Sentences with phrase «high expression rates»

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So we like owning assets with the highest convexity to inflation, with an additional layer of expressions that will benefit from benign moves higher in real rates.
The United States, averaging over 40 per cent, is a strange anomaly for sociological commentators — one often explained by denying that the higher U.S. rate is an expression of greater national religiosity, and suggesting that in America religion fulfills certain nonreligious needs: for sociability and community, for example.
«This high rate of attrition is a clear expression of the challenges which have characterized the Build It Back program, and raises serious questions about our city's ability to mount an efficient and effective recovery operation in the event of a future disaster,» Stringer and City Councilman Mark Treyger (D - Brooklyn) wrote in a letter to program director Amy Peterson.
Using RNA sequencing, the researchers found multiple genes whose abnormal expression could lead to the high rate of death for cloned embryos, including failure to implant in the uterus and failure to develop a normal placenta.
In addition, the 3D model shared more similarities with a tumour than 2D models including a higher proliferation rate, higher protein expression and higher resistance to anti-cancer drugs.
Accordingly, breast cancer patients whose tumors displayed low miR - 203 / high Robo1 expression had better long - term survival rates.
The study showed that TNBC patients whose tumours have high expression of RASAL2 tend to have a lower survival rate as compared to patients whose tumours have low levels of this gene.
In patients with tumor programmed death ligand 1 (PD - L1) expression ≥ 5 %, the 2 - year OS rate was higher in the nivolumab arm (72 %) than the combination (68 %); it was 54 % with ipilimumab.
However, when we extracted gene expression levels from the brain transcriptome data following the methodology in Carneiro et al. [29], we found that levels of nucleotide diversity and the proportion of low frequency variants between lowly (bottom 5 %) and highly (top 5 %) expressed genes in our dataset (Table S7) were not significantly different in most comparisons (with the exception of π in O. c. cuniculus) nor did they consistently differ in the expected direction when assuming higher error rates in lowly expressed genes.
Using 5 % false discovery rate in ANOVA calculation in any of the 3 comparisons (CGR8 vs. E14TG2a vs. R1), there are 137 genes (0.9 % of the analyzed transcripts) that show a 2-fold difference or higher in expression levels among the three lines; 34 of these genes are > 2-fold higher or lower expressed in E14TG2a, 5 in CGR8 and 11 in R1 cells.
In five independent large cohorts in which more than 1100 total patients were followed for overall survival (Desmedt et al., 2007; Esserman et al., 2012; Kao et al., 2011; Pawitan et al., 2005; van de Vijver et al., 2002; Supplementary file 1), high expression level of MELK strongly correlated with increased rates of mortality (all p values < 0.05, hazard ratios > 2)(Figure 2D, Figure 2 — figure supplement 1D).
So we like owning assets with the highest convexity to inflation, with an additional layer of expressions that will benefit from benign moves higher in real rates.
A collectivistic culture values harmony within the group, and the individual gain is considered to be less important than improvement of the social group.14 Embarrassment may be more common in collectivistic cultures because it is induced by external sanctions.15 «Taijin kyofusho» (the fear of offending or embarrassing the other person) is an example of a culturally specific expression of anxiety in Asian countries.16 Biological evidence also showed that people who live in collectivist cultures are more likely than those in individualistic cultures to have a form of the serotonin transporter gene that correlates with higher rates of anxiety and depression.17
In our first study, we found that mothers of children rated higher on CU traits tended to have affective attitudes that were less accepting of children's experience and expression of emotions.
Sixty adolescents (M age = 13.24, SD = 1.03, 66.7 % female) with high (HD) and low (LD) depressive symptoms rated the predominant affective expression in ambiguous stimuli with varying intensity (happy - sad, happy - angry, sad - angry) prior to and following a negative (social rejection), positive (social inclusion), or no social experience with the depicted model identities.
Independent observations of children's behavior found that treatment group children showed significantly fewer submissive behaviors (e.g., approval - seeking or help - seeking) and negative behaviors (e.g., pouting, ridicule) and higher rates of positive - affect behaviors (e.g., smiling, expressions of affection) than control group children.
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