Skip to search formSkip to main contentSkip to account menu

Phenotype determination

Known as: Phenotyping, phenotype 
National Institutes of Health

Papers overview

Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
Highly Cited
2016
Highly Cited
2016
Glioblastomas are highly infiltrated by diverse immune cells, including microglia, macrophages, and myeloid-derived suppressor… 
Highly Cited
2016
Highly Cited
2016
Human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) shows extensive within-population sequence variability. Many studies suggest that mtDNA variants… 
Review
2012
Review
2012
In medical contexts, the word “phenotype” is used to refer to some deviation from normal morphology, physiology, or behavior. The… 
Highly Cited
2009
Highly Cited
2009
Oral squamous cell carcinomas are among the 10 most common cancers and have a 50% lethality rate after 5 years. Despite easy… 
Highly Cited
2003
Highly Cited
2003
We report on the characteristics of 21 patients with hepatosplenic γδ T-cell lymphoma (HSγδTCL), an entity recognized since 1994… 
Highly Cited
1999
Highly Cited
1999
AIMS The cytochrome P450 enzyme CYP1A2 metabolises several drugs and carcinogens. We wanted to determine how much of the… 
Highly Cited
1993
Highly Cited
1993
Carcinogenic arylamines are acetylated by the hepatic N-acetyltransferase. This enzyme is polymorphic in humans and in some… 
Highly Cited
1989
Highly Cited
1989
A rapid and highly sensitive technique (MAPPing: message amplification phenotyping) has been developed to simultaneously analyze… 
Review
1987
Review
1987
Methods are described for extraction of DNA from the yeast form of Candida spp., followed by digestion and electrophoresis of DNA…