Not exact matches
The work,
published in
Molecular Psychiatry in April, pooled results from 11
studies to analyze data from over 20,000 volunteers.
The
study, led by Dr Len Stephens and Dr Phill Hawkins and
published today in the journal
Molecular Cell, reveals why loss of the PTEN gene has such an impact on many people with prostate cancer, as well as in some breast cancers.
«Organisms can deal with these stressful transitions from warm to cold by either acclimating - think about dogs putting on their winter coats - or by populations genetically evolving to deal with new stresses, a phenomenon known as rapid climate adaptation,» said Alison Gerken, a post-doctoral associate with UF's Department of
Molecular Genetics and Microbiology and the lead author of a new
study,
published this month in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
In a new
study published in EPJE, physicists have developed an algorithm to simulate the
molecular dynamics of these patchy particles.
The UI
study, which was
published March 28 online in the journal
Molecular Psychiatry, adds to the accumulating evidence, including recent human
studies from Harvard University, that suggests cerebellar stimulation might help improve cognitive problems in patients with schizophrenia.
In particular, the
study,
published Jan. 6 in the journal
Molecular Psychiatry, revealed differences in the white matter of patients» brains and in the cerebellum, an area of the brain not previously linked with the disorder.
In this new
study published in Nature Communications, Mariaceleste Aragona, Sophie Dekoninck and colleagues define the clonal dynamics and the
molecular mechanisms that lead to tissue repair in the skin epidermis.
The
study,
published in Nature Structural and
Molecular Biology, showed that a combination of genetics and epigenetics — factors that turn genes on or off — could explain how lactose intolerance develops over time.
Last year, UC San Diego nanoengineers led by Professor Y. Shirley Meng
published a detailed
molecular study addressing this question.
The
study, which is
published in the journal
Molecular Psychiatry, describes a possible mechanism for how the gene variant produces clinical symptoms by affecting levels of specific proteins in the brain.
In a
study published in the May 29, 2014, edition of
Molecular Ecology Resources, Duke researchers Peter Larsen, Ryan Campbell and Anne Yoder used high - throughput sequencing on sifaka blood samples to generate sequence data for more than 150,000 different sifaka antibodies — protective molecules that latch on to bacteria, viruses and other foreign invaders in the body and fight them off before they cause infection.
A new
study published today in
Molecular Neuropsychiatry helps explain why.
«Our goal here was to understand the
molecular underpinnings of an important evolutionary transition, not to create a «dino - chicken» simply for the sake of it,» said Bhullar, lead author of the
study,
published online May 12 in the journal Evolution.
Published in
Molecular Neurobiology, the
study led by Dr Elodie Siney under the supervision of Dr Sandrine Willaime - Morawek, Lecturer in Stem Cells and Brain Repair at the University, analysed how enzymes called ADAMs affect the movement and function of the human tumor cells.
And last month, Gwendal Dujardin, a postdoctoral fellow from France (a rare sight in an Argentine lab),
published a splicing
study in
Molecular Cell (G. Dujardin et al..
«The physical and chemical processes that follow radiolysis release
molecular hydrogen (H2), which is a molecule of astrobiological interest,» said Alexis Bouquet, lead author of the
study published in the May edition of Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Lorson's
study, «Morpholino antisense oligonucleotides targeting intronic repressor Element1 improve phenotype in SMA mouse models,» was
published in September 2014 in the Journal of Human
Molecular Genetics.
A new
study published in Nature Communications by researchers from the MRC Centre for Developmental Neurobiology (MRC CDN) at IoPPN, carried out in collaboration with the Tian lab at the Rutgers New Jersey Medical School (USA), unravels how this synchrony is achieved at the
molecular level.
Published in the peer - reviewed journal Systems Biology in Reproductive Medicine, the
study, «Sperm RNA elements as markers of health,» from the lab of Stephen A. Krawetz, Ph.D., the Charlotte B. Failing Professor of Fetal Therapy and Diagnosis in the Wayne State Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Center for
Molecular Medicine and Genetics, indicates that RNA found in male sperm not only shows promise as a determinant in successful live birth, it may also tell us more about the health of a child as it matures.
Published in the journal
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, the
study also found that use of a second inhibitor might improve the effectiveness of these drugs by possibly preventing resistance, and it recommends that clinical trials should be designed to include a second inhibitor.
The researchers led by
study director Annette Schürmann, Robert Schwenk and Anne Kammel of DIfE recently
published their findings in the journal Human
Molecular Genetics.
The latest findings reinforce a 2016 Storz - led
study published in the journal Science, which was the first to establish that vertebrate species can follow different
molecular - level paths to reach the same adaptation.
What you get is a corannulene (C20H10), a molecule that, according to a just -
published study conducted with SISSA's collaboration, could be an important component of future «
molecular circuits,» that is, circuits miniaturized to the size of molecules, to be used for various kinds of electronic devices (transistors, diodes, etc.).
A
study published in Nature Communications, led by the Max Delbrück Center for
Molecular Medicine (MDC) and Charité — Universitätsmedizin Berlin, has found five genetic risk loci that point to the importance of skin and mucous membrane barriers and the immune system in the development of food allergies.
In a new
study published in the journal Nature Structural and
Molecular Biology researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have shown that a subtle epigenetic change plays an important role in the correct segregation of chromosomes.
According to a
study published on the journal
Molecular Biology and Evolution, most genes involved in complex processes are present in sponges.
The
study,
published in
Molecular Cell, describes the new antibiotic and, for the first time, how it works.
In a
study recently
published in the journal Human
Molecular Genetics the researchers have examined how the genes are changed in smokers and users of non-smoke tobacco.
Two recent
studies describe these kinds of mechanisms: one of them,
published in the journal
Molecular Systems Biology, describes the process through which cells stop growing due cell differentiation; the second one,
published in Journal of Cell Science, describes plants» cell replenishment after being damaged.
«The ability to identify the glycan fingerprint on HIV's glycoprotein will help us develop a vaccine that matches what is found on the virus,» said James Paulson, Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Chair of Chemistry at TSRI and co-chair of the Department of
Molecular Medicine, who led the
study published in the journal Nature Communications.
A new
study published in The Journal of
Molecular Diagnostics has established that hybrid - capture sequencing is the method of choice for sequencing «actionable» gene mutations across the most common forms of lymphoid cancer.
The
study outlining the framework,
published in the journal
Molecular Ecology Resources, focuses on the grey long - eared bat and shows that its populations in Spain and Portugal are particularly at risk as conditions there become too harsh.
The
study, which was conducted in collaboration with researchers at the TU Dresden and the Institute of
Molecular Biology Mainz, both in Germany, were
published in the journal EMBO Reports in May 2017.
A team led by Latha Venkataraman, professor of applied physics and chemistry at Columbia Engineering and Xavier Roy, assistant professor of chemistry (Arts & Sciences),
published a
study today in Nature Nanotechnology that is the first to reproducibly demonstrate current blockade — the ability to switch a device from the insulating to the conducting state where charge is added and removed one electron at a time — using atomically precise
molecular clusters at room temperature.
A recent
study published in Cell Chemical Biology has revealed new insights into a
molecular pathway that leads to Staphylococcus aureus virulence.
This
study,
published in the journal
Molecular Ecology Resources, presents a revolutionary tool to process a very large number of samples in parallel, allowing wide coverage of the monitored sites in a reduced time and at a lower cost.
The
study,
published in the journal eLife, provides a valuable model for uncovering the basic
molecular mechanisms governing the interplay of immunity and regeneration, and could point the way toward new therapies to combat serious human ailments like chronic non-healing wounds.
A new Tel Aviv University
study,
published in the Journal of
Molecular Neuroscience, may pave the way for improving the efficacy of lithium in these patients.
said Ehrenreich, assistant professor of
molecular biology at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, and corresponding author of a paper on the
study that was
published by PLOS Genetics on May 1.
A new
study published in eLife and headed by Jordi Casanova and Sofía J. Araújo, both scientists at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) and the Instituto de Biología
Molecular de Barcelona (IBMB - CSIC), describes a cell communication mechanism that allows the organisation of the extracellular matrix and how this structure affects cells through a feedback system.
In a
study published July 15 in ACS Central Science, a team of chemists from the University of Wisconsin - Madison introduces a new approach that uses a
molecular catalyst system instead of solid catalysts.
«We have confirmed this earlier appearance of the Iberian lynx based on initial
molecular studies that estimate the emergence of this feline during the Early Pleistocene in the Iberian Peninsula,» asserts Alberto Boscaini, a researcher at the Miquel Crusafont Catalan Institute of Palaeontology (ICP) and the main author of this
study published by Quaternary Science Reviews.
The
study, led by TSRI Associate Professor Jun - Li Luo, was
published online ahead of print in the journal
Molecular Cell.
A
study published in
Molecular Cancer Research reveals that a tumor suppressor gene p16 is turned off by a histone mutation (H3.3 K27M), which is found in up to 70 percent of childhood brain tumors called diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG).
Jean - Pierre Issa, MD, Director of the Fels Institute for Cancer Research and
Molecular Biology at Temple University School of Medicine and co-Leader of the Cancer Epigenetics Program at the Fox Chase Cancer Center is lead author of the
study, which has been
published August 19 in the journal, Lancet Oncology.
Using single cell transcriptogenomics to probe the cell's defense mechanisms,
study published in Mutation Research — Fundamental and
Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis
The
study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, were
published in the journal
Molecular Therapy.
However, the work
published on
Molecular Psychiatry and first signed by the expert Claudio Toma provides an innovative view on the
study of ASDs genetics: «It is the first time that mutations transmitted to children by any of the progenitors are
studied in a genomic perspective.
In a new
study published in
Molecular Psychiatry the researchers describe how cells from patients with the severe developmental disease lissencephaly differ from healthy cells.
The
study was recently
published in
Molecular Cell and featured on its cover.