Sentences with phrase «in nucleic»

Vitamin B12 is a coenzyme in nucleic acid, protein and lipid synthesis.
Although chlorella contains less beta - carotene and protein than spirulina, yet it has more essential fatty acids and is twice higher in the nucleic acid and chlorophyll.
When Dr. Benjamin Frank treated his patients with sardines and other foods high in nucleic acids, they looked and felt much younger, improved their memory and concentration, and recovered from different health problems including depression and arthritis.
That includes a study published in 2014 in Nucleic Acids Researchthat found resveratrol stops the formation of inflammatory factors involved with cancer, cardiovascular and chronic inflammatory diseases.
«Among the various types of oxidative lesions found in nucleic acids, 8 - oxoG is one of the major sources of spontaneous mutagenesis.
Design of functional and nanostructured biomaterials for applications in nucleic acid delivery, precision medicine, and regenerative medicine
The study was led by Olof Emanuelsson, KTH Royal Institute of Technology / SciLifeLab and Jens Sundström, SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, and published in Nucleic Acids Research.
This study, published in Nucleic Acids Research, March 9 2018, disclosed part of the pathophysiological mechanisms in the Kleefstra syndrome.
«The larger number of genes in M. pulmonis... can be mainly attributed to an increased number of membrane proteins,» the researchers write in Nucleic Acids Research.
The article was published in Nucleic Acids Research.
Our work on PoSTAC (Polycistronic SunTAg modified CRISPR) has been published in Nucleic Acids Research.
Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc. (IDT), the global leader in nucleic acid synthesis, serving all areas of life sciences research and development, offers products for a broad range of genomics applications.
When the researchers added radio - labelled arsenate to the solution to track its distribution, they found that arsenic was present in the cellular fractions containing the bacterium's proteins, lipids and metabolites such as ATP and glucose, as well as in the nucleic acids that made up its DNA and RNA.
Their findings are published in Nucleic Acids Research, now online.
As published this week in Nucleic Acids Research, they have discovered a mechanism that regulates the expression of alpha - synuclein, a protein linked to Parkinson's disease and multiple system atrophy (MSA).
Researchers at Stockholm University and Science for Life Laboratory have developed a new computer algorithm for analysing gene function called BinoX, which was e-published in Nucleic Acids Research on September 22 (Ogris et al., 2016a).
Joint winner of the 1980 chemistry prize with Walter Gilbert for his «contributions concerning the determination of base sequences in nucleic acids» and winner of the 1958 chemistry prize «for his work on the structure of proteins, especially that of insulin.»
In the study published in Nucleic Acids Research, the researchers were able to induce and inhibit the expression of genes in mammalian cell cultures and were able to regulate intracellular protein levels using light signals.
Now, Wyss Institute researchers led by Church have developed a new suite of such sensors, reported in Nucleic Acids Research journal, that not only increase the number of cellular «switches and levers» that scientists can use for complex genetic re-programming, but also respond to valuable products such as renewable plastics or costly pharmaceuticals and give microbes a voice to report on their own efficiency in making these products.
The findings, from the Emory / Johns Hopkins / Florida State team that showed this spring that neural progenitor cells are particularly vulnerable to Zika infection, were published in Nucleic Acid Research.

Not exact matches

This blockchain manager would «compute a cryptographic hash» of a given «nucleic acid sequence» and «use» it as PoW before transmitting the attendant «new block... to the other nodes in [the] blockchain system.»
According to one of his analogies: just as the sequence of letters on a page is extraneous to the chemistry of ink and paper, so the sequence of nucleic acids in the DNA molecule (which, when translated, determines the shape of an organism and its specific characteristics) is extraneous to the chemical forces operative in the genetic process.
Were there not a certain invariance about the way in which carbon atoms bond with others under identical conditions, or about the manner in which protein synthesis is charted and activated by nucleic acids, life would be impossible altogether.
Still is it not possible that the specific sequence of base - pairs in a DNA molecule is extraneous to the chemistry which bonds the nucleic acids to one another?
The «secret» of life, growth and heredity seems to lie in the movement and combination of nucleic and amino acids.
The letters of this code are nucleic acids (A, C, T and G) arranged sequentially in triadic formations.
So we must ask whether chemistry (or any physical science) can specify the overall sequence of nucleic acids that determines the kinds and shapes of organisms existing in the biosphere.
Out of the Gordon Conference on nucleic acids in the summer of 1973 came an open letter to Science; the establishment (in October 1974) by the National Institutes of Health of the Recombinant DNA Molecule Program Advisory Committee; and in February 1975 the now - famous international conference at the Asilomar Conference Center in California, where a reluctant decision was made by scientists to declare a temporary moratorium on certain kinds of DNA research.
A preference for atomicity (explanation in terms of amino and nucleic acids) prescribes the method for molecular biology; and a persistent materialism hovers over the essentially anti- mechanistic physics of this century.
if you disolve a mixture of carbon dioxide, sulther dioxide and ammonia all of which occur naturally in water and then run a high voltahe electric current through it (i.e lightning) amino acids and nucleic acids will spontaneously form and breakdown as the chemicals react.
For example, after the macromolecules of amino acids or nucleic acids have become sufficiently abundant, the possibility of living cells becomes a relevant new form of ordered novelty in the world's advance.
They are the principal component, other than water, of all living forms, but the nucleic acids alone have the remarkable property of being capable of duplicating their patterns, whatever they may be, from small molecules in their medium.
I have followed Polanyi's contention that there are organizational principles operative in the universe which formatively influence the specific sequences of nucleic acids in DNA, and with Sheldrake I have postulated the existence of morphogenetic fields which canalize the processes of growth and development in organisms.
«It's difficult to make contrived samples behave like actual cell - free nucleic acids, so that's been quite a challenge,» says Kelli Bramlett, director of R&D in clinical sequencing and oncology at Thermo Fisher Scientific in Waltham, Massachusetts.
«It's a type of molecule called an antisense oligonucleotide, or ASO, that essentially is synthetic string of nucleic acid that binds a specific sequence in the gene.»
A year earlier James Watson and Francis Crick had proposed their double - helix model of DNA, the nucleic acid that conveys genetic information from generation to generation in all organisms except certain viruses.
He studies DNA and RNA quadruplexes, nucleic acid structures that were first visualized via confocal microscopy in fixed, dead cells.
The new methods allowed them to catch proteins in the act of binding to RNA, and also identify what part of the protein was in contact with the nucleic acid.
Using nucleic acids can mitigate or eliminate this problem, especially with the high degrees of multiplexing seen in the platform of Olink Proteomics, headquartered in Uppsala, Sweden.
My colleagues and I first undertook to synthesize nucleic acids outside the living cell, with the help of cellular enzymes, in 1954.
In the study, which was published in the journal Nucleic Acids Research, the biologists utilised so - called riboswitches, also called RNA switches, and RNA thermometerIn the study, which was published in the journal Nucleic Acids Research, the biologists utilised so - called riboswitches, also called RNA switches, and RNA thermometerin the journal Nucleic Acids Research, the biologists utilised so - called riboswitches, also called RNA switches, and RNA thermometers.
To start, she used a cotton swab to get a sample of cells from her cheek, boiled them in a test tube in her kitchen to free the DNA, then added primers, nucleic acids that mark the part of the sequence.
Further research by Stanley and others established that a virus consists of nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) enclosed in a protein coat that may also shelter viral proteins involved in infection.
The duo mixed in a test tube a viral DNA template, nucleic acids, DNA polymerase, and ligase.
In 2009, a team led by Svante Pääbo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, uncovered evidence of the process in Neanderthal and mammoth DNA (Nucleic Acids Research, DOI: 10.1093 / nar / gkp1163In 2009, a team led by Svante Pääbo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, uncovered evidence of the process in Neanderthal and mammoth DNA (Nucleic Acids Research, DOI: 10.1093 / nar / gkp1163in Leipzig, Germany, uncovered evidence of the process in Neanderthal and mammoth DNA (Nucleic Acids Research, DOI: 10.1093 / nar / gkp1163in Neanderthal and mammoth DNA (Nucleic Acids Research, DOI: 10.1093 / nar / gkp1163).
You can't necessarily see the change happening in the adult, but you can see that if you change that nucleic acid base right there in that gene, at that particular point in embryonic development, that animal is darker.
Using a combination of old - fashioned clinical observation and modern biochemical analysis, he has shown that a person's appetite and their eating behavior can be linked to specific genes — and that even a tiny defect such as the absence of a single nucleic acid in a sequence of DNA can lead to runaway weight gain.
His suspicionswas confirmed: the children had an identical defect — a missing single nucleic acid, called guanine — in the gene coding for leptin.
Found in amino acids, the building blocks of proteins; an essential part of the nucleic acids that constitute DNA.
The study results revolve around the relationship between TET2 and cytosine, one of the four nucleic acid «letters» that comprise the DNA code in genes.
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