HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Dimitrios Tsitsipatis and colleagues from the Laboratory of Genetics and Genomics, National Institute on Aging, Intramural Research Program, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD, USA Department of Neurology, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA have published the paper: Transcriptomic analysis of human ALS skeletal muscle reveals a disease-specific pattern of dysregulated circRNAs, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: Given the low counts and highly variable abundance of circRNAs, the authors focused on identifying only abundant circRNAs by requiring one or more counts in at least 40% of the ALS muscle samples . . .
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