Results 211 to 220 of about 348,401 (256)
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GENETIC POLYMORPHISMS AND SEPSIS
Shock, 2005Sepsis is a polygenic and complex syndrome that is initiated by infection and is characterized by a systemic inflammatory response. Genetic polymorphisms in the immune response to infection have been shown to be associated with clinical outcomes. Functional and association studies involving genetic polymorphisms in essential genes, including Toll-like ...
John, Arcaroli +2 more
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Endometriosis and Genetic Polymorphisms
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 2007Endometriosis is a benign gynecological disease with an unclear pathophysiology characterized by ectopic endometrium causing endometrium-like inflammatory lesions outside the uterine cavity. Recently, a number of studies have investigated genetic polymorphisms as a possible factor contributing to the development of endometriosis.
Henrik, Falconer +2 more
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Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences, 1966
Abstract The title of this Symposium ‘From Mendel’s factors to the genetic code’ emphasizes a single aspect of genetic research. That is unfortunate in a subject of such wide scope. Even in the most general terms, it naturally involves far more than analysing the fine structure of the genetic material and the physiological paths by ...
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Abstract The title of this Symposium ‘From Mendel’s factors to the genetic code’ emphasizes a single aspect of genetic research. That is unfortunate in a subject of such wide scope. Even in the most general terms, it naturally involves far more than analysing the fine structure of the genetic material and the physiological paths by ...
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The Genetics of the Human APOE Polymorphism
Rejuvenation Research, 2011The genetic origin of the three common variants of the human apolipoprotein E (apoE) protein, known as E2, E3 and E4, was understood in 1981, and since the mid 1980s these are probably the most-studied protein variants in human races. They have been related to a number of age-related diseases, including Alzheimer disease, as well as to healthy aging ...
Davide, Seripa +5 more
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Genetic Polymorphism of Plasminogen
Haemostasis, 1988By isoelectric focusing in a pH range of pH 3.5 – 9.5 or of pH 5–8, and by using a functional or an immunological detection, a genetic polymorphism of plasminogen can be demonstrated. In Caucasoids, 2 common alleles – PLG*A (frequency 0.67) and PLG*B (frequency 0.30) – as well as several rare variants (sum of their frequencies 0.03) exist.
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Populations and genetic polymorphisms*
Molecular Diagnosis, 1999Population frequencies of many polymorphic genes of pharmacogenetic interest depend on race or ethnic specificity. Association of these genes with person-to-person differences in drug effectiveness (hypersensitivity or resistance) and drug toxicity may also depend on the racial or ethnic characteristics of a population.
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Genetic polymorphisms and additive genetic models
Behavior Genetics, 1985The degree of genetic dissimilarity between inbred strains or substrains of mice may be estimated from available data concerning biochemical and immunological polymorphisms. Dissimilarities between substrains are bimodally distributed, suggesting that both genetic drift and contamination are responsible for substrain differences.
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Polymorphism and Genetic Programming
2001Types have been introduced to Genetic Programming (GP) by researchers with different motivation. We present the concept of types in GP and introduce a typed GP system, PolyGP, that supports polymorphism through the use of three different kinds of type variable. We demonstrate the usefulness of this kind of polymorphism in GP by evolving two polymorphic
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The Genetics of Polymorphism in the Lepidoptera
1953Publisher Summary Polymorphism is the occurrence together in the same environment of two or more discontinuous forms of a species in such proportions as the rarest of them cannot be maintained merely by recurrent mutation. Two distinct types must be recognized: balanced polymorphism which is due to a balance of selective agencies that favor ...
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