Publicidad

Publicidad

becas.universia.netBiblioteca.Net

Buscar recursos:

Buscador Google

rss_1.0 Recursos de colección

PubMed Central (PMC3 - NLM DTD) (2,081,148 recursos)
Archive of life sciences journal literature at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), developed and managed by NIH's National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) in the National Library of Medicine (NLM).

Mostrando recursos 61 - 80 de 3,096

61. Targeting Drosophila eye development - Jemc, Jennifer; Rebay, Ilaria
New target genes of Eyeless, a key transcription factor in Drosophila eye development, have been identified.

62. Enigma variations: control of sexual fate in nematode germ cells - Ellis, Ronald E
Spermatogenesis in two species of Caenorhabditis is under quite different genetic controls.

63. The Heterochromatin Protein 1 family - Lomberk, Gwen; Wallrath, Lori; Urrutia, Raul
Members of the Heterochromatin Protein 1 (HP1) family contain a chromodomain and a chromoshadow domain and bind to methylated histone H3 as well as to proteins involved in a wide variety of nuclear functions.

64. Immunological applications of genomics - Monticelli, Silvia; Sharma, Sonia; Rao, Anjana
A report of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory meeting 'Gene Expression and Signaling in the Immune System', Cold Spring Harbor, New York, USA, 26-30 April 2006.

65. Evidence for intelligent (algorithm) design - Srinivasan, Balaji S; Do, Chuong B; Batzoglou, Serafim
A report on the 10th annual Research in Computational Molecular Biology (RECOMB) Conference, Venice, Italy, 2-5 April 2006.

66. Toxicity in mice expressing short hairpin RNAs gives new insight into RNAi - Snøve, Ola; Rossi, John J
A popular method of RNA interference shows levels of toxicity in mice that could limit its therapeutic potential.

67. Protein-protein interaction networks in the spinocerebellar ataxias - Rubinsztein, David C
A large yeast two-hybrid study shows that some proteins mutated in different spinocerebellar ataxias have interacting protein partners in common.

68. The peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) - Dziarski, Roman; Gupta, Dipika
Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) are found in insects, mollusks, echinoderms, and vertebrates, and they protect animals against infections. The four mammalian family members are either bactericidal proteins or amidases that hydrolyze bacterial peptidoglycan.

69. The future is genome-wide - Deutsch, Samuel; Reymond, Alexandre
A report of the annual meeting of the European Society of Human Genetics, Amsterdam, 6-9 May 2006.

70. Advances in the genetics and epigenetics of gene regulation and human disease - Kleivi, Kristine
A report on the Human Genome Organisation (HUGO) 11th Human Genome Meeting, Helsinki, Finland, 31 May-3 June 2006.

71. Senior moments - Petsko, Gregory A
The problem with reaching 'senior faculty' status is the feeling that you have nothing much to contribute except experience, but the recently announced Neanderthal Genome Project might put things into perspective.

72. Genomics - from Neanderthals to high-throughput sequencing - Wakefield, Matthew John
A report on 'The Biology of Genomes' meeting, Cold Spring Harbor, USA, 10-14 May 2006.

73. Unraveling the transcriptional network controlling ES cell pluripotency - Rao, Sridhar; Orkin, Stuart H
Separate transcriptional pathways have been delineated for the maintenance of the undifferentiated state and for self-renewal in embryonic stem cells.

74. Fast, cheap and somewhat in control - Arkin, Adam P; Fletcher, Daniel A
Various practical challenges involved in controlling living organisms must be surmounted if synthetic biology is to be productive.

75. A model worth considering? - Petsko, Gregory A
A business-science hybrid model for medical research that focuses on collaboration rather than competition seems worth exploring.

76. The chemokine and chemokine receptor superfamilies and their molecular evolution - Zlotnik, Albert; Yoshie, Osamu; Nomiyama, Hisayuki
Tandem gene duplication has taken place independently in the mouse and human lineages of some chemokine families, so care needs to be taken when extrapolating experimental results on chemokines from mouse to human

77. Taking care of Dad's DNA - Maruyama, Rika; Singson, Andrew
Proteomic analysis in C. elegans has uncovered sperm chromatin-packaging factors necessary for male fertility.

78. Photosynthesis: what color was its origin? - Xiong, Jin
Recent studies suggest several alternative evolutionary scenarios for the origin of photosynthesis.

79. The many routes to regulating mRNA translation - Baker, Kristian E; Coller, Jeff
A report on the meeting 'Translational Control' at Cold Spring Harbor, New York, 6-10 September 2006.

80. Harry Potter and the structural biologist's (Key)stone - Devos, Damien; Kalinina, Olga V; Russell, Robert B
A report on the first European Keystone symposium 'Multi-protein complexes involved in cell regulation', Cambridge, UK, 18-23 August 2006.

Página de resultados:
Anterior  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12  13  Siguiente