Results 191 to 200 of about 26,470 (237)
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Cionin: Ciona intestinalis cholecystokinin

Handbook of Hormones, 2021
Cholecystokinin (CCK) and gastrin are vertebrate brain/gut peptides conserving a sulfated tyrosine residue and a C-terminally amidated tetrapeptide consensus sequence.
H. Satake
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Chemotaxis of the spermatozoa of Ciona intestinalis

Nature, 1975
CHEMOTAXIS of animal sperm, long thought not to occur1–4, was first proved in the marine coelenterate Campanularia5 and since then has been observed in other hydroids6,8. The species-specificities and cross reactions between sperm and reproductive structures of these species and genera have been described6, and some of the attractants have been ...
openaire   +4 more sources

Ciona intestinalis calcitonin

Handbook of Hormones, 2021
Honoo Satake
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Computational Identification of Ciona intestinalis MicroRNAs

Zoological Science, 2010
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are conserved non-coding small RNAs with potent post-transcriptional gene regulatory functions. Recent computational approaches and sequencing of small RNAs had indicated the existence of about 80 Ciona intestinalis miRNAs, although it was not clear whether other miRNA genes were present in the genome.
Raja, Keshavan   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Ciona intestinalis

2012
3. Ciona intestinalis (Linnaeus, 1767) (Fig. 2C, Table 3) Ascidia canina Müller, 1776: 43. Ascidea intestinalis: De Kay, 1843: 259. Ciona intestinalis: Van Name, 1912: 606, fig. 43, pl. 66, fig. 130; Van Name, 1945: 160, fig. 79; Millar, 1952: 47; Tokioka, 1954: 82; Yamaguchi, 1975: 253; Rho, 1977: 316; Rho & Lee, 1991: 201; Currie et al,
Pyo, Jooyeon, Lee, Taekjun, Shin, Sook
openaire   +1 more source

Experiments on Ciona Intestinalis

Nature, 1923
IN the issue of NATURE for November 3, p. 653, there appears a letter from my old friend and former colleague, Mr. H. M. Fox, in which he records an attempt which he made this summer to repeat Dr. Kammerer's experiments on Ciona. These experiments consisted in inducing an abnormal growth of the siphons of Ciona by repeated amputation. Mr. Fox amputated
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Cititf1 and endoderm differentiation in Ciona intestinalis

Gene, 2002
Studies on the initial formation of the endoderm have lead to the identification, mostly in Xenopus, of numerous genes relevant for the formation of this tissue during early embryogenesis (reviewed by Date, Curr. Biol. 9 (1999) R812-R815 and by Yasuo and Lemaire, Curr. Biol. 9 (1999) 869-879).
SPAGNUOLO A., DI LAURO, ROBERTO
openaire   +3 more sources

Histochemical studies of cholinesterases in Ciona intestinalis

Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 1966
Abstract 1. 1. The cholinergicity of tunicates is at present controversial. The results of this study on Ciona intestinalis based on Koelle's histochemical technique suggest that acetylcholinesterase is present in “detritus” found in the gut lumen and in the sinus of the neural gland. 2. 2.
C L, Scudder, A G, Karczmar
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A lasp family protein of Ciona intestinalis

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms, 2008
Lasp-1 and lasp-2 are actin-binding proteins that contain a LIM domain, nebulin repeats, and an SH3 domain and they are significantly conserved in mammalian and avian. Lasp-1 is widely expressed in nonmuscle tissues and lasp-2 is specifically expressed in the brain.
Asako G, Terasaki   +8 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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