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Ichiko Nishijima
Researcher at Baylor College of Medicine
Publications - 11
Citations - 798
Ichiko Nishijima is an academic researcher from Baylor College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Secretin & Homeobox A1. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 11 publications receiving 770 citations. Previous affiliations of Ichiko Nishijima include Ohio State University.
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Cancer predisposition caused by elevated mitotic recombination in Bloom mice
Guangbin Luo,Irma M. Santoro,Lisa D. McDaniel,Ichiko Nishijima,Michael Mills,Hagop Youssoufian,Hannes Vogel,Roger A. Schultz,Allan Bradley,Allan Bradley +9 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the increased rate of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) resulting from mitotic recombination in vivo constitutes the underlying mechanism causing tumour susceptibility in these mice.
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Mutagenic Insertion and Chromosome Engineering Resource (MICER)
David J. Adams,Patrick J. Biggs,Tony Cox,Robert L. Davies,Louise van der Weyden,J Jonkers,J Jonkers,James Smith,Bob Plumb,Ruth Taylor,Ichiko Nishijima,Yuejin Yu,Jane Rogers,Allan Bradley +13 more
TL;DR: These indexed vectors constitute a public resource (Mutagenic Insertion and Chromosome Engineering Resource; MICER) for high-throughput, targeted manipulation of the mouse genome.
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A Whole-Genome Mouse BAC Microarray With 1-Mb Resolution for Analysis of DNA Copy Number Changes by Array Comparative Genomic Hybridization
Yuen Jun Chung,J Jonkers,J Jonkers,Hannah Kitson,Heike Fiegler,Sean Humphray,Carol Scott,Sarah E. Hunt,Yuejin Yu,Ichiko Nishijima,Arno Velds,Henne Holstege,Nigel P. Carter,Allan Bradley +13 more
TL;DR: A mouse BAC microarray containing 2803 unique BAC clones from mouse genomic libraries at 1-Mb intervals is developed and reproducibly identified DNA copy number alterations in cell lines and primary tumors, such as single-copy deletions, regional amplifications, and aneuploidy.
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Secretin receptor-deficient mice exhibit impaired synaptic plasticity and social behavior
Ichiko Nishijima,Takanori Yamagata,Corinne M. Spencer,Edwin J. Weeber,Olga Alekseyenko,J. David Sweatt,Mariko Y. Momoi,Masayuki Ito,Dawna L. Armstrong,David L. Nelson,Richard Paylor,Allan Bradley +11 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the secretin receptor system has an important role in the central nervous system relating to social behavior.
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Dmbx1, a novel evolutionarily conserved paired-like homeobox gene expressed in the brain of mouse embryos.
TL;DR: Dmbx1 provides a unique marker of the developing anterior nervous system and should provide a useful molecular resource to elucidate the mechanisms that pattern the vertebrate brain.