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G. Lanfranchi

Researcher at University of Trieste

Publications -  7
Citations -  1116

G. Lanfranchi is an academic researcher from University of Trieste. The author has contributed to research in topics: Expressed sequence tag & DNA sequencing. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 1100 citations. Previous affiliations of G. Lanfranchi include International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology.

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The complete DNA sequence of yeast chromosome III.

Stephen G. Oliver, +146 more
- 07 May 1992 - 
TL;DR: The entire DNA sequence of chromosome III of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been determined, which is the first complete sequence analysis of an entire chromosome from any organism.
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FATZ, a Filamin-, Actinin-, and Telethonin-binding Protein of the Z-disc of Skeletal Muscle

TL;DR: The identification and characterization of a novel 32-kDa protein expressed in skeletal muscle and located in the Z-disc of the sarcomere is found and it is found that this protein binds to three other Z- Disc proteins; therefore, it is named FATZ, γ-filamin/ABP-L, α-actinin andtelethonin binding protein of theZ-disc.
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Identification of 4370 expressed sequence tags from a 3'-end-specific cDNA library of human skeletal muscle by DNA sequencing and filter hybridization.

TL;DR: A new method has been developed for the construction of unbiased cDNA libraries specially designed for the production of ESTs corresponding to the 3'-end portion of the mRNAs, applied to human skeletal muscle, where the analysis of the transcription profile is particularly difficult for the presence of several very abundant transcripts.
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Mediterranean mussel gene expression profile induced by okadaic acid exposure.

TL;DR: The first gene expression analysis performed on Mediterranean mussels exposed to okadaic acid is presented, identifying 58 candidate transcripts for OA-induced stress in mussels, half of which have unknown function.
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Chromosome assignment of 115 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from human skeletal muscle

TL;DR: Analysis of preliminary data suggests a nonrandom distribution of muscle ESTs in the human chromosome complement, and the unexpected occurrence of multiple chromosome localizations for some ESTs is discussed.