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Daniel Gaile

Researcher at University at Buffalo

Publications -  11
Citations -  1437

Daniel Gaile is an academic researcher from University at Buffalo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Comparative genomic hybridization & DNA methylation. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications receiving 1289 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel Gaile include Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

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The Collaborative Cross, a community resource for the genetic analysis of complex traits

Gary A. Churchill, +113 more
- 01 Nov 2004 - 
TL;DR: The Collaborative Cross will provide a common reference panel specifically designed for the integrative analysis of complex systems and will change the way the authors approach human health and disease.
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Brain or strain? Symptoms alone do not distinguish physiologic concussion from cervical/vestibular injury.

TL;DR: Symptoms after head injury, including cognitive symptoms, have traditionally been ascribed to brain injury, but they do not reliably discriminate between physiologic PCD and cervicogenic/vestibular PCD.
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Genome-wide aberrations in pancreatic adenocarcinoma

TL;DR: BAC aCGH proved to be a powerful genome-wide strategy to identify molecular alterations in pancreatic cancer and to distinguish differences between cell line and xenograft aberration profiles, and could lead to the identification of novel therapeutic targets and biomarkers for early detection.
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Challenges in array comparative genomic hybridization for the analysis of cancer samples.

TL;DR: This study demonstrates that copy number alterations can be robustly and reproducibly detected by array comparative genomic hybridization in DNA isolated from challenging tumor types and sources, including archival materials, low DNA yield, and heterogeneous tissues.
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Identification of consistent novel submegabase deletions in low-grade oligodendrogliomas using array-based comparative genomic hybridization.

TL;DR: The aCGH analysis defined the spectrum of gain and loss of genomic regions in low‐grade oligodendrogliomas and identified two regions of the genome that showed hemizygous deletion in virtually all the tumors analyzed regardless of their 1p/19q status.