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Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco

Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetic disorder of abnormal ciliary structure and function that leads to defective mucociliary clearance, resulting in oto-sino-pulmonary disease, and infertility. The disease is currently under intense investigation by a number of research groups worldwide. At...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Noone, Peadar G
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC59509/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/rr75
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author Noone, Peadar G
author_facet Noone, Peadar G
author_sort Noone, Peadar G
collection PubMed
description Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetic disorder of abnormal ciliary structure and function that leads to defective mucociliary clearance, resulting in oto-sino-pulmonary disease, and infertility. The disease is currently under intense investigation by a number of research groups worldwide. At the recent American Thoracic Society meeting in San Francisco in May 2001, two sessions focused on PCD; a symposium session on May 21 with several featured expert speakers was followed by a mini-symposium on Tuesday May 22, with one featured speaker and presentation of nine abstracts covering a range of research topics. Mattias Salathe (University of Miami, USA) and Stephen Brody (Washington University, St Louis, USA) chaired the symposium session. Presentations focused on the clinical spectrum of PCD, the genetics of PCD, a proteomics approach to detail the structure of cilia, the role of cilia in the embryology of situs laterality, and airway epithelial cell biology. The mini-symposium was chaired by Peadar Noone (University of North Carolina, USA) and Malcolm King (University of Alberta, USA) and included presentations on the use of PCD as a human disease model, accurate definition of the phenotype using clinical and cell biologic markers, and molecular studies. The latter reports ranged from isolation of a protein involved in ciliary structure and function to genetic studies using linkage analysis and the candidate gene approach. Clinicians and scientists alike displayed considerable interest at both sessions, and there were several lively question–answer sessions.
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spelling pubmed-595092001-11-06 Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco Noone, Peadar G Respir Res Meeting Report Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetic disorder of abnormal ciliary structure and function that leads to defective mucociliary clearance, resulting in oto-sino-pulmonary disease, and infertility. The disease is currently under intense investigation by a number of research groups worldwide. At the recent American Thoracic Society meeting in San Francisco in May 2001, two sessions focused on PCD; a symposium session on May 21 with several featured expert speakers was followed by a mini-symposium on Tuesday May 22, with one featured speaker and presentation of nine abstracts covering a range of research topics. Mattias Salathe (University of Miami, USA) and Stephen Brody (Washington University, St Louis, USA) chaired the symposium session. Presentations focused on the clinical spectrum of PCD, the genetics of PCD, a proteomics approach to detail the structure of cilia, the role of cilia in the embryology of situs laterality, and airway epithelial cell biology. The mini-symposium was chaired by Peadar Noone (University of North Carolina, USA) and Malcolm King (University of Alberta, USA) and included presentations on the use of PCD as a human disease model, accurate definition of the phenotype using clinical and cell biologic markers, and molecular studies. The latter reports ranged from isolation of a protein involved in ciliary structure and function to genetic studies using linkage analysis and the candidate gene approach. Clinicians and scientists alike displayed considerable interest at both sessions, and there were several lively question–answer sessions. BioMed Central 2001 2001-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC59509/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/rr75 Text en Copyright © 2001 BioMed Central Ltd
spellingShingle Meeting Report
Noone, Peadar G
Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco
title Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco
title_full Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco
title_fullStr Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco
title_full_unstemmed Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco
title_short Primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ATS 2001, May 18–23, San Francisco
title_sort primary ciliary dyskinesia: a report from ats 2001, may 18–23, san francisco
topic Meeting Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC59509/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/rr75
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