J
Jinlu Cai
Researcher at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Publications - 1
Citations - 2228
Jinlu Cai is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Exome. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 1838 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Synaptic, transcriptional and chromatin genes disrupted in autism
Silvia De Rubeis,Xin-Xin He,Arthur P. Goldberg,Christopher S. Poultney,Kaitlin E. Samocha,A. Ercument Cicek,Yan Kou,Li Liu,Menachem Fromer,Menachem Fromer,R. Susan Walker,Tarjinder Singh,Lambertus Klei,Jack A. Kosmicki,Shih-Chen Fu,Branko Aleksic,Monica Biscaldi,Patrick Bolton,Jessica M. Brownfeld,Jinlu Cai,Nicholas G. Campbell,Angel Carracedo,Angel Carracedo,Maria H. Chahrour,Andreas G. Chiocchetti,Hilary Coon,Emily L. Crawford,Lucy Crooks,Sarah Curran,Geraldine Dawson,Eftichia Duketis,Bridget A. Fernandez,Louise Gallagher,Evan T. Geller,Stephen J. Guter,R. Sean Hill,R. Sean Hill,Iuliana Ionita-Laza,Patricia Jiménez González,Helena Kilpinen,Sabine M. Klauck,Alexander Kolevzon,Irene Lee,Jing Lei,Terho Lehtimäki,Chiao-Feng Lin,Avi Ma'ayan,Christian R. Marshall,Alison L. McInnes,Benjamin M. Neale,Michael John Owen,Norio Ozaki,Mara Parellada,Jeremy R. Parr,Shaun Purcell,Kaija Puura,Deepthi Rajagopalan,Karola Rehnström,Abraham Reichenberg,Aniko Sabo,Michael Sachse,Stephen Sanders,Chad M. Schafer,Martin Schulte-Rüther,David Skuse,David Skuse,Christine Stevens,Peter Szatmari,Kristiina Tammimies,Otto Valladares,Annette Voran,Li-San Wang,Lauren A. Weiss,A. Jeremy Willsey,Timothy W. Yu,Timothy W. Yu,Ryan K. C. Yuen,Edwin H. Cook,Christine M. Freitag,Michael Gill,Christina M. Hultman,Thomas Lehner,Aarno Palotie,Aarno Palotie,Aarno Palotie,Gerard D. Schellenberg,Pamela Sklar,Matthew W. State,James S. Sutcliffe,Christopher A. Walsh,Christopher A. Walsh,Stephen W. Scherer,Michael E. Zwick,Jeffrey C. Barrett,David J. Cutler,Kathryn Roeder,Bernie Devlin,Mark J. Daly,Mark J. Daly,Joseph D. Buxbaum +99 more
TL;DR: Using exome sequencing, it is shown that analysis of rare coding variation in 3,871 autism cases and 9,937 ancestry-matched or parental controls implicates 22 autosomal genes at a false discovery rate of < 0.05, plus a set of 107 genes strongly enriched for those likely to affect risk (FDR < 0.30).