NR1H3 p.Arg415Gln Is Not Associated to Multiple Sclerosis Risk
Consortium T, Antel J, Ban M, Baranzini S, Barcellos L, Barizzone N, Beecham A, Berge T, Bernardinelli L, Booth D, Bos S, Buck D, Butkiewicz M, Celius E, Comabella M, Compston A, Dedham K, Cotsapas C, Alfonso S, De Jager P, Dubois B, Duquette P, Fontaine B, Gasperi C, Gil E, Goris A, Gourraud P, Graetz C, Gyllenberg A, Hadjigeorgiou G, Hafler D, Hribko D, Haines J, Harbo H, Hauser S, Warto S, Hawkins C, Hemmer B, Henry R, Hintzen R, Horakova D, Ivinson A, Howard M, Jelcic I, Kaskow B, Kira J, Kleinova P, Kockum I, Kucerova K, Lill C, Luessi F, Malhotra S, Martin R, Martinelli F, Matsushita T, McCabe C, McCauley J, Mescheriakkova J, Mitrovic M, Moen S, Montalban X, Muhlau M, Nakmura Y, Oksenberg J, Olsson T, Oturai A, Palotie A, Patsopoulos N, Pavlicova J, Pericak-Vance P, Piehl F, Rebeix I, Rioux J, Saarela J, Sawcer S, Sellebjerg F, Sondergaard H, Sorensen P, Sospedra M, Spurkland A, Stewart G, Taylor B, Uitterlinden A, Van Duijn C, Zipp F. NR1H3 p.Arg415Gln Is Not Associated to Multiple Sclerosis Risk. Neuron 2016, 92: 333-335. PMID: 27764667, PMCID: PMC5641967, DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.09.052.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPrimary progressive diseaseMultiple sclerosis riskProgressive diseaseMultiple sclerosisPatient's likelihoodDisease subtypesPatient collectionInsufficient sample sizeCommon variant associationsLow-frequency associationMendelian formsAssociationRecent studiesCertain individualsSample sizeVariant associationsSclerosisSubtypesDiseaseNeurons
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