Publications by authors named "Hruskova L"

Article Synopsis
  • Monoallelic germline pathogenic variants in certain Fanconi anemia genes are known to increase breast and ovarian cancer risk, but the effects of variants in FANCG/XRCC9 remain unclear.
  • Researchers found that the frequency of truncating variants in FANCG did not significantly differ between breast cancer, ovarian cancer patients, and controls.
  • The study concludes that heterozygous germline FANCG variants are unlikely to play a role in developing breast or ovarian cancer.
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Germline CHEK2 pathogenic variants confer an increased risk of female breast cancer (FBC). Here we describe a recurrent germline intronic variant c.1009-118_1009-87delinsC, which showed a splice acceptor shift in RNA analysis, introducing a premature stop codon (p.

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Background: Hereditary cancer syndromes are an important subset of malignant cancers caused by pathogenic variants in one of many known cancer predisposition genes. Diagnosis of cancer predisposition is based on genetic testing using next-generation sequencing. This allows many genes to be analysed at once, increasing the number of variants identified.

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The cold acclimation process is regulated by many factors like ambient temperature, day length, light intensity, or hormonal status. Experiments with plants grown under different light quality conditions indicate that the plant response to cold is also a light-quality-dependent process. Here, the role of light quality in the cold response was studied in 1-month-old (Col-0) plants exposed for 1 week to 4°C at short-day conditions under white (100 and 20 μmol ms), blue, or red (20 μmol ms) light conditions.

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Ovarian cancer (OC) is the deadliest gynecologic malignancy with a substantial proportion of hereditary cases and a frequent association with breast cancer (BC). Genetic testing facilitates treatment and preventive strategies reducing OC mortality in mutation carriers. However, the prevalence of germline mutations varies among populations and many rarely mutated OC predisposition genes remain to be identified.

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Background And Aim: Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), also called brittle bone disease, is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized by decreased bone density. Autosomal dominant forms result from mutations in either the COL1A1 (collagen type I alpha-1 chain) or COL1A2 (collagen type I alpha-2 chain) genes encoding the type I collagen. The aim of this study was to identify mutations and allelic variants of the COL1A1 gene in patients with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI).

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This paper concerns the formation of biofilm in bacteria of the genus Arcobacter. A multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method was introduced and optimized for detecting biofilm while using the intercalating dyes ethidium monoazide (EMA) and propidium monoazide (PMA), first for analysis of strains of the genus Arcobacter from a collection, and then applied to samples of prepared biofilms. The results of the study indicate considerable variability among species of bacteria within the genus Arcobacter.

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