K
Kay E. Davies
Researcher at University of Oxford
Publications - 580
Citations - 40236
Kay E. Davies is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Duchenne muscular dystrophy & Dystrophin. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 573 publications receiving 38462 citations. Previous affiliations of Kay E. Davies include Case Western Reserve University & Technische Universität München.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Syncoilin is an intermediate filament protein in activated hepatic stellate cells
E. Van Rossen,Zhenan Liu,D Blijweert,Nathalie Eysackers,Inge Mannaerts,Ben Schroyen,A. El Taghdouini,Ben Edwards,Kay E. Davies,Etienne Sokal,Mustapha Najimi,Hendrik Reynaert,L.A. van Grunsven +12 more
TL;DR: It is shown that in the liver, syncoilin is predominantly expressed by activated HSCs and displays very low-expression levels in other liver cell types, making it a good marker of activated H SCs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Novel transcribed sequences represented in the complex genomic region 5q13
Karen E. Morrison,Safia J. Qureshi,Susan Anderson,James P. Borrett,Aspasia Theodosiou,Nanda Rodrigues,Derek J. Blake,Andrew Nesbit,Kay E. Davies,David J. Porteous,Anthony J. Brookes +10 more
TL;DR: YACs from the complex repetitive human genomic region 5q13, spanning the spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) locus, have been searched for transcribed sequences using the method of End Ligation Coincident Sequence Cloning, resulting in six transcripts, three of which are novel.
Journal ArticleDOI
Detection and exclusion of carriers of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency by RFLP analysis.
Marianne Schwartz,Ernst Christensen,Niels C. Christensen,Flemming Skovby,Kay E. Davies,John Old +5 more
TL;DR: By examining a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) detected by a gene specific DNA probe of ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC), the segregation of the defective gene in a family with OTC deficiency is followed.
Journal ArticleDOI
EagI and NotI linking clones from human chromosomes 11 and Xp
Mark A. Pook,Rekhaben Thakrar,Bruce Pottinger,Brian Harding,David J. Porteous,Veronica van Heyningen,John K. Cowell,Carol Jones,Sue Povey,Kay E. Davies,Rajesh V. Thakker +10 more
TL;DR: These EagI andNotI clones, which supplement those previously mapped to chromosome 11 and Xp, should facilitate the generation of more detailed maps and the identification of genes that are associated with CpG-rich islands.