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Kent Riemondy

University of Colorado, Aurora - RNA Biosciences Initiative

United States

SCHOLARLY PAPERS

2

DOWNLOADS

146

TOTAL CITATIONS

3

Scholarly Papers (2)

1.

Single-Cell RNAseq of Childhood Ependymoma Reveals Distinct Neoplastic Cell Subpopulations that Impact Etiology, Molecular Classification and Outcome

Number of pages: 50 Posted: 25 Oct 2019
University of Colorado, Aurora - RNA Biosciences Initiative, University of Colorado, Aurora - RNA Biosciences Initiative, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Department of Pathology, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado, Aurora - Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado, Aurora - RNA Biosciences Initiative, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program and University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program
Downloads 95 (715,072)
Citation 3

Abstract:

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Ependymoma (EPN), posterior fossa subgroup A (PFA), single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNAseq), neoplastic subpopulations, cellular heterogeneity

2.

Neoplastic and Immune Single Cell Transcriptomics Define Subgroup-Specific Intra-Tumoral Heterogeneity of Childhood Medulloblastoma

Number of pages: 51 Posted: 07 Oct 2020
University of Colorado, Aurora - RNA Biosciences Initiative, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado, Aurora - Department of Pathology, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, Hopp Children's Cancer Center Heidelberg (KiTZ), University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill - Department of Neurology, University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill - Department of Neurology, University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill - Department of Neurology, University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill - Department of Neurology, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute - Tumor Initiation and Maintenance Program, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute - Tumor Initiation and Maintenance Program, University of Colorado, Aurora - RNA Biosciences Initiative, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program, University of Colorado at Denver - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program and Children’s Hospital Colorado - Morgan Adams Foundation Pediatric Brain Tumor Research Program
Downloads 51 (1,052,702)

Abstract:

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medulloblastoma, subgroup, scRNA-seq, intra-tumor cellular heterogeneity, photoreceptor, immune contexture, genetically-engineered mouse models