Results 261 to 270 of about 234,613 (299)
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HEAT SHOCK PROTEINS, ANTI-HEAT SHOCK PROTEIN REACTIVITY AND ALLOGRAFT REJECTION
Transplantation, 2001Heat shock proteins are families of highly conserved immunodominant molecules, reactivity to which has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a number of autoimmune and vascular disease states. However, heat shock proteins are cytoprotective, and in clinical and experimental arthritis, anti-heat shock protein reactivity can down modulate immune ...
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2009
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) or so called stress proteins have multifunctional roles and are involved in many physiological processes, such as cell cycle control, cell proliferation, development, organisation of the cytoarchitecture, regulation of cell death and survival, and play regulatory roles in cellular aging and longevity.
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Heat shock proteins (HSPs) or so called stress proteins have multifunctional roles and are involved in many physiological processes, such as cell cycle control, cell proliferation, development, organisation of the cytoarchitecture, regulation of cell death and survival, and play regulatory roles in cellular aging and longevity.
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Transforming heat transfer with thermal metamaterials and devices
Nature Reviews Materials, 2021Ying Li, Wei Li, Tiancheng Han
exaly
Photothermal Nanomaterials: A Powerful Light-to-Heat Converter
Chemical Reviews, 2023Ximin Cui, Qifeng Ruan, Xiaolu Zhuo
exaly
Heat shock proteins. Introduction
Experientia, 1992U, Feige, J, Mollenhauer
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Bulletin de la Societe des sciences medicales du Grand-Duche de Luxembourg, 1993
All cells, procaryotic and eucaryotic, respond to a rise in environmental temperature by a rapid synthesis of a set of specific proteins: the heat shock proteins (HSPs). These HSPs appear to be among the most conserved proteins in nature and certain members of the HSP family are present in non-stressed cells.
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All cells, procaryotic and eucaryotic, respond to a rise in environmental temperature by a rapid synthesis of a set of specific proteins: the heat shock proteins (HSPs). These HSPs appear to be among the most conserved proteins in nature and certain members of the HSP family are present in non-stressed cells.
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