Results 81 to 90 of about 285,101 (303)
For scientists, for students or for the public? : the shifting roles of natural history museums [PDF]
This article aims to discuss the main roles of natural history museums and to show how these purposes have evolved and adapted throughout the museums’ history, as a response to the development of natural sciences and societal change, from their creation ...
Delicado, Ana
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PICALM::MLLT10 translocated leukemia
This comprehensive review of PICALM::MLLT10 translocated acute leukemia provides an in‐depth review of the structure and function of CALM, AF10, and the fusion oncoprotein (1). The multifaceted molecular mechanisms of oncogenesis, including nucleocytoplasmic shuttling (2), epigenetic modifications (3), and disruption of endocytosis (4), are then ...
John M. Cullen +7 more
wiley +1 more source
L’archéologie de l’or en Europe
In such a long-standing discipline as archeology, research on gold metallurgy used to hold a secondary position, until things began to change in the 1990s.
Alicia Perea, Barbara Armbruster
doaj +1 more source
Biennalization? What biennalization?: the documentation of biennials and other recurrent exhibitions [PDF]
Biennials have been central to the development of contemporary art for decades, but there is a paucity of published material specifically related to this subject.
Grandal Montero, Gustavo
core
Bone metastasis in prostate cancer (PCa) patients is a clinical hurdle due to the poor understanding of the supportive bone microenvironment. Here, we identify stearoyl‐CoA desaturase (SCD) as a tumor‐promoting enzyme and potential therapeutic target in bone metastatic PCa.
Alexis Wilson +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Excavating Identity: The Significance of Soil Exhibitions for Understanding Place
Exhibition design, as a powerful medium of communication and interpretation, can reveal the hidden richness and regional identity embedded within the subterranean layers of soil.
Jacqueline McIntosh +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Relegated to the margins of the history of 19th century German art, the Nazareans and the painters of the Düsseldorf school have long been disparaged, their art considered sterile and backward-looking by some, and academic and bourgeois by others.
France Nerlich
doaj +1 more source
We reconstituted Synechocystis glycogen synthesis in vitro from purified enzymes and showed that two GlgA isoenzymes produce glycogen with different architectures: GlgA1 yields denser, highly branched glycogen, whereas GlgA2 synthesizes longer, less‐branched chains.
Kenric Lee +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Some undisclosed points of remove [PDF]
Journal article discussing 'some undisclosed points of remove', an exhibition in Chelsea College of Arts' Old College Library. The exhibition showed new, site-responsive artworks by Melanie Counsell, Sara MacKillop, Anne Tallentire, Sabine Tholen and ...
Falconer, Vicky
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Structural biology of ferritin nanocages
Ferritin is a conserved iron‐storage protein that sequesters iron as a ferric mineral core within a nanocage, protecting cells from oxidative damage and maintaining iron homeostasis. This review discusses ferritin biology, structure, and function, and highlights recent cryo‐EM studies revealing mechanisms of ferritinophagy, cellular iron uptake, and ...
Eloise Mastrangelo, Flavio Di Pisa
wiley +1 more source

