Ferris,
first author of the new study who led trials of the quadrivalent vaccine in 2002, says the earlier, shorter - term evaluation clearly indicated the vaccine worked.
«As our nation as a whole is learning, it's important to reduce risky opioid - related prescribing,» says Lewei Allison Lin, M.D.,
the first author of the new study and an addiction fellow in the U-M Department of Psychiatry who trained in the VA system.
«It was surprising that many classic characteristics of orchids — the tiny, dust - like seeds, the role of fungi in triggering germination, the fused male - female flower parts that define the orchid flower — did not trigger the acceleration in species formation,» says Thomas Givnish, a professor of botany and
first author of the new study.
«This suggested that fungal symbionts that colonize plants which are deficient in lipid biosynthesis suffer from a lack of essential lipids,» says Andreas Keymer, a PhD student in Gutjahr's group and
first author of the new study.
Hope Mirendil, an alumna of the TSRI graduate program and
first author of the new study, spearheaded the effort to develop the first - ever animal model of fetal cerebral hemorrhage.
Boyd is
the first author of a new study, published in the March 18 issue of the journal Nature Communications, detailing the new manufacturing process and the novel properties of the graphene it produces.
However, animals that had mutations with Pcdha9, but not Sap130, can display defects in the aorta, but with normal - sized left ventricles, suggesting interaction between the two genes is needed to cause all the features of HLHS,» said Xiaoqin Liu, M.D., Ph.D.,
the first author of the new study and a research instructor in Lo's lab.
«After watching the photoanodes run at record performance without any noticeable degradation for 24 hours, and then 100 hours, and then 500 hours, I knew we had done what scientists had failed to do before,» says Ke Sun, a postdoc in Lewis's lab and
the first author of the new study.
«The ability to control the functional states of opioid receptors is of particular interest because they belong to the large family of so - called G - protein - coupled transmembrane receptors (GPCRs), which make up a large fraction of the proteins targeted by pharmaceutical agents,» says Matthias Schönberger,
first author of the new study.
«Our finding of a link between bipolar disorder and the striatum at the molecular level complements studies that implicate the same brain region in bipolar disorder at the anatomical level, including functional imaging studies that show altered activity in the striatum of bipolar subjects during tasks that involve balancing reward and risk,» said TRSI Research Associate Rodrigo Pacifico, who was
first author of the new study.
«We found the IFG2 gene marks the beginning of reprogramming to hematopoietic cells,» said Dr. Masatoshi Nishizawa, a hematologist in the Yoshida lab and
first author of the new study.
Gidon is
the first author of the new study.
«When Europeans arrived, some of those populations were wiped out completely,» says Bastien Llamas, a geneticist also at the University of Adelaide and
first author of the new study.
«In the bovine embryo, we found precisely the opposite effect,» says Kilian Simmet,
first author of the new study.
The wind pushes them out to the open sea, where they ultimately break up into smaller pieces and melt in the course of two to three years,» explains Thomas Rackow, a climate modeller at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven / Germany and
first author of the new study.
The team leader and
first author of the new study, Héctor Arce (Yale University, USA) explains that «ALMA's exquisite sensitivity allows the detection of previously unseen features in this source, like this very fast outflow.
That's a paradigm shift, because «the popular idea was that the GFAP protein would not be degraded as quickly,» says Laura Moody, a former postdoctoral researcher in Messing's lab and
first author of the new study.
Not exact matches
Jon Levs,
author of All in: How Our Work -
First Culture Fails Dads, Families, and Businesses — And How We Can Fix It Together,
studied the effect
of paid leave in California and
New Jersey, which have paid family leave programs, and found that the majority
of businesses reported that their state's paid leave programs had either no effect or a positive effect on their business.
To assume that Christian
authors of the
New Testament in the
first century could have known what God had said elsewhere, and that Christian thinkers
of the 20th century, on the basis
of that Scripture, could pass judgment on any non-Christian revelation without thoroughly objective and unbiased
study would be, at the very least, parochial.
«This case presents scurvy as a
new and severe complication
of improper use
of almond beverage in the
first year
of life,» the case
study authors write.
The
authors of the
new study have proposed that the Haarlem specimen be assigned to a
new genus, for which they suggest the name Ostromia — in honor
of the American paleontologist John Ostrom, who
first identified the fossil as a theropod dinosaur.
The lead
author of the
new study, Guillem Anglada [1], from the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC), Granada, Spain, explains the significance
of this find: «The dust around Proxima is important because, following the discovery
of the terrestrial planet Proxima b, it's the
first indication
of the presence
of an elaborate planetary system, and not just a single planet, around the star closest to our Sun.»
The
new study covers the entire U.S. West, from the High Plains states to the Pacific coast, and provides the
first detailed look at how groundwater recharge may change as the climate changes, said senior
author Thomas Meixner, UA professor and associate department head
of hydrology and atmospheric sciences.
But in a
study published in this week's advance online publication
of the journal Nature, Peters, the
first author of the paper, and his colleagues found that the motor cortex itself plays an active role in learning
new motor movements.
The
new results, published in the Journal
of General Internal Medicine, give the
first objective evidence
of a phenomenon that senior
author Srijan Sen, M.D., Ph.D. and his colleagues have
studied for years.
«These findings open doors to developing
new drugs against Ebola,» added Zachary Bornholdt, Ph.D., senior staff scientist and
first author of the
study.
Cara Ebbeling
of the
New Balance Foundation Obesity Prevention Center at Boston Children's Hospital,
first author on the
study, and her colleagues have found that what you eat can significantly affect your metabolism rate.
As the
authors of the
new research explain: «There are three main levels
of analysis in the
study of proteins: the
first is the sequence
of amino acids, the second is the three - dimensional structure that these filaments take on a very short time after they are synthesized, while the third regards their function.
«Two percent sounds small,» says Krishnan Bhaskaran, a researcher at the London School
of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and lead
author on the
new study, «but the reason it's important is the whole population is exposed to the weather, and heart attacks are common in the
first place.»
«These data show for the
first time that obesity is associated with increased DNA damage in breast epithelium
of BRCA mutation carriers,» lead
study author Priya Bhardwaj, a Ph.D. student at Weill Cornell Medicine in
New York, N.Y., and colleagues write in their abstract.
«Our findings present
new potential targets for therapeutic regulation
of cross-presentation,» said Filippo Veglia, Ph.D.,
first author of the
study and staff scientist in the Gabrilovich Lab.
«The imaging technique could shed light on the immune dysfunction that underpins a broad range
of neuroinflammatory diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and addiction,» said Christine Sandiego, PhD, lead
author of the
study and a researcher from the department
of psychiatry at the Yale School
of Medicine in
New Haven, Conn. «This is the
first human
study that accurately measures this immune response in the brain.
For Dr. Christophe Dufresnes from the University
of Lausanne,
first author of the common
study just published in Scientific Reports, this «suggests that the undifferentiated sex chromosomes in these tree frogs contribute more to the evolution
of new species than other, normal chromosomes.»
The
authors conclude that the
study of marine mammals is just the
first demonstration
of this
new evolutionary approach, and is versatile enough to be applied to many other emerging questions concerning key genes involved in the diversity
of life.
«This is the
first time [stimulated movement has] been linked to signals recorded from within the brain,» says biomedical engineer Chad Bouton, one
of the
study's
authors and vice president
of advanced engineering and technology at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset,
New York.
For the
new study, researchers in Diamond's laboratory, led by
first author Helen Lazear, PhD, now at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, tested five strains
of the Zika virus in the mice: the original strain acquired from Uganda in 1947; three strains that circulated in Senegal in the 1980s; and the French Polynesian strain, which caused infections in 2013 and is nearly identical to the strain causing the current outbreak.
Postdoctoral researcher Anat Milo, the
study's
first author, says use
of the
new method «can assist the design
of reactions with fewer byproducts and much less waste, and the reactions would be more efficient.
The strong response to this
new use
of enzalutamide shows that it can provide a viable, less toxic alternative to chemotherapy in staving off the disease in men who aren't responding to standard
first line hormonal treatments,» said Tomasz Beer, M.D., the lead
author on the
study and deputy director
of the Knight Cancer Institute at OHSU.
«The
new knowledge we have gained facilitates the design
of prophylactic and therapeutic measures for delaying tumour progression and extending cancer - free periods in RDEB,» says Venugopal Rao Mittapalli, the
first author of the
study.
Dr Hanno Seebens from Senckenberg, Germany,
first author a
new study on the topic has an answer now: «For all groups
of organisms on all continents, the number
of alien species has increased continuously during the last 200 years.
In a
new study published in the American Journal
of Medicine, Charles H. Hennekens, M.D., senior
author and
first Sir Richard Doll Professor and senior academic advisor to the dean in the Charles E. Schmidt College
of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University, indicates that black and white women ages 75 to 84 years who had an annual mammogram had lower 10 - year breast cancer mortality than corresponding women who had biennial or no / irregular mammograms.
«With this
new structure, we can start to see how this treatment works,» adds Liam King, a TSRI graduate student and
first author of the
study.
«We demonstrate a
new approach for a multiplexed assay that detects multiple proteins simultaneously by letting a fluid flow past the randomly positioned gold nano - rods,» explained Christina Rosman,
first author of the
study.
«The
study provides insight into causes and evolution
of this complex neoplasm and has identified targets for
new treatments,» says Dr. Silvia Beà,
first author of the
study.
«We're the
first measurement from the martian surface,» says Christopher Webster, a planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and lead
author of the
new study.
According to
first author Dr. Ariel Martinez, the
study is an effort to address limitations
of existing ADHD medications that don't work for all patients, and develop
new medication targeting the protein encoded by the ADGRL3 gene.
«This is a
new application for an old pain medication that offers hope for reducing the development
of acute pain in the
first few days after surgery, as well as chronic postoperative pain and the need for opioid medications following discharge from the hospital,» said Glenn S. Murphy, M.D., lead
study author and physician anesthesiologist at NorthShore University Health System in Evanston, Illinois.
«This is really a geotechnical monitoring success story,» says the
new study's
first author, Kris Pankow, associate director
of the University
of Utah Seismograph Stations and a research associate professor
of geology and geophysics.
But when
first author of the
study Michael Metzger analyzed the genomes
of cancer cells collected in
New York, Maine, and Prince Edward Island, he discovered something else entirely.
Our results have given us insights into
new bacteriotherapies for C. difficile infection and inflammatory bowel disease, and moreover suggest general strategies for developing these therapies for many other diseases,» said Vanni Bucci, PhD,
first author of the
study and an assistant professor at the University
of Massachusetts at Dartmouth.