» Authors » R C Lovering

R C Lovering

Explore the profile of R C Lovering including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
Snapshot
Articles 17
Citations 511
Followers 0
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Perfetto L, Acencio M, Bradley G, Cesareni G, Del Toro N, Fazekas D, et al.
Bioinformatics . 2019 Feb; 35(19):3779-3785. PMID: 30793173
Motivation: Combining multiple layers of information underlying biological complexity into a structured framework represent a challenge in systems biology. A key task is the formalization of such information in models...
2.
Sivade Dumousseau M, Alonso-Lopez D, Ammari M, Bradley G, Campbell N, Ceol A, et al.
BMC Bioinformatics . 2018 Apr; 19(1):134. PMID: 29642841
Background: Systems biologists study interaction data to understand the behaviour of whole cell systems, and their environment, at a molecular level. In order to effectively achieve this goal, it is...
3.
Foulger R, Denny P, Hardy J, Martin M, Sawford T, Lovering R
Neuroinformatics . 2016 Jan; 14(3):297-304. PMID: 26825309
The Gene Ontology (GO) is widely recognised as the gold standard bioinformatics resource for summarizing functional knowledge of gene products in a consistent and computable, information-rich language. GO describes cellular...
4.
Kalea A, Hoteit R, Suvan J, Lovering R, Palmen J, Cooper J, et al.
J Dent Res . 2015 Jan; 94(3 Suppl):59S-69S. PMID: 25630869
Increased local immune and inflammatory responses in obese individuals with periodontitis may explain the aggressive clinical presentation and altered treatment response when compared to that of normal weight subjects. Our...
5.
Blake J, Dolan M, Drabkin H, Hill D, Li N, Sitnikov D, et al.
Nucleic Acids Res . 2012 Nov; 41(Database issue):D530-5. PMID: 23161678
The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (GOC, http://www.geneontology.org) is a community-based bioinformatics resource that classifies gene product function through the use of structured, controlled vocabularies. Over the past year, the GOC...
6.
Deloukas P, Earthrowl M, Grafham D, Rubenfield M, French L, Steward C, et al.
Nature . 2004 May; 429(6990):375-81. PMID: 15164054
The finished sequence of human chromosome 10 comprises a total of 131,666,441 base pairs. It represents 99.4% of the euchromatic DNA and includes one megabase of heterochromatic sequence within the...
7.
Kinnon C, Cory G, Banin S, Gout I, Lovering R, Brickell P
Biochem Soc Trans . 1997 May; 25(2):648-50. PMID: 9191173
No abstract available.
8.
de Weers M, Dingjan G, Brouns G, Kraakman M, Mensink R, Lovering R, et al.
Clin Exp Immunol . 1997 Feb; 107(2):235-40. PMID: 9030858
X-linked agammaglobulinaemia (XLA) is an immunodeficiency caused by mutations in Bruton's tyrosine kinase (Btk) and is characterized by an almost complete arrest of B cell development. We analysed expression of...
9.
Cory G, Banin S, Gout I, Brickell P, Levinsky R, Kinnon C, et al.
J Immunol . 1996 Nov; 157(9):3791-5. PMID: 8892607
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome is an X-linked combined immunodeficiency affecting cells of several different hemopoietic lineages. The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP), which has no homology with any other known protein families, is...
10.
Cory G, Lovering R, Hinshelwood S, Levinsky R, Kinnon C
J Exp Med . 1995 Aug; 182(2):611-5. PMID: 7629518
X-linked agammaglobulinemia, a B cell immunodeficiency, is caused by mutations in the Bruton's tyrosine kinase (Btk) gene. The absence of a functional Btk protein leads to a failure of B...