S
Shirley A. Miller
Researcher at Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center
Publications - 13
Citations - 20049
Shirley A. Miller is an academic researcher from Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Isoelectric focusing & Salting out. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications receiving 19385 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A simple salting out procedure for extracting DNA from human nucleated cells
TL;DR: A rapid, safe and inexpensive method was developed to simplify the deprotein-ization procedure that yielded quantities comparable to those obtained from phenol-chloroform extractions, rendering the entire process of RFLP analysis free of toxic materials.
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Distribution of alpha 1-antitrypsin variants in a US white population.
TL;DR: A white population from the State of Minnesota of primarily German and Scandinavian heritage was subtyped for alpha 1-antitrypsin variants using isoelectric focusing to find genes consistent with those for white populations documented in the literature from Northern Europe.
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Frequency of the ESD*5 allele in three ethnic groups in Minnesota.
TL;DR: Detection of the ESD*5 gene products was simplified by the use of isoelectric focusing (IEF) and gene frequencies observed in the white data set were similar to those reported for European whites.
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Comparison of acid phosphatase ACP1 variants by isoelectric focusing and conventional electrophoresis: identification of three new alleles, ACP1*N, ACP1*P and ACP1*S.
TL;DR: Three new alleles of human red cell acid phosphatase (ACP1) have been identified by comparison with previously reported variants using three different electrophoretic techniques and further evidence of a rare allele demonstrating reversed 'A' activity is described.
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Gene frequency distribution of the B subunit of factor XIII (F XIIIB) in Minnesota Whites, Blacks and Amerindians
TL;DR: Serum specimens from local Whites, Blacks and Amerindians were phenotyped for the B subunit of Factor XIII to prove to be a valuable marker for anthropological genetics and parentage testing.