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Carlo M. Croce

Researcher at Ohio State University

Publications -  1156
Citations -  199822

Carlo M. Croce is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: microRNA & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 198, co-authored 1135 publications receiving 189007 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlo M. Croce include University of Nebraska Medical Center & University of California, Los Angeles.

Papers
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Cloning and characterization of cDNAs expressed during chick development and encoding different isoforms of a putative zinc finger transcriptional regulator

TL;DR: Northern blot analysis and RNase-protection assays showed that chZFp transcripts are present in brain, heart, skin and liver during chick development and Reverse transcription mediated polymerase chain reaction experiments suggested that the relative amount of some ch ZFp isoforms increases at critical stages of development and skin morphogenesis.
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Presence of two active X chromosomes in hybrids between normal human and SV40-transformed fibroblasts from patients with the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.

TL;DR: Skin fibroblasts derived from a hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) deficient patient with the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, who has glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) type A, were transformed with SV40 and hybridized with WI38 human diploid fibroblastderived from a female embryo which have normal HGPRT and G6PD type B activities.
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Chromosomal localization of four human zinc finger cDNAs.

TL;DR: Unique cDNA clones encoding zinc finger motifs were isolated by screening human placenta and T-cell (Peer) cDNA libraries with zinc finger consensus sequences by in situ hybridization and use of appropriate hybrids to map telomeric to the MYC locus.
Patent

Detection and treatment of acute leukemias resulting from chromosome abnormalities in the all-1 region

TL;DR: In this paper, the ALL-1 breakpoint region, an approximately 8 kb region on chromosome 11, illustrated in the figure, is disclosed, which is involved in translocation in acute lymphocytic, myelomonocyte, monocytic and myelogenous leukemias.