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  2. List of Bungo Stray Dogs episodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Bungo_Stray_Dogs...

    The Bungo Stray Dogs anime television series focuses on individuals who are gifted with supernatural powers and use them for different purposes including holding a business, solving mysteries, and carrying out missions assigned by the mafia. The story mainly follows the members of the "Armed Detective Agency" and their everyday lives.

  3. Chromosome 4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromosome_4

    The chromosome is ~193 megabases in length. In a 2012 paper, 775 protein-encoding genes were identified on this chromosome. [4] 211 (27.9%) of these coding sequences did not have any experimental evidence at the protein level, in 2012. 271 appear to be membrane proteins. 54 have been classified as cancer-associated proteins.

  4. Chromosome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromosome

    It took until 1954 before the human diploid number was confirmed as 46. [46] [47] Considering the techniques of Winiwarter and Painter, their results were quite remarkable. [48] Chimpanzees, the closest living relatives to modern humans, have 48 chromosomes as do the other great apes: in humans two chromosomes fused to form chromosome 2.

  5. Grapefruit–drug interactions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grapefruit–drug_interactions

    The effect of grapefruit juice with regard to drug absorption was originally discovered in 1989 by a group led by pharmacologist David Bailey.Their first published clinical report on grapefruit drug interactions was in 1991. [9]

  6. Gonadal dysgenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonadal_dysgenesis

    Gonadal dysgenesis; Specialty: Medical genetics : Diagnostic method: pelvic examination (checking for maturation of external internal genitals), general examination (looking for secondary sexual characters), chromosome karyotyping, hormone levels like FSH, LH (which are increased in case of purely XX dysgenesis), family history

  7. Chromosome abnormality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromosome_abnormality

    [citation needed] An example of trisomy in humans is Down syndrome, which is a developmental disorder caused by an extra copy of chromosome 21; the disorder is therefore also called trisomy 21. [7] An example of monosomy in humans is Turner syndrome, where the individual is born with only one sex chromosome, an X. [8]

  8. Ring chromosome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_chromosome

    Arrowheads indicate breakpoints. Also evident are monosomy 9, 18, and X and trisomy 7. A ring chromosome is an aberrant chromosome whose ends have fused together to form a ring. Ring chromosomes were first discovered by Lilian Vaughan Morgan in 1926. [1] A ring chromosome is denoted by the symbol r in human genetics and R in Drosophila genetics.

  9. List of diseases (C) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diseases_(C)

    Chromosome 10, distal trisomy 10q; Chromosome 10, monosomy 10p; Chromosome 10, monosomy 10q; Chromosome 10, trisomy 10p; Chromosome 10, trisomy 10pter p13; Chromosome 10, trisomy 10q; Chromosome 10, uniparental disomy of; Chromosome 10p terminal deletion syndrome; Chromosome 11, deletion 11p; Chromosome 11, partial trisomy 11q; Chromosome 11-14 ...