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- Q5769426 subject Q7233066.
- Q5769426 abstract "Hirano bodies are intracellular aggregates of actin and actin-associated proteins first observed in neurons (nerve cells) by Asao Hirano in 1965.Hirano bodies are found in the nerve cells of individuals afflicted with certain neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.Hirano bodies are often described as rod-shaped, crystal-like, and eosinophilic (pink after staining with haematoxylin and eosin). They are frequently seen in hippocampal pyramidal cells. An experimental model of Hirano body formation has been reported, using a genetically altered strain of the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum.Hirano bodies have been noted as a function of age without obvious underlying neurodegeration.".
- Q5769426 wikiPageExternalLink hirano_bodies.htm.
- Q5769426 wikiPageExternalLink research-slime.html.
- Q5769426 wikiPageExternalLink 3582.html.
- Q5769426 wikiPageExternalLink 463013735&referer=brief_results.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q108576.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q11081.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q1146112.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q1755122.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q185269.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q310364.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q390551.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q422637.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q43054.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q4803565.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q48360.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q49989.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q645285.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q7233066.
- Q5769426 wikiPageWikiLink Q949817.
- Q5769426 comment "Hirano bodies are intracellular aggregates of actin and actin-associated proteins first observed in neurons (nerve cells) by Asao Hirano in 1965.Hirano bodies are found in the nerve cells of individuals afflicted with certain neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.Hirano bodies are often described as rod-shaped, crystal-like, and eosinophilic (pink after staining with haematoxylin and eosin).".
- Q5769426 label "Hirano body".