Search results for "genetics [Transcriptome]"

showing 10 items of 3033 documents

Nuclear protein phosphatase Wip1 regulate sensitivity of human colorectal cancer cells to DNA damaging anti-cancer agents

2019

chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryColorectal cancerbusiness.industryPhosphatasemedicineCancer researchCancerNuclear proteinmedicine.diseasebusinessGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyDNABiopolymers and Cell
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N-(3H-Thia­zol-2-yl­idene)­nitr­amine and N-methyl-N-(thia­zol-2-yl)­nitr­amine

2003

The geometries of the thiazole ring and the nitramino groups in N-(3H-thiazol-2-ylidene)nitramine, C 3 H 3 N 3 O 2 S, (I), and N-methyl-N-(thiazol-2-yl)nitramine, C 4 H 5 N 3 O 2 S, (II), are very similar. The nitramine group in (II) is planar and twisted along the C-N bond with respect to the thiazole ring. In both structures, the asymmetric unit includes two practically equal molecules. In (I), the molecules are arranged in layers connected to each other by N-H...N and much weaker C-H...O hydrogen bonds. In the crystal structure of (II), the molecules are arranged in layers bound to each other by both weak C-H...O hydrogen bonds and S...O dipolar interactions.

chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryHydrogen bondStereochemistryMoleculeGeneral MedicineCrystal structureTetrylThiazoleRing (chemistry)Medicinal chemistryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyActa Crystallographica Section C-Structural Chemistry
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Abbau und Toxizität von Hexachlorbicyclo [2.2.1]-hept-5-en- Derivaten (Cyclodien-Insektizide) / Structural Aspects of Biological Conversion and Toxic…

1973

The aspects of molecular-structure and biological conversion have been studied for 12 derivatives of the endosulfan ether 1 [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 8- hexachloro- 1, 3, 3a, 4, 7, 7a- hexahydro- 4, 7-methanoisobenzofuran]. Adults of a normal house-fly strain (Musca domestica) have been used in the assay. Derivatives of 1 monosubstituted in position I are found to be converted substantially faster than products disubstituted in position I and 3, respectively. Metabolism is inhibited for all compounds studied after application of piperonyl butoxide as a synergist. Besides proving that on oxidative metabolism has to be discussed and in fact could be proved for some derivatives, the intrinsic toxicity o…

chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryToxicityMedicinal chemistryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyNorborneneZeitschrift für Naturforschung C
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Zinc and inflammatory/immune response in aging

2007

Life-long antigenic burden determines a condition of chronic inflammation, with increased lymphocyte activation and proinflammatory cytokine production. A large number of studies have documented changes in zinc metabolism in experimental animal models of acute and chronic inflammation and in human chronic inflammatory conditions. In particular, modification of zinc plasma concentration, as well as intracellular disturbance of antioxidant intracellular pathways, has been found in aging and in some age-related diseases. Zinc deficiency is diffused in aged individuals in order to avoid meat and other high zinc content foods due to fear of cholesterol. Rather, they increase the consumption of r…

chemistry.chemical_elementInflammationZincBiologyModels BiologicalAntioxidantsGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyProinflammatory cytokinechemistry.chemical_compoundImmune systemHistory and Philosophy of SciencemedicineAnimalsHumansModels GeneticInterleukin-6Tumor Necrosis Factor-alphaGeneral NeuroscienceagingzincNF-kappa BNF-κBAtherosclerosismedicine.diseasemetallothioneinDiabetes Mellitus Type 2chemistryinflammationImmune SystemImmunologyZinc deficiencymedicine.symptomIntracellularHomeostasis
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Idiopathic Non-Dental Facial Pain Syndromes in Italian Children: A Clinical Case Series

2023

Background. The orofacial pain syndromes (OFPs) are a heterogeneous group of syndromes characterized by painful attacks involving the orofacial structures. They may be summarily subdivided into two great categories: (1) orofacial pain mainly attributed to dental disorders such as dentoalveolar and myofascial orofacial pain or temporomandibular joint (TM) pain; (2) orofacial pain mainly attributed to non-dental pain as neuralgias, facial localization of primary headaches or idiopathic orofacial pain. The second group is uncommon, often described by single case reports, can often show overlapping symptoms with the first group, and represents a clinical challenge, carrying the risk of underval…

childrenSpace and Planetary Scienceorofacial pain; children; headache; red ear syndrome; migraine; trigeminal autonomic syndromesorofacial painred ear syndrometrigeminal autonomic syndromesPaleontologymigraineheadacheGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLife
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Removal of Chromophore-proximal Polar Atoms Decreases Water Content and Increases Fluorescence in a Near Infrared Phytofluor

2015

Genetically encoded fluorescent markers have revolutionized cell and molecular biology due to their biological compatibility, controllable spatiotemporal expression, and photostability. To achieve in vivo imaging in whole animals, longer excitation wavelength probes are needed due to the superior ability of near infrared light to penetrate tissues unimpeded by absorbance from biomolecules or autofluorescence of water. Derived from near infrared-absorbing bacteriophytochromes, phytofluors are engineered to fluoresce in this region of the electromagnetic spectrum, although high quantum yield remains an elusive goal. An invariant aspartate residue is of utmost importance for photoconversion in…

chromophore binding domain (CBD)Analytical chemistryQuantum yieldPhotochemistryBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)BiochemistryFluorescence spectroscopychemistry.chemical_compoundDeinococcus radioduransWiPhy2Side chainMolecular Biologylcsh:QH301-705.5Wisconsin infrared phytofluor (WiPhy2)Original ResearchBiliverdinta114Physicsta1182Excitation-emission matrix (EEM)ChromophorePhotobleachingFluorescenceexcitation-emission matrix (EEM)chemistrylcsh:Biology (General)Excited statetetrapyrroleFrontiers in Molecular Biosciences
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Hair Cortisol Concentration as a Biomarker of Sleep Quality and Related Disorders

2021

Cortisol is the end product of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and its production is increased mainly in stressful situations or in chronic disorders accompanied by stress enhancement. Altered cortisol concentrations have been reported in a number of neuropsychiatric diseases and sleep disorders. Cortisol concentrations have been measured using several methods, and in several matrixes, such as blood, saliva, and urine. However, lately, hair cortisol, for several reasons, has emerged as a promising biomarker of long-term retrospective HPA activation. Several experimental approaches for cortisol measurement with the corresponding concentration reference ranges and a summary of …

circadian rhythmSalivaendocrine systemUrinary systeminsomniaPhysiologyUrineReviewGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyShift work03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinechildrenInsomniaMedicineCircadian rhythmlcsh:ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbusiness.industryPaleontologySleep in non-human animals030227 psychiatryshift workSpace and Planetary ScienceBiomarker (medicine)lcsh:QREM sleepmedicine.symptombusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsLife
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Prevention of Dominant IgG Adsorption on Nanocarriers in IgG‐Enriched Blood Plasma by Clusterin Precoating

2019

Abstract Nanocarriers for medical applications must work reliably within organisms, independent of the individual differences in the blood proteome. Variation in the blood proteome, such as immunoglobulin levels, is a result of environmental, nutrition, and constitution conditions. This variation, however, should not influence the behavior of nanocarriers in biological media. The composition of the protein corona is investigated to understand the influence varying immunoglobulin levels in the blood plasma have on the interactions with nanocarriers. Specifically, the composition of the nanocarriers' coronas is analyzed after incubation in plasma with normal or elevated immunoglobulin G (IgG)…

clusterinGeneral Chemical Engineeringmedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral Physics and AstronomyMedicine (miscellaneous)Protein Corona02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)Immunoglobulin Gimmunoglobulin Gprotein coronaBlood plasmaGeneral Materials ScienceReceptorInternalizationlcsh:Sciencemedia_commonstealth effectbiologyFull PapernanocarriersChemistryGeneral EngineeringFull Papers021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesIgG bindingBiophysicsbiology.proteinlcsh:QNanocarriersAntibody0210 nano-technologyAdvanced Science
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Zebrafish Fins as a Model System for Skeletal Human Studies

2007

Recent studies on the morphogenesis of the fins ofDanio rerio(zebrafish) during development and regeneration suggest that a number of inductive signals involved in the process are similar to some of those that affect bone and cartilage differentiation in mammals and humans. Akimenko et al. (2002) has shown that bone morphogenetic protein-2b (BMP2b) is involved in the induction of dermal bone differentiation during fin regeneration. Many other groups have also shown that molecules from the transforming growth factor-beta superfamily (TGFβ), including BMP2, are effective in promoting chondrogenesis and osteogenesisin vivoin higher vertebrates, including humans. In the present study, we review…

collagenPathologylcsh:MedicineReview Articlebonelcsh:TechnologydentineExtracellular matrixbone regenerationOsteogenesisMorphogenesislcsh:ScienceZebrafishZebrafishGeneral Environmental Sciencetransforming growth factor betaDermal bonebiologyenamelGeneral MedicineCell biologyendochondral ossificationmedicine.anatomical_structureModels Animalmedicine.medical_specialtyextracellular matrixosteocyteregenerative medicineray dermal boneBone morphogenetic protein 2Bone and BonesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyFin regenerationsonic hedgehogbone morphogenetic proteinsmedicineAnimalsHumansactinopterygian fishesmammalslepidotrichiascleroblastmesenchymal stem cellslcsh:TRegeneration (biology)Cartilagelcsh:RZebrafish Proteinsbone repairbiology.organism_classificationChondrogenesisCartilageregenerationintramembranous ossificationlcsh:Qcell therapyvertebratesThe Scientific World Journal
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Genetic and Chemical Modifiers Of A CUG Toxicity Model in Drosophila

2007

Non-coding CUG repeat expansions interfere with the activity of human Muscleblind-like (MBNL) proteins contributing to myotonic dystrophy 1 (DM1). To understand this toxic RNA gain-of-function mechanism we developed a Drosophila model expressing 60 pure and 480 interrupted CUG repeats in the context of a non-translatable RNA. These flies reproduced aspects of the DM1 pathology, most notably nuclear accumulation of CUG transcripts, muscle degeneration, splicing misregulation, and diminished Muscleblind function in vivo. Reduced Muscleblind activity was evident from the sensitivity of CUG-induced phenotypes to a decrease in muscleblind genetic dosage and rescue by MBNL1 expression, and furthe…

congenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesGene Dosagelcsh:MedicineRNA-binding proteinBiologyEyechemistry.chemical_compoundTrinucleotide RepeatsAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsMyotonic DystrophyMBNL1lcsh:ScienceGeneGenetics and Genomics/Genetics of DiseaseGeneticsMessenger RNADNA Repeat ExpansionMultidisciplinaryAlternative splicinglcsh:RBrainNuclear ProteinsRNA-Binding ProteinsRNAPhenotypeCell biologyDisease Models AnimalGenetics and Genomics/Disease ModelschemistryRNA splicingDrosophilalcsh:QGenèticaResearch Article
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