But everything appears to be up to the sadly low standards
of cellular calls.
and the metadata
of every cellular call I've ever made, including time and duration pic.twitter.com/Ykr3o 0gZFu
Not exact matches
The police made the discovery after a 17 - year - old girl escaped the house in Perris, about 70 miles east
of Los Angeles, and used a
cellular phone she had found in the house to
call them, the Riverside County Sheriff's Office said in a statement released online.
Founded in 2017 and based in Emeryville, California, Finless Foods is one
of a number
of startups using so -
called cellular agriculture to replace age - old methods
of food production: farming, animal husbandry, and, in this case, fishing.
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If the device is connected to a Wi - Fi network, Google will route
calls and data to Wi - Fi to further reduce the use
of more expensive
cellular signals and help customers save up on data costs.
This aura is our spirit and when death occurs, it is
called back to its» origins within our
cellular embodiment to live out its» remainder
of life.
Given a system or composite
of individuals, all on a comparable level, for instance molecular or
cellular, then in some cases, given integration
of activities (thus molecules in a cell, or cells in a vertebrate animal), there may be what Leibniz
called a «dominant monad» or what Whitehead
calls a «society
of presiding occasions.»
A NYC - based reader
call in to report that he had received a mysterious robocall today on his
cellular phone that appeared to be from Gov. Andrew Cuomo's corruption - busting Moreland Commission and name checked a Bronx assemblywoman whose dubious slot machine winnings have been making headlines
of late.
Growing demand for
cellular data by smartphones, tablets and other devices has led wireless carriers across the country to deploy a new kind
of wireless transmitter
called «small cells» to provide better coverage in densely populated areas.
To help fix this, a team led by Elizabeth Belding at the University
of California, Santa Barbara, designed a cheap, local
cellular network
called Kwiizya — which means «to chat» in Tonga, the native language in Zambia's Southern Province.
Degenerative brain diseases like mad cow disease (officially known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE), scrapie in sheep, and vCJD in humans are thought to be caused by prions, misfolded versions
of a normal
cellular protein
called PrPC.
Now 24, he is a first - year graduate student in the department
of cellular and structural biology at the University
of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio (UTHSCSA), where he is studying the role
of oxidative damage — the wear and tear inflicted upon the cell by toxic molecules
called free radicals — in the aging process.
They all use RNA molecules as messengers to transfer the information from DNA to
cellular factories
called ribosomes, which then build proteins, which in turn drive our metabolisms and form the structures
of our cells.
The gene signature identified by Hancock and his colleagues relates to a special type
of immune suppression
called cellular reprogramming and suggests that treating inflammation in sepsis is a bad idea.
Called mTOR in mammals, for the term «mammalian target
of rapamycin,» this pathway has a critical evolutionary value — it helps an organism avoid too much
cellular expansion and growth when energy supplies are insufficient.
When cells become cancerous, tremendous stresses are placed on the
cellular machinery responsible for maintaining protein equilibrium — and that machinery is the target
of anti-cancer drugs
called proteasome inhibitors.
And the first thing that begins to happen is carbon dioxide builds up inside the body, and with it there is a rise in acidity; that acidity rise contributes to
cellular membranes decaying and then collapsing and then digestive enzymes that were already always present in the cells begin to slosh around to the body and [it] begins a state
of what's
called self digestion, so the body begins to liquefy inside rather literally.
And last is the so -
called dry stage, which is stage four, from days 51 to 64 or so where tissue is all removed and the bones then begin their own process
of cellular decay and decomposition.
New findings published in the Proceedings
of the National Academy
of Sciences showed in lab studies that supplementing an epigenetic cancer drug
called decitabine with vitamin C enhanced the drug's ability to impede cancer cell growth and trigger
cellular self - destruction in cancer cell lines.
In a process
called cellular reprogramming, researchers at Icahn School
of Medicine at Mount Sinai have taken mature blood cells from patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and reprogrammed them back into iPSCs to study the genetic origins
of this rare blood cancer.
Researchers did not understand what normally kept ras genes» protein production in check — and why certain ras mutations led to such chaotic, uncontrolled
cellular activity — until the discovery
of a snippet
of genetic material
called microRNA (miRNA).
But
cellular immunity involves other players — such as macrophages, the network
of chemical messengers
called cytokines, and so -
called natural killer cells — that have received scant attention.
Like removing unnecessary lighting from a financially strapped household to save on electricity bills, the drug —
called rapamycin — prolongs the survival
of diseased neurons by forcing them to reduce protein production to conserve
cellular energy.
This so -
called microRNA disrupts the expression
of two key
cellular genes
called TGF - β and SMAD3, in a process known as RNA interference (RNAi).
A forward genetic screen in Drosophila melanogaster (fruit flies) identified mutant copies, or alleles,
of a gene
called cacophony associated with defects in autophagy and
cellular homeostasis.
Called 6 diazo -5-oxo L norleucine, or DON, the drug blocks the
cellular use
of the protein building block glutamine.
But a string
of recent discoveries indicates that a class
of RNA molecules
called small RNAs are actually in charge
of many
cellular functions.
Proteins
called kinesins, for example, are natural nanomotors that support
cellular functions such as mitosis (the chromosomal process that creates two nuclei from one parent nucleus) and meiosis (when the number
of chromosomes per cell is reduced by one half).
Many
of those efforts have focused on drugs that target
cellular receptors in the brain
called NMDA receptors.
The Brain Trauma Indicator measures blood plasma levels
of the UCH - L1, a protein scientists believe helps dispose
of cellular waste in the brain, and GFAP, a structural protein found in non-neuronal cells
called astrocytes.
This breakdown
of laminB1 and other nuclear material leads to a
cellular state
called senescence, or literally «getting old.»
Most important
of all seem to be the tiny powerhouses
called mitochondria that fuel
cellular development.
They found that by attaching to a mitochondrial protein
called TOM20, alpha - synuclein prevented the mitochondria from functioning optimally, which resulted in the production
of less energy and more damaging
cellular waste.
SIK3 phosphorylates and activates a key enzyme
of glucose metabolism
called Glucose -6-phosphate dehydrogenase G6PD, which is an important regulator
of cellular redox balance.
Led by Dr. Peter Glazer, chair
of therapeutic radiology, Dr. Mark Saltzman, chair
of biomedical engineering, and Dr. Marie Egan, professor
of pediatrics and
of cellular and molecular physiology, the collaborative team used synthetic molecules similar to DNA —
called peptide nucleic acids, or PNAs — as well as donor DNA, to edit the genetic defect.
Researchers looking at the white blood cells
called eosinophils found a new weapon in the immune arsenal: toxic webs
of DNA flung in less than a second by a kind
of cellular catapult.
The controversy began in December 2010, when NASA astrobiology fellow Felisa Wolfe - Simon and colleagues described online in Science a microbe
called GFAJ - 1, which grew, albeit slowly, in the presence
of arsenic, leading the authors to conclude the bacterium had taken up the toxic element and incorporated it into its
cellular components.
Previous studies in the lab showed that once HCMV is inside the cell, it quickly becomes latent by entering the cell's nucleus and co-opting a
cellular protein
called Daxx — part
of the intrinsic immune system — to shut down its own replication, the process
of reproducing its genetic material to make more copies
of itself.
Functional measurements
of the cells showed that a drug
called avanafil reversed some
of the
cellular imbalances caused by the mitochondrial defect.
This insulation,
called myelin, is made up
of numerous layers
of cellular membranes — seen in cross section, an axon insulated in this way resembles the rings
of a tree.
This cycle
of activation, production and stop / block goes around once a day and is also influenced by a compound
called FBXL3, which flags CRY for degradation by
cellular enzymes.
Some
of these molecules are a complex
of proteins
called the Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) that is involved in «silencing» genes so that they are not «read» by the
cellular machinery that decodes genetic information, effectively keeping the genetic information in the «off» state.
This association
of the RNAi machinery and a gene's message is prelude to destruction
of the message before it arrives at a
cellular protein factory
called the ribosome.
That is when studies finally convinced scientists that the minuscule RNA snippets they had taken to
calling «microRNA» were regulating
cellular and genetic processes throughout the human body and were critical factors in the determination
of health and disease.
But they are daring again with growing confidence, buoyed by new insights and technologies to fight a foe that Jay Levy, codiscoverer
of HIV, compares to a «biological Trojan horse» and Jay Lalezari
calls «a
cellular bioterrorist that kills your first responders first.»
These small signaling molecules,
called cytokines (SIGH - toe - kines), spur a cascade
of cellular reactions that help the body fight infection.
Because
of that, many different components are present in minute quantities, which inevitably leads to random variations in
cellular processes which are also
called «noise» by chemists.
The new enzyme converts A to a base
called inosine, or I. Either a
cellular repair mechanism or the process
of the DNA copying itself then changes the I to a G. «The big deal here is engineering the TadA enzyme to do something fairly unnatural,» says George Church
of Harvard, who studies CRISPR.
Bex acts on a «master regulator» protein
called retinoid X receptor (RXR), which controls a network
of other
cellular proteins.