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Transcriptional profiling and single-cell chimerism analysis identifies human tissue resident T cells in the human skin after allogeneic stem cell transplantation

Gustavo P. de Almeida, Peter Lichtner, Sophia Mädler, Chang-Feng Chu, Christina E. Zielinski
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.11.037101
Gustavo P. de Almeida
1Institute of Virology, Technical University of Munich, Germany
2TranslaTUM, Technical University of Munich, Germany
3German Center for Infection Research, Munich, Germany
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Peter Lichtner
4Genome Analysis Center, Helmholtz Zentrum Munich, Germany
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Sophia Mädler
1Institute of Virology, Technical University of Munich, Germany
2TranslaTUM, Technical University of Munich, Germany
3German Center for Infection Research, Munich, Germany
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Chang-Feng Chu
1Institute of Virology, Technical University of Munich, Germany
2TranslaTUM, Technical University of Munich, Germany
3German Center for Infection Research, Munich, Germany
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Christina E. Zielinski
1Institute of Virology, Technical University of Munich, Germany
2TranslaTUM, Technical University of Munich, Germany
3German Center for Infection Research, Munich, Germany
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  • For correspondence: christina.zielinski@tum.de
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Posted April 13, 2020.
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Transcriptional profiling and single-cell chimerism analysis identifies human tissue resident T cells in the human skin after allogeneic stem cell transplantation
Gustavo P. de Almeida, Peter Lichtner, Sophia Mädler, Chang-Feng Chu, Christina E. Zielinski
bioRxiv 2020.04.11.037101; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.11.037101
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Transcriptional profiling and single-cell chimerism analysis identifies human tissue resident T cells in the human skin after allogeneic stem cell transplantation
Gustavo P. de Almeida, Peter Lichtner, Sophia Mädler, Chang-Feng Chu, Christina E. Zielinski
bioRxiv 2020.04.11.037101; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.11.037101

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