Article info

Download PDFPDF

Tumor genomic alterations in severe-combined immunodeficiency bare-lymphocyte syndrome genes are associated with high mutational burden and disproportional neo-antigen rates

Authors

  • Yu Wang Department of BiostatisticsVanderbilt University Medical Center 37232 Nashville TN USA Center for Quantitative SciencesVanderbilt University Medical Center 2200 Pierce Ave, 777 PRB 37232–6307 Nashville TN USA PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles
  • Douglas B. Johnson Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of MedicineVanderbilt University Medical Center 37232 Nashville TN USA PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles
  • Steve Lu Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 21287 Baltimore MD USA PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles
  • Luis A. Diaz Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center 10065 New York NY USA PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles
  • Yaomin Xu Department of BiostatisticsVanderbilt University Medical Center 37232 Nashville TN USA Center for Quantitative SciencesVanderbilt University Medical Center 2200 Pierce Ave, 777 PRB 37232–6307 Nashville TN USA PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles
  • Justin M. Balko Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of MedicineVanderbilt University Medical Center 37232 Nashville TN USA Breast Cancer Research ProgramVanderbilt University Medical Center 37232 Nashville TN USA PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles

Citation

Wang Y, Johnson DB, Lu S, et al
Tumor genomic alterations in severe-combined immunodeficiency bare-lymphocyte syndrome genes are associated with high mutational burden and disproportional neo-antigen rates
Online issue publication 
January 08, 2022

Request permissions

If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.