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 81 - 100 de 3,096
81.
Moonlight in Vermont illuminates plant development - Voinnet, Olivier; Baumann, Kim
A report on the FASEB summer research conference 'Mechanisms in plant development', Saxtons River, USA, 5-9 August 2006.
82.
Arrestins: ubiquitous regulators of cellular signaling pathways - Gurevich, Eugenia V; Gurevich, Vsevolod V
The arrestins are a small family of proteins that regulate the signaling and trafficking of G-protein-coupled receptors and also serve as ubiquitous signaling regulators in the cytoplasm and nucleus.
83.
Functional genomics of the yeast DNA-damage response - Cagney, Gerard; Alvaro, David; Reid, Robert JD; Thorpe, Peter H; Rothstein, Rodney; Krogan, Nevan J
Two high-throughput studies of the DNA-damage response in yeast reveal new regulatory pathways and genes involved.
85.
A bright future for Chlamydomonas - Manuell, Andrea L; Mayfield, Stephen P
A report on the 12th International Conference on the Cell and Molecular Biology of Chlamydomonas, Portland, USA, 9-14 May 2006.
86.
Fly's time - Petsko, Gregory A
The struggle between public and private efforts to sequence the fly genome is the subject of Michael Ashburner's new book, Won for All: How the Drosophila Genome Was Sequenced
87.
Regulatory RNAs and the demise of 'junk' DNA - Slack, Frank J
A report of the meeting 'Regulatory RNAs', the 71st Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology, Cold Spring Harbor, USA, 31 May-5 July 2006.
89.
The tree of one percent - Dagan, Tal; Martin, William
As lateral gene transfer among prokaryotes and endosymbiotic gene transfer (from organelles) among eukaryotes are fundamentally not tree-like in nature, biologists need to depart from the notion that all genomes are related by a single bifurcating tree.
91.
Lipids join the post-genomic era - Bauer, Reinhard; Imhof, Axel
A report of the meeting 'From Proteomics to Lipidomics - Basics, Advances and Applications', Bonn, Germany, 30 June-1 July 2006.
93.
Getting a buzz out of the bee genome - Ashburner, Michael; Kyriacou, Charalambos P
The honey bee Apis mellifera displays the most complex behavior of any insect. This, and its utility
to humans, makes it a fascinating object of study for biologists. Such studies are now further enabled by the release of the honey-bee genome sequence.
94.
Developmental genomics reaches new heights - Rallis, Charalampos
A report on the EMBO/SNF symposium 'The Genomics of Development', Arolla, Switzerland, 21-27 August 2006.
95.
Transformation - Petsko, Gregory A
The Nobel process for science are often somewhat controversial for who they omit. A posthumous Nobel honor could help recognize some neglected heroes.
97.
Proteomics gets faster and smarter - Johnson, Hannah; Gaskell, Simon J
A report on the third annual joint meeting of the British Society for Proteome Research and the European Bioinformatics Institute, Hinxton, UK, 12-14 July 2006.
100.
Do the math - Petsko, Gregory A
Statistics is the one branch of mathematics that everybody should be able to grasp - and all biologists should be required to do so.