Cite
Analysis of a large prostate cancer family identifies novel and recurrent gene fusion events providing evidence for inherited predisposition.
MLA
Raspin, Kelsie, et al. “Analysis of a Large Prostate Cancer Family Identifies Novel and Recurrent Gene Fusion Events Providing Evidence for Inherited Predisposition.” The Prostate, vol. 82, no. 5, Apr. 2022, pp. 540–50. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1002/pros.24300.
APA
Raspin, K., O’Malley, D. E., Marthick, J. R., Donovan, S., Malley, R. C., Banks, A., Redwig, F., Skala, M., Dickinson, J. L., & FitzGerald, L. M. (2022). Analysis of a large prostate cancer family identifies novel and recurrent gene fusion events providing evidence for inherited predisposition. The Prostate, 82(5), 540–550. https://doi.org/10.1002/pros.24300
Chicago
Raspin, Kelsie, Dannielle E O’Malley, James R Marthick, Shaun Donovan, Roslyn C Malley, Annette Banks, Frank Redwig, Marketa Skala, Joanne L Dickinson, and Liesel M FitzGerald. 2022. “Analysis of a Large Prostate Cancer Family Identifies Novel and Recurrent Gene Fusion Events Providing Evidence for Inherited Predisposition.” The Prostate 82 (5): 540–50. doi:10.1002/pros.24300.