Sentences with phrase «paper published in the journal cell»

But in a paper published in the journal Cell, researchers at the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT reveal that aneuploidy alone can cause this significant variability in traits, in otherwise genetically identical cells.
The circuit, which will only activate a therapeutic response when it detects two specific cancer markers, is described in a paper published in the journal Cell.
Now, in a new paper published in the journal Cell, an international team of scientists reports how they created a new form of BanLec that still fights viruses in mice, but doesn't have a property that causes irritation and unwanted inflammation.
Legislation which allows the replacement of faulty mitochondria in eggs of mothers with mitochondrial disorders has been passed in the UK, and a paper published in the journal Cell Stem Cell has explored the efficacy of such techniques.
Two papers published in the journal Cell have examined how the Ebola virus adapted during the outbreak in West Africa.

Not exact matches

Mangahas «was a very important part of my lab,» Zakian says, and he was the first author on a paper published in the journal Molecular Biology of the Cell.
A related paper, involving Svendsen, his colleague Gad Vatine, PhD, and a team from University of California, Irvine, published the same day in the journal Cell Reports, used a similar approach to study Huntington's disease.
In the paper, published in the now - defunct online journal e-biomed, West, Lanza and their colleagues showed that they could pull a nucleus from a human egg cell, replace it with a whole adult ovarian cell and generate an embryo that divided into six cellIn the paper, published in the now - defunct online journal e-biomed, West, Lanza and their colleagues showed that they could pull a nucleus from a human egg cell, replace it with a whole adult ovarian cell and generate an embryo that divided into six cellin the now - defunct online journal e-biomed, West, Lanza and their colleagues showed that they could pull a nucleus from a human egg cell, replace it with a whole adult ovarian cell and generate an embryo that divided into six cells.
The findings are published alongside several papers in other Cell journals this week examining molecular pathways using The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).
As part of BLUEPRINT, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute led two of the six papers being published in the journal Cell.
In a 1967 paper published in the Journal of Theoretical Biology, Margulis suggested that mitochondria and plastids — vital structures within animal and plant cells — evolved from bacteria hundreds of million of years ago, after bacterial cells started to collect in interactive communities and live symbiotically with one anotheIn a 1967 paper published in the Journal of Theoretical Biology, Margulis suggested that mitochondria and plastids — vital structures within animal and plant cells — evolved from bacteria hundreds of million of years ago, after bacterial cells started to collect in interactive communities and live symbiotically with one anothein the Journal of Theoretical Biology, Margulis suggested that mitochondria and plastids — vital structures within animal and plant cells — evolved from bacteria hundreds of million of years ago, after bacterial cells started to collect in interactive communities and live symbiotically with one anothein interactive communities and live symbiotically with one another.
Now, in a paper published on Oct. 3 in the Biophysical Journal, researchers at UConn Health's Virtual Cell Project have made it far easier for cell biologists to build complex biological modCell Project have made it far easier for cell biologists to build complex biological modcell biologists to build complex biological models.
In a paper published in the current online issue of the journal Small, titled «Immune Cell - Mediated Biodegradable Theranostic Nanoparticles for Melanoma Targeting,» the researchers report the use of a novel biodegradable and photoluminescent poly (lactic acid) nanoparticle, loaded with melanoma - specific drugs with immune cells as the nanoparticle carrierIn a paper published in the current online issue of the journal Small, titled «Immune Cell - Mediated Biodegradable Theranostic Nanoparticles for Melanoma Targeting,» the researchers report the use of a novel biodegradable and photoluminescent poly (lactic acid) nanoparticle, loaded with melanoma - specific drugs with immune cells as the nanoparticle carrierin the current online issue of the journal Small, titled «Immune Cell - Mediated Biodegradable Theranostic Nanoparticles for Melanoma Targeting,» the researchers report the use of a novel biodegradable and photoluminescent poly (lactic acid) nanoparticle, loaded with melanoma - specific drugs with immune cells as the nanoparticle carriers.
This proof - of - principle study shows «for the first time... that human iPS cells can be used to model a diverse range of inherited diseases in adult cells,» the authors wrote in their paper, published online in The Journal of Clinical Investigation August 25.
A paper he published early this year in the Journal of Clinical Oncology describes a dendritic cell vaccine in advanced glioma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.
Her most recent paper — this one published in PNAS, the official journal of theNational Academy of Sciences — explains a totally new way that viruses operate in building particles and how viruses can change shapes to interact with their host cells.
The case presented in the latest paper, published in the journal Stem Cell Reports, suggests that uneven growth of identical twins could start during the early stages of preimplantation development.
The researchers outline their findings in a research paper published January 31, 2017 in the journal Cell Reports.
But that meeting isn't until mid-June, and Cell has previously permitted authors of high - profile papers to publish in the journal after describing their research at a meeting.
In a paper publishing August 7th in the Open Access journal PLOS Biology, researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI - CBG) succeeded in mimicking the sustained expression of the transcription factor Pax6 as seen in the developing human brain, in mouse cortical progenitor cellIn a paper publishing August 7th in the Open Access journal PLOS Biology, researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI - CBG) succeeded in mimicking the sustained expression of the transcription factor Pax6 as seen in the developing human brain, in mouse cortical progenitor cellin the Open Access journal PLOS Biology, researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI - CBG) succeeded in mimicking the sustained expression of the transcription factor Pax6 as seen in the developing human brain, in mouse cortical progenitor cellin mimicking the sustained expression of the transcription factor Pax6 as seen in the developing human brain, in mouse cortical progenitor cellin the developing human brain, in mouse cortical progenitor cellin mouse cortical progenitor cells.
The paper is published online in Cell Death & Differentiation, a Nature journal.
The findings were published online today in the journal Immunity in a paper entitled, «Human circulating PD - 1 + CXCR3 - CXCR5 + memory Tfh cells are highly functional and correlate with broadly neutralizing HIV antibody responses.»
The research team from the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology headed by Professor Susanne Mandrup are publishing a paper entitled «Browning of human adipocytes requires KLF11 and reprogramming of PPAR super-enhancers» in the January 1 edition of the scientific journal Genes & Development that describes their results from working with «brite» fat cells.
The paper is published in the 2014 World Stem Cell Report, which is a special supplement to the journal Stem Cells and Development and is the official publication of the 2014 World Stem Cell Summit being held Dec. 3 - 5 in San Antonio.
A paper by Yan's research group, published in the Jan. 8 issue of the multidisciplinary journal Nature Communications, helps pin down the basic mechanisms of the fuel - cell reaction on platinum, which will help researchers create alternative electrocatalysts.
In a paper published January 7, 2018, in the journal Aging Cell, they report that the drug binds to a protein found in mitochondria, the energy - generating powerhouses of cellIn a paper published January 7, 2018, in the journal Aging Cell, they report that the drug binds to a protein found in mitochondria, the energy - generating powerhouses of cellin the journal Aging Cell, they report that the drug binds to a protein found in mitochondria, the energy - generating powerhouses of cellin mitochondria, the energy - generating powerhouses of cells.
«The worldwide push to advance renewable energy is limited by the availability of energy storage vectors,» says Banerjee in the team's paper, published today (Feb. 1) in the journal Chem, a new chemistry - focused journal by Cell Press.
In a paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Sangeeta Bhatia of MIT and Charles Rice of Rockefeller University describe using microfabricated cell cultures to sustain hepatitis B virus in human liver cells, allowing them to study immune responses and drug treatmentIn a paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Sangeeta Bhatia of MIT and Charles Rice of Rockefeller University describe using microfabricated cell cultures to sustain hepatitis B virus in human liver cells, allowing them to study immune responses and drug treatmentin the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Sangeeta Bhatia of MIT and Charles Rice of Rockefeller University describe using microfabricated cell cultures to sustain hepatitis B virus in human liver cells, allowing them to study immune responses and drug treatmentin human liver cells, allowing them to study immune responses and drug treatments.
In a paper published in the Journal of Neuroscience, the OIST Cell Signal Unit, led by Professor Tadashi Yamamoto, reported that mice lacking an intracellular trafficking protein called LMTK3, are hyperactivIn a paper published in the Journal of Neuroscience, the OIST Cell Signal Unit, led by Professor Tadashi Yamamoto, reported that mice lacking an intracellular trafficking protein called LMTK3, are hyperactivin the Journal of Neuroscience, the OIST Cell Signal Unit, led by Professor Tadashi Yamamoto, reported that mice lacking an intracellular trafficking protein called LMTK3, are hyperactive.
Environmental «noise» is a key evolutionary pressure that shapes the interconnections within cells, as well as those of neural networks and bacterial / ecological networks, they observe in a paper to be published online April 30 by the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.
The paper is published in the American Journal of Physiology — Cell Physiology.
In a paper published June 20 in the journal Cell, McCutcheon and collaborators reveal a striking new level of interdependency among the Tremblaya troikIn a paper published June 20 in the journal Cell, McCutcheon and collaborators reveal a striking new level of interdependency among the Tremblaya troikin the journal Cell, McCutcheon and collaborators reveal a striking new level of interdependency among the Tremblaya troika.
The same Swiss team had reported, in two papers published previously in the journal Nature, a new molecular mechanism that generates broad - spectrum antibodies able to bind red blood cells infected by the parasite and therefore to keep the infection under control.
The approach, which is described in a paper to be published September 7 in The Journal of Experimental Medicine, could allow those in need of such transplants, including leukemia and lymphoma patients, to be treated with fewer donor stem cells while limiting potential adverse side effects.
In a paper published online May 17, 2016 in the journal Nature Communications, de Jong and co-first author Koji Taniguchi, MD, PhD, and colleagues, report that treating both ERK1 / 2 and the compensatory pathway, ERK5, concurrently with a combination of drug inhibitors halted colorectal cancer growth more effectively in both mouse models and human colorectal cancer cell lineIn a paper published online May 17, 2016 in the journal Nature Communications, de Jong and co-first author Koji Taniguchi, MD, PhD, and colleagues, report that treating both ERK1 / 2 and the compensatory pathway, ERK5, concurrently with a combination of drug inhibitors halted colorectal cancer growth more effectively in both mouse models and human colorectal cancer cell linein the journal Nature Communications, de Jong and co-first author Koji Taniguchi, MD, PhD, and colleagues, report that treating both ERK1 / 2 and the compensatory pathway, ERK5, concurrently with a combination of drug inhibitors halted colorectal cancer growth more effectively in both mouse models and human colorectal cancer cell linein both mouse models and human colorectal cancer cell lines.
Daniel Grinberg and Lluïsa Vilageliu, from the Department of Genetics of the Faculty of Biology, and Joan Blasi, from the Department of Pathology and Experimental Therapy of the Faculty of Medicine, participated in the paper, published on the journal Cell Reports.
In a paper publishing online December 15 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences, researchers explain how they have used the brain's ability to bring together information from different senses to make white people feel that they were inhabiting black bodies and adults feel like they had children's bodieIn a paper publishing online December 15 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences, researchers explain how they have used the brain's ability to bring together information from different senses to make white people feel that they were inhabiting black bodies and adults feel like they had children's bodiein the Cell Press journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences, researchers explain how they have used the brain's ability to bring together information from different senses to make white people feel that they were inhabiting black bodies and adults feel like they had children's bodiein Cognitive Sciences, researchers explain how they have used the brain's ability to bring together information from different senses to make white people feel that they were inhabiting black bodies and adults feel like they had children's bodies.
In the paper, publishing September 26 in the ISSCR's journal Stem Cell Reports, published by Cell Press, iPSCs from nonhuman primates successfully developed into the neurons depleted by Parkinson's disease while eliciting only a minimal immune responsIn the paper, publishing September 26 in the ISSCR's journal Stem Cell Reports, published by Cell Press, iPSCs from nonhuman primates successfully developed into the neurons depleted by Parkinson's disease while eliciting only a minimal immune responsin the ISSCR's journal Stem Cell Reports, published by Cell Press, iPSCs from nonhuman primates successfully developed into the neurons depleted by Parkinson's disease while eliciting only a minimal immune response.
In a paper published in the journal Nanotechnology [«Static micro-array isolation, dynamic time series classification, capture and enumeration of spiked breast cancer cells in blood: the nanotube - CTC chip»], Panchapakesan's team, which includes graduate students Farhad Khosravi, the paper's lead author, and researchers at the University of Louisville and Thomas Jefferson University, describe a study in which antibodies specific for two markers of metastatic breast cancer, EpCam and Her2, were attached to the carbon nanotubes in the chiIn a paper published in the journal Nanotechnology [«Static micro-array isolation, dynamic time series classification, capture and enumeration of spiked breast cancer cells in blood: the nanotube - CTC chip»], Panchapakesan's team, which includes graduate students Farhad Khosravi, the paper's lead author, and researchers at the University of Louisville and Thomas Jefferson University, describe a study in which antibodies specific for two markers of metastatic breast cancer, EpCam and Her2, were attached to the carbon nanotubes in the chiin the journal Nanotechnology [«Static micro-array isolation, dynamic time series classification, capture and enumeration of spiked breast cancer cells in blood: the nanotube - CTC chip»], Panchapakesan's team, which includes graduate students Farhad Khosravi, the paper's lead author, and researchers at the University of Louisville and Thomas Jefferson University, describe a study in which antibodies specific for two markers of metastatic breast cancer, EpCam and Her2, were attached to the carbon nanotubes in the chiin blood: the nanotube - CTC chip»], Panchapakesan's team, which includes graduate students Farhad Khosravi, the paper's lead author, and researchers at the University of Louisville and Thomas Jefferson University, describe a study in which antibodies specific for two markers of metastatic breast cancer, EpCam and Her2, were attached to the carbon nanotubes in the chiin which antibodies specific for two markers of metastatic breast cancer, EpCam and Her2, were attached to the carbon nanotubes in the chiin the chip.
In a paper published online today in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), scientists treated 33 people with one such cancer, basal cell carcinoma, a common skin canceIn a paper published online today in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), scientists treated 33 people with one such cancer, basal cell carcinoma, a common skin cancein The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), scientists treated 33 people with one such cancer, basal cell carcinoma, a common skin cancer.
In a paper in the high - impact journal Cell Research, published April 4, 2017, researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem report the discovery of an entirely new mechanism through which globin genes are expresseIn a paper in the high - impact journal Cell Research, published April 4, 2017, researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem report the discovery of an entirely new mechanism through which globin genes are expressein the high - impact journal Cell Research, published April 4, 2017, researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem report the discovery of an entirely new mechanism through which globin genes are expressed.
A metabolic pathway that is up - regulated in certain breast cancers promotes the disease's progression by activating a cell signaling protein called Arf6, according to a paper published in the Journal of Cell Biolcell signaling protein called Arf6, according to a paper published in the Journal of Cell BiolCell Biology.
Read the full paper titled Intranasal administration of mesenchymoangioblast - derived mesenchymal stem cells abrogates airway fibrosis and airway hyperresponsiveness associated with chronic allergic airways disease published in the FASEB Journal.
They may also be news briefings where the SMC works with scientists to give the national media a new story on developments within science, whether it's a report on climate change, a paper on stem cells being published in a leading journal, or science funding cuts in the latest budget.
She recently co-authored a paper with Kantorow and research colleagues titled «Integrin αVβ5 - mediated removal of apoptotic cell debris by the eye lens and its inhibition by UV - light exposure,» published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry.
Better understanding of the beta - cell proliferation process eventually may lead toward therapies for diabetes patients, whose supplies of these cells often shrink over time, says Rohit Kulkarni, M.D., Ph.D., a Joslin Senior Investigator and senior author on a paper about the work published in the journal Cell Metabolcell proliferation process eventually may lead toward therapies for diabetes patients, whose supplies of these cells often shrink over time, says Rohit Kulkarni, M.D., Ph.D., a Joslin Senior Investigator and senior author on a paper about the work published in the journal Cell MetabolCell Metabolism.
A team at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) led by Professor and HHMI Investigator Leemor Joshua - Tor of the W. M. Keck structural biology laboratory today publishes a paper in the journal Cell Reports that defines the critical differences between the human Argonautes that lead to their differences in activity.
A paper published today in the journal Nature has reported that male mice infected with a mouse - adapted strain of Zika virus can experience tissue injury associated with decreased testis size and reduced levels of two sex hormones and of sperm cells in the seminal fluid.
He has published more than 60 papers in such journals as Nature, Cell, Science, Nature Genetics, PLoS Genetics, Genes and Development, and Genome Research, with more in press.
The paper supporting this finding was conducted by researchers at the University of Southern California (USC), and published, Feb. 23, in the journal Cell.
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