𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
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CYSTIC DISEASE AND CILIOPATHIES

✍ Scribed by Hoshino, J.; Suwabe, T.; Sumida, K.; Mise, K.; Hayami, N.; Kawada, M.; Imafuku, A.; Hiramatsu, R.; Hasegawa, E.; Sawa, N.; Ubara, Y.; Takaichi, K.; Yamamoto, J.; Ishikawa, Y.; Nakagaki, T.; Shibazaki, S.; Nishio, S.; Atsumi, T.; Westland, R.; Verbitsky, M.; Vukojevic, K.; Perry, B. J.; Fasel, D. A.; Zwijnenburg, P. J. G.; Gille, J. J. P.; Bokenkamp, A.; D'Agati, V. D.; Gharavi, A. G.; Schreuder, M. F.; Van Wijk, J. A. E.; Sanna-Cherchi, S.; Rodriguez, D.; Riwanto, M.; Edenhofer, I.; Segerer, S.; Wuthrich, R. P.; Kapoor, S.; Raaijmakers, A. M. J.; Mekahli, D.; Van Dyck, M.; Corveleyn, A.; Allegaert, K.; Deviendt, K.; Kuypers, D.; Claes, K.; Levtchenko, E. N.


Book ID
125516527
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Weight
136 KB
Volume
29
Category
Article
ISSN
0931-0509

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## Abstract Ubiquitous in nature, cilia and flagella comprise nearly identical structures with similar functions. The most obvious example of the latter is motility: driving movement of the organism or particle flow across the epithelial surface in fixed structures. In vertebrates, such motile cili