участник оригинал втори orcid id ioannis vlachos империя упълномощаване Може
Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University
The h-index for Greek origin Computer Scientists & Engineers
Professor Yannis Korkontzelos - Department of Computer Science
PDF) Biocuration: Distilling data into knowledge
The h-index for Greek origin Computer Scientists & Engineers
One in three highly selected Greek patients with breast cancer carries a loss-of-function variant in a cancer susceptibility gene | Journal of Medical Genetics
AKT3-mediated IWS1 phosphorylation promotes the proliferation of EGFR-mutant lung adenocarcinomas through cell cycle-regulated U2AF2 RNA splicing | Nature Communications
Aberrant expression of USF2 in refractory rheumatoid arthritis and its regulation of proinflammatory cytokines in Th17 cells | PNAS
Genome-wide transcriptome analysis reveals that DMRT3 and DMRT5... | Download Scientific Diagram
Ioannis Vlachos - Director of Spatial Technologies - Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | LinkedIn
The h-index for Greek origin Computer Scientists & Engineers
MicroRNA-934 is a novel primate-specific small non-coding RNA with neurogenic function during early development | eLife
Ioannis Vlachos - Director of Spatial Technologies - Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | LinkedIn
Ioannis Vlachos - Director of Spatial Technologies - Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | LinkedIn
DMRT5, DMRT3, and EMX2 Cooperatively Repress Gsx2 at the Pallium–Subpallium Boundary to Maintain Cortical Identity in Dorsal Telencephalic Progenitors | Journal of Neuroscience
Ioannis Vlachos - Director of Spatial Technologies - Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | LinkedIn
About – Ioannis Vlachos Non-coding Research Lab
AKT3-mediated IWS1 phosphorylation promotes the proliferation of EGFR-mutant lung adenocarcinomas through cell cycle-regulated U2AF2 RNA splicing | Nature Communications
RNAcentral: a comprehensive database of non-coding RNA sequences. - Abstract - Europe PMC
MicroRNA-934 is a novel primate-specific small non-coding RNA with neurogenic function during early development | eLife