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Tama Hasson

Researcher at Yale University

Publications -  19
Citations -  2726

Tama Hasson is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myosin & Usher syndrome. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 19 publications receiving 2651 citations.

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Unconventional Myosins in Inner-Ear Sensory Epithelia

TL;DR: This work examined the distribution of four unconventional myosin isozymes in the inner ear, a tissue that is particularly reliant on actin-rich structures and unconventionalMyosin wasozymes, and localization results suggest specific functions for three hair-cell myosins.
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The mouse Snell's waltzer deafness gene encodes an unconventional myosin required for structural integrity of inner ear hair cells

TL;DR: It is shown that Snell's waltzer encodes an unconventional myosin heavy chain,Myosin VI, which is expressed within the sensory hair cells of the inner ear, and appears to be required for maintaining their structural integrity.
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Expression in cochlea and retina of myosin VIIa, the gene product defective in Usher syndrome type 1B

TL;DR: The cell-specific localization of myosin VIIa suggests that the blindness and deafness associated with Usher syndrome is due to lack of proper myosIn VIIa function within the cochlear hair cells and the retinal pigmented epithelial cells.
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Porcine myosin-VI: characterization of a new mammalian unconventional myosin.

TL;DR: Porcine myosin-VI is cloned from the proximal tubule cell line, LLC-PK1, and exhibits ATP-sensitive actin-binding activities characteristic of myosins, and it is associated with a calmodulin light chain.
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Identification and overlapping expression of multiple unconventional myosin genes in vertebrate cell types.

TL;DR: The results reveal the existence of at least 11 unconventional human myosin genes, most of which are expressed in an overlapping fashion in different cell types, and suggests that the myOSin I vs. myosIn II paradigm is inadequate to explain actin-based cellular motility.