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Rachel Abbott

Researcher at Washington University in St. Louis

Publications -  14
Citations -  34960

Rachel Abbott is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Genome. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 14 publications receiving 30489 citations. Previous affiliations of Rachel Abbott include University of Washington.

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Comprehensive genomic characterization defines human glioblastoma genes and core pathways

Roger E. McLendon, +233 more
- 23 Oct 2008 - 
TL;DR: The interim integrative analysis of DNA copy number, gene expression and DNA methylation aberrations in 206 glioblastomas reveals a link between MGMT promoter methylation and a hypermutator phenotype consequent to mismatch repair deficiency in treated gliobeasts, demonstrating that it can rapidly expand knowledge of the molecular basis of cancer.

Integrated genomic analyses of ovarian carcinoma

Daphne W. Bell, +261 more
TL;DR: The Cancer Genome Atlas project has analyzed messenger RNA expression, microRNA expression, promoter methylation and DNA copy number in 489 high-grade serous ovarian adenocarcinomas and the DNA sequences of exons from coding genes in 316 of these tumours as mentioned in this paper.
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The cancer genome atlas pan-cancer analysis project

John N. Weinstein, +379 more
- 01 Oct 2013 - 
TL;DR: The Pan-Cancer initiative compares the first 12 tumor types profiled by TCGA with a major opportunity to develop an integrated picture of commonalities, differences and emergent themes across tumor lineages.
Journal Article

The Cancer Genome Atlas Pan-Cancer analysis project

Kyle Chang, +337 more
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
TL;DR: The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Research Network has profiled and analyzed large numbers of human tumors to discover molecular aberrations at the DNA, RNA, protein and epigenetic levels as mentioned in this paper.
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The B73 Maize Genome: Complexity, Diversity, and Dynamics

Patrick S. Schnable, +159 more
- 20 Nov 2009 - 
TL;DR: The sequence of the maize genome reveals it to be the most complex genome known to date and the correlation of methylation-poor regions with Mu transposon insertions and recombination and how uneven gene losses between duplicated regions were involved in returning an ancient allotetraploid to a genetically diploid state is reported.