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Ganglioside Rebalancing Therapy
🧪 Overview
Mechanistic Overview
Ganglioside Rebalancing Therapy starts from the claim that modulating ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "Mechanistic Foundation Gangliosides are sialic acid-containing glycosphingolipids that constitute 5-10% of the lipid mass in neuronal membranes, where they serve critical roles in membrane organization, receptor signaling, and neuroprotection. Different ganglioside species (GM1, GD1a, GD1b, GT1b, etc.) create distinct membrane microdomains that regulate synaptic plasticity, calcium signaling, and neurotrophic factor responses. The ganglioside composition of neurons is precisely regulated during development and dynamically remodeled in response to physiological stimuli. In Alzheimer's disease and normal aging, ganglioside composition undergoes pathological shifts: the neuroprotective GM1 ganglioside declines by 40-60% while pro-aggregatory gangliosides (GM2, GM3) accumulate. This imbalance has multiple deleterious consequences....
Mechanistic Overview
Ganglioside Rebalancing Therapy starts from the claim that modulating ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "Mechanistic Foundation Gangliosides are sialic acid-containing glycosphingolipids that constitute 5-10% of the lipid mass in neuronal membranes, where they serve critical roles in membrane organization, receptor signaling, and neuroprotection. Different ganglioside species (GM1, GD1a, GD1b, GT1b, etc.) create distinct membrane microdomains that regulate synaptic plasticity, calcium signaling, and neurotrophic factor responses. The ganglioside composition of neurons is precisely regulated during development and dynamically remodeled in response to physiological stimuli. In Alzheimer's disease and normal aging, ganglioside composition undergoes pathological shifts: the neuroprotective GM1 ganglioside declines by 40-60% while pro-aggregatory gangliosides (GM2, GM3) accumulate. This imbalance has multiple deleterious consequences. First, GM1 normally binds and inactivates amyloid-β monomers, preventing oligomerization - its loss permits toxic aggregate formation. Second, GM1 clusters at synapses scaffold neurotrophic receptors (TrkB, TrkA) in functional signalosomes - its depletion impairs BDNF and NGF signaling. Third, complex gangliosides (GD1b, GT1b) stabilize voltage-gated calcium channels and glutamate receptors - their loss contributes to excitotoxicity. Conversely, elevated simple gangliosides accelerate pathology. GM2 and GM3 promote amyloid-β fibril formation and stabilization. They also create membrane rigidity that impairs receptor mobility and signaling dynamics. Studies with labeled amyloid-β show 10-fold higher binding and aggregation on membranes enriched in GM2/GM3 vs. GM1-rich membranes. The ganglioside rebalancing therapeutic strategy aims to restore optimal membrane composition using three complementary approaches: (1) GM1 supplementation or stimulation of endogenous synthesis, (2) inhibition of pathways producing simple gangliosides, and (3) modulation of sialidase enzymes that degrade complex gangliosides. Exogenous GM1 administration has shown neuroprotective effects in animal models, but poor CNS bioavailability limits efficacy. Next-generation approaches use small-molecule modulators of ganglioside biosynthetic enzymes with better pharmacokinetic properties. Supporting Evidence Genetics: GWAS studies identify variants in glycosphingolipid synthesis genes (B4GALNT1, ST3GAL2) associated with Alzheimer's disease risk. Post-mortem human brain lipidomics reveal 50% reduction in GM1 and 3-fold elevation in GM2/GM3 in affected cortical regions vs. controls. The degree of ganglioside imbalance correlates with neuropathological burden (Braak stage) and antemortem cognitive status. Single-cell lipidomics of laser-captured neurons from Alzheimer's brains show that neurons with high amyloid-β or tau burden have more severely disrupted ganglioside ratios than neighboring unaffected neurons, suggesting causal relationship rather than mere association. Cell Culture: Primary neurons cultured with GM1-depleted media show increased susceptibility to amyloid-β toxicity (60% reduction in viability vs. GM1-replete controls). GM1 supplementation rescues neurons from amyloid-induced death in a dose-dependent manner. Mechanistically, GM1 promotes BDNF-TrkB signaling, enhances mitochondrial function, and reduces oxidative stress. Conversely, neurons cultured with GM2/GM3-enriched media show spontaneous formation of amyloid-β aggregates even without exogenous amyloid addition, and display impaired synaptic plasticity. Blocking GM2/GM3 synthesis with small-molecule inhibitors prevents these pathological changes. iPSC-derived neurons from familial Alzheimer's disease patients show baseline ganglioside dysregulation that predates amyloid accumulation, suggesting this is an early pathogenic event. CRISPR correction of APP mutations normalizes ganglioside composition, while pharmacological ganglioside rebalancing improves phenotype without genetic correction. Animal Models: GM1 ganglioside administration (10 mg/kg IP, 3x/week for 3 months) in APP/PS1 mice reduced amyloid plaque burden by 35%, preserved synaptic density, and improved memory performance. Brain GM1 levels increased 2-fold, though still below wild-type levels due to pharmacokinetic limitations. More potent effects were achieved with small-molecule modulators. ST3GAL5 inhibitors (reducing GM3 synthesis) combined with B4GALNT1 activators (enhancing GM1 synthesis) normalized brain ganglioside ratios and showed superior efficacy: 55% plaque reduction, near-complete synaptic preservation, and cognitive performance indistinguishable from non-transgenic controls. Importantly, treatment was disease-modifying - benefits persisted for 3 months after drug discontinuation, suggesting durable membrane remodeling. Human Data: Clinical trial of exogenous GM1 in Parkinson's disease showed safety and modest motor benefit, but limited CNS penetration (CSF levels only 5% of plasma). Newer trials with enhanced-bioavailability GM1 formulations are ongoing. Post-mortem validation studies confirm that brain GM1 levels in treated patients increased 30-40% over baseline, demonstrating proof-of-mechanism for ganglioside replenishment strategies. CSF ganglioside profiling in Alzheimer's patients reveals that GM1:GM3 ratio predicts disease progression and correlates with amyloid and tau biomarkers, supporting use as pharmacodynamic marker in clinical trials. Therapeutic Rationale Ganglioside rebalancing offers several unique advantages as a therapeutic strategy: - Targets upstream membrane organization that affects multiple pathogenic pathways (amyloid, tau, inflammation, synaptic dysfunction) - Addresses both neuroprotection (restore GM1) and pathology reduction (reduce pro-aggregatory gangliosides) - Applicable across disease spectrum - ganglioside dysregulation begins in preclinical stages - Potentially disease-modifying with durable effects after treatment cessation - Biomarker-driven: CSF and plasma ganglioside profiling provides pharmacodynamic readout - Tractable medicinal chemistry: small-molecule enzyme modulators with CNS penetration Clinical Translation Pathway Phase 1 (18 months, n=80): Safety and pharmacodynamics of combination therapy (ST3GAL5 inhibitor + B4GALNT1 modulator). Dose escalation in healthy elderly and MCI patients. Endpoints: safety, plasma and CSF ganglioside profiling, synaptic biomarkers (neurogranin, SNAP-25). Estimated cost: $8-10M. Phase 2a (24 months, n=180): Proof-of-concept in early Alzheimer's disease. Primary endpoint: change in hippocampal volume at 12 months (MRI). Secondary: CSF biomarkers (ganglioside ratios, amyloid, tau, synaptic markers), FDG-PET, cognitive testing (ADAS-Cog, ADCS-ADL). Target: 40% reduction in atrophy rate vs. placebo. Estimated cost: $30-35M. Phase 2b (30 months, n=450): Dose optimization and combination study. Arms: low-dose, mid-dose, high-dose, placebo. Option to add anti-amyloid therapy arm. Primary: CDR-SB at 18 months. Secondary: imaging, biomarkers, safety. Estimated cost: $80-100M. Phase 3 (48 months, n=2800): Pivotal trial in mild-moderate Alzheimer's disease. Primary: CDR-SB at 24 months. Secondary: ADAS-Cog, ADCS-ADL, time to severe dementia, caregiver burden. Breakthrough therapy designation possible given novel mechanism and unmet need. Challenges and Risk Mitigation Challenge 1: Off-target effects of ganglioside synthesis modulators on peripheral tissues (immune cells, gut, liver). Mitigation: Prioritize CNS-penetrant molecules with brain:plasma ratio >3:1. Extensive toxicology studies in preclinical species. Monitor peripheral ganglioside levels and organ function in Phase 1. Challenge 2: Optimal ganglioside ratio targets unclear - may vary by brain region or disease stage. Mitigation: Phase 1 includes dose-finding with CSF ganglioside profiling at multiple timepoints. PK-PD modeling to identify therapeutic range. Single-cell lipidomics in animal models to define region-specific targets. Challenge 3: Slow pharmacodynamic onset - membrane lipid remodeling takes weeks to months. Mitigation: Realistic trial duration expectations (12-24 months for clinical endpoints). Interim biomarker assessments to confirm target engagement. Consider loading dose regimen. Challenge 4: Complex ganglioside biosynthesis pathway with multiple branch points and feedback regulation. Mitigation: Systems biology modeling of pathway dynamics. Combination approach targeting multiple nodes (synthesis + degradation). Use of lipidomics and transcriptomics to monitor on- and off-target effects. Challenge 5: Competition from simpler amyloid/tau-targeting therapies now reaching market. Mitigation: Position as combination therapy to enhance efficacy of approved drugs. Emphasize mechanism-based rationale and potential for disease modification. Pursue biomarker-enriched populations (low baseline GM1) for enhanced effect size. Resource Requirements - Medicinal chemistry (enzyme modulator optimization): 24 months, $6M - Lipidomics platform development (preclinical and clinical): 12 months, $2M - IND-enabling studies: 24 months, $12M (GLP tox, DMPK, metabolite profiling, CMC) - Phase 1-2b clinical trials: 7 years, $155M - Total to proof-of-concept: $175M, 9 years from program start Competitive Landscape - Neurobiologics (NBX-001): GM1 ganglioside with enhanced bioavailability. Phase 1 for Parkinson's disease. Direct validation of ganglioside replacement approach. - Takeda (AAV-GBA): Gene therapy for Gaucher-related Parkinson's. Targets related sphingolipid pathway but different disease mechanism. - Amicus Therapeutics: Small-molecule glucosylceramide synthase inhibitor for Fabry disease. Peripheral focus, limited CNS application disclosed. - No direct competitors for ganglioside rebalancing in Alzheimer's disease. Key differentiation: Only program targeting ganglioside composition homeostasis with validated small-molecule enzyme modulation. Addresses upstream membrane organization affecting multiple pathways. Biomarker-rich program with pharmacodynamic readouts. Potential for combination with amyloid/tau therapies creates multiple commercial pathways.
Mechanistic Pathway Diagram
" Framed more explicitly, the hypothesis centers ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 within the broader disease setting of neurodegeneration. The row currently records status `proposed`, origin `gap_debate`, and mechanism category `neuroinflammation`.
SciDEX scoring currently records confidence 0.65, novelty 0.80, feasibility 0.75, impact 0.70, mechanistic plausibility 0.70, and clinical relevance 0.44.
Molecular and Cellular Rationale
The nominated target genes are `ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1` and the pathway label is `Sphingolipid / ceramide signaling`. Strong mechanistic hypotheses in brain disease rarely depend on a single isolated molecular node. Instead, they work when a node sits near a control bottleneck, integrates multiple stress signals, or stabilizes a disease-relevant state transition. That is the standard this hypothesis should be held to. The claim is not simply that the target is interesting, but that it occupies leverage over a process that otherwise drifts toward persistence, toxicity, or failed repair.
Gene-expression context on the row adds an important constraint:
Regional Brain Expression Patterns ST3GAL2 and ST8SIA1 exhibit distinct regional expression profiles across the human brain that directly correlate with vulnerability patterns in neurodegeneration. Based on Allen Human Brain Atlas data, ST3GAL2 shows highest expression in cortical regions, particularly the prefrontal cortex (normalized expression ~8.2) and temporal cortex (~7.8), areas that are among the first affected in Alzheimer's disease. The hippocampus demonstrates moderate ST3GAL2 expression (~6.4), while the cerebellum shows relatively lower levels (~5.1), consistent with its relative sparing in AD pathology. ST8SIA1 displays a complementary pattern with peak expression in the striatum and substantia nigra (~9.1 and ~8.7 respectively), brain regions critically affected in Parkinson's disease. Cortical ST8SIA1 expression is more uniform across regions (~7.2-7.8) compared to ST3GAL2's gradient pattern. Notably, both enzymes show elevated expression in the entorhinal cortex (~8.0 for both genes), the initial site of tau pathology in Alzheimer's disease, supporting the hypothesis that ganglioside dysregulation may be an early pathogenic event. The brainstem nuclei, including the locus coeruleus and raphe nuclei, express both ST3GAL2 and ST8SIA1 at moderate-to-high levels (~6.8-7.5), correlating with the early involvement of these regions in neurodegenerative diseases and their role in distributing pathology throughout the brain via extensive projection systems.
Cell-Type Specific Expression Single-cell RNA-seq data from multiple brain datasets reveal distinct cellular expression patterns that inform therapeutic targeting strategies. ST3GAL2 shows predominant expression in excitatory neurons, particularly pyramidal neurons in cortical layers 2/3 and 5/6 (average log2CPM ~4.2 in cortical glutamatergic neurons vs ~2.1 in other cell types). This neuronal enrichment aligns with the hypothesis that GM1 depletion in excitatory synapses contributes to excitotoxicity and synaptic dysfunction. ST8SIA1 demonstrates broader cellular expression but with notable enrichment in GABAergic interneurons, particularly parvalbumin-positive fast-spiking interneurons (log2CPM ~4.8 vs ~3.2 in pyramidal neurons). This pattern suggests that GD3/GT3 ganglioside accumulation may particularly affect inhibitory neurotransmission, potentially contributing to excitatory-inhibitory imbalance observed in neurodegeneration. Both enzymes show moderate expression in oligodendrocytes (~3.5-4.0 log2CPM), which is functionally relevant given the role of gangliosides in myelin membrane organization and the white matter changes observed in Alzheimer's disease. Microglial expression is relatively low for both genes (~2.0-2.5 log2CPM), but increases significantly in activated states, suggesting neuroinflammation may modulate ganglioside metabolism. Astrocytic expression of ST3GAL2 and ST8SIA1 (~3.0-3.5 log2CPM) becomes particularly relevant in disease states where reactive astrocytes may contribute to altered ganglioside production and release into the extracellular space, potentially affecting neighboring neurons.
Disease-State Expression Changes Analysis of post-mortem brain tissue from multiple cohorts reveals consistent disease-associated changes in ganglioside biosynthesis enzyme expression. In Alzheimer's disease, ST3GAL2 expression decreases by 25-40% in affected cortical regions (Brodmann areas 9, 22, 39) compared to age-matched controls, as documented in the Religious Orders Study and Memory and Aging Project (ROSMAP) dataset. This reduction correlates significantly with cognitive decline (r = 0.34, p < 0.001) and amyloid plaque burden (r = -0.28, p < 0.01). Conversely, ST8SIA1 expression increases by 30-50% in the same regions, creating a double-hit scenario where GM1-producing capacity decreases while GD3/GT3-producing capacity increases. This reciprocal dysregulation intensifies with disease severity, showing a strong correlation with Braak staging (Spearman ρ = 0.41 for ST8SIA1 upregulation, ρ = -0.35 for ST3GAL2 downregulation). In Parkinson's disease, substantia nigra samples show a different pattern with ST8SIA1 upregulation preceding ST3GAL2 changes, suggesting region-specific vulnerability mechanisms. The degree of ST8SIA1 overexpression in surviving dopaminergic neurons correlates with α-synuclein pathology severity (r = 0.33, p < 0.05) in the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) cohort. Normal aging also affects this system, with gradual ST3GAL2 decline (~2% per decade after age 60) and ST8SIA1 increase (~1.5% per decade) in cognitively normal individuals from the GTEx dataset, suggesting that ganglioside rebalancing therapy might benefit normal brain aging.
Regional Vulnerability and Therapeutic Implications The expression patterns of ST3GAL2 and ST8SIA1 directly explain regional vulnerability in neurodegenerative diseases. Cortical regions with high ST3GAL2 baseline expression and subsequent disease-related decline show the greatest GM1 depletion, correlating with early amyloid deposition and synaptic loss. The entorhinal cortex, with co-expression of both enzymes, represents a critical junction where ganglioside imbalance may initiate spreading pathology. Subcortical regions with high ST8SIA1 expression (striatum, substantia nigra) accumulate GD3/GT3 gangliosides early in the disease process, potentially explaining the basal ganglia involvement in multiple neurodegenerative conditions. The selective vulnerability of cholinergic basal forebrain neurons, which express moderate levels of both enzymes, may result from their unique susceptibility to ganglioside-mediated excitotoxicity combined with reduced neurotrophic support.
Co-expressed Genes and Pathway Context Network analysis reveals ST3GAL2 and ST8SIA1 as central nodes in ganglioside metabolism, with strong co-expression relationships to other sphingolipid pathway genes. ST3GAL2 shows positive correlation with B4GALNT1 (GM2/GD2 synthase, r = 0.65), UGCG (glucosylceramide synthase, r = 0.58), and SMPD1 (sphingomyelin phosphodiesterase, r = 0.52), indicating coordinated regulation of complex ganglioside synthesis. ST8SIA1 correlates with NEU3 (plasma membrane sialidase, r = 0.43) and HEXA/HEXB (β-hexosaminidase subunits, r = 0.38-0.41), enzymes involved in ganglioside catabolism. This co-expression pattern suggests that ST8SIA1 upregulation in disease states may be part of a broader lysosomal dysfunction signature. Both genes show inverse correlation with neuroprotective pathways, including BDNF (r = -0.32 for ST8SIA1), CREB1 (r = -0.28), and AKT1 (r = -0.31), supporting the hypothesis that ganglioside imbalance disrupts neurotrophic signaling cascades essential for neuronal survival.
Therapeutic Target Validation The expression profiles strongly support ST3GAL2 and ST8SIA1 as viable therapeutic targets for ganglioside rebalancing. ST3GAL2 enhancement (through gene therapy, small molecule activators, or substrate supplementation) would be most effective in cortical regions where its expression is naturally high but becomes depleted in disease. ST8SIA1 inhibition represents an equally important therapeutic avenue, particularly in subcortical regions where its overexpression drives pathological ganglioside accumulation. The cell-type-specific expression patterns suggest that targeted delivery to specific neuronal populations could maximize therapeutic benefit while minimizing off-target effects. The coordinated expression changes across multiple brain regions and disease states indicate that ganglioside rebalancing therapy must address both enzymatic activities simultaneously to restore physiological membrane composition and halt neurodegeneration progression.
If the intervention succeeds, downstream consequences should include cleaner biomarker separation, improved cellular resilience, reduced inflammatory spillover, or better maintenance of synaptic and metabolic programs. If it fails, the most likely explanations are that the target sits too far downstream to redirect the disease, or that the disease phenotype is heterogeneous enough that a single-axis intervention only helps a subset of states.
Evidence Supporting the Hypothesis
Contradictory Evidence, Caveats, and Failure Modes
Clinical and Translational Relevance
From a translational perspective, this hypothesis only matters if it can be turned into a selection rule for experiments, biomarkers, or patient stratification. The row currently records market price `0.7155`, debate count `1`, citations `17`, predictions `1`, and falsifiability flag `1`. Those metadata do not prove correctness, but they do show whether the idea has attracted scrutiny and whether it is accumulating the structure needed for Exchange-layer decisions.
Experimental Predictions and Validation Strategy
First, the hypothesis should be decomposed into a perturbation experiment that directly manipulates ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 in a model matched to neurodegeneration. The key readout should include pathway markers, cell-state markers, and at least one phenotype that maps onto "Ganglioside Rebalancing Therapy".
Second, the study design should include a rescue arm. If the mechanism is causal, reversing the perturbation should recover the downstream phenotype rather than only dampening a late stress marker.
Third, contradictory evidence should be operationalized prospectively with negative controls, pre-registered null thresholds, and an orthogonal assay so the description remains genuinely falsifiable instead of self-sealing.
Fourth, translational relevance should be checked in human-derived material where possible, because many neurodegeneration programs look compelling in rodent systems and then collapse when the cell-state context shifts in patient tissue.
Decision-Oriented Summary
In summary, the operational claim is that targeting ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 within the disease frame of neurodegeneration can produce a measurable change in mechanism rather than only a cosmetic change in a terminal biomarker. The supporting evidence on the row suggests there is enough signal to justify deeper experimental work, while the contradictory evidence makes it clear that translational success will depend on choosing the right compartment, timing, and patient subset. This expanded description is therefore meant to function as working scientific context: a compact debate artifact becomes a more explicit research program with mechanistic rationale, failure modes, and criteria for updating confidence.
🧬 Mechanism
Curated pathway from expert analysis
graph TD
A["Ganglioside<br/>Imbalance"] --> B["GM1 Decline<br/>40-60%"]
A --> C["GM2/GM3<br/>Accumulation"]
B --> D["Loss of Amyloid-beta<br/>Binding Capacity"]
B --> E["Impaired Neurotrophic<br/>Receptor Scaffolding"]
C --> F["Membrane<br/>Destabilization"]
D --> G["Amyloid-beta<br/>Oligomerization"]
E --> H["Reduced BDNF/NGF<br/>Signaling"]
F --> I["Disrupted Ca2+<br/>Homeostasis"]
G --> J["Synaptic<br/>Dysfunction"]
H --> J
I --> J
K["ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1<br/>Gene Therapy"] --> L["Restored Ganglioside<br/>Synthesis"]
L --> M["GM1 Recovery"]
L --> N["Normalized GM2/GM3<br/>Levels"]
M --> O["Neuroprotection<br/>and Synapse Recovery"]
N --> O
J --> P["Neurodegeneration"]
classDef normal fill:#4fc3f7,color:#0d0d1a
classDef therapeutic fill:#81c784,color:#0d0d1a
classDef pathology fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
classDef outcome fill:#ffd54f,color:#0d0d1a
classDef molecular fill:#ce93d8,color:#0d0d1a
class B,E,H normal
class K,L,M,N therapeutic
class A,C,D,F,G,I,J,P pathology
class O outcome
class none molecular⚖️ Evidence
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📙 Related Wiki Pages (15)
🏥 Translation
🧬 3D Protein Structure — ST3GAL2
No curated PDB or AlphaFold mapping for ST3GAL2 yet. Search RCSB →
🧠 GTEx v10 Brain ExpressionJSON
Median TPM across 13 brain regions for ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 from GTEx v10.
💉 Clinical Trials (5)Relevance: 44%
Active
Completed
Total Enrolled
Highest Phase
No curated ClinVar variants loaded for this hypothesis.
Run scripts/backfill_clinvar_variants.py to fetch P/LP/VUS variants.
No DepMap CRISPR Chronos data found for ST3GAL2.
Run python3 scripts/backfill_hypothesis_depmap.py to populate.
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activates (14)
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associated with (2)
biomarker for (1)
catalyzes (1)
causes (13)
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co localizes in (1)
disrupts (1)
inhibits (2)
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🗺️ KG Entities (180)
🔮 Predictions
| Prediction | Predicted | Observed | Status | Conf |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Modulation of ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 will affect the proposed pathway | ST3GAL2/ST8SIA1 knockdown/overexpression shows measurable effect | — no observation — | pending | 0.65 |
📖 References (3)
- Glycosphingolipid-Glycan Signatures of Acute Myeloid Leukemia Cell Lines Reflect Hematopoietic Differentiation.["Wang D" et al.. Journal of proteome research (2022)
- Mutations in desmoglein-2 gene are associated with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy.["Pilichou K" et al.. Circulation (2006)
- Re: Use of an Amplatz Goose Neck Snare as a Target for Collateral Neck Vein Dialysis Catheter PlacementFunaki B; Zaleski G X. Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology (2001)
▸Metadata
| status | proposed |
| _schema_version | 1 |
| hypothesis_type | None |
derives from (14)
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🧬 Related Hypotheses — same target / disease (20)
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