Results 121 to 130 of about 1,608,475 (285)

EK STR A K SI D A N EV A LU A SI SI F A T SI F A T P R EBI O T I K P EK TI N K U LI T P I SA N G

open access: yes, 2014
P i s a ng m e r upa ka n kom odi t a s ungg ul a n I ndone s i a , de n g a n j um l a h pr od uks i pa da t a hun 2008 s a m p a i 2010 be r t ur ut t ur ut s e be s a ...
Dol i P ar d o m u an H u t agal u n g
core  

pH‐mediated activation of the lysosomal arginine sensor SLC38A9

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Cells monitor nutrient levels via the lysosomal transporter SLC38A9 to activate the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1). This study reveals that SLC38A9 function is regulated by pH. We identified histidine 544 as a critical pH sensor that undergoes conformational changes to control amino acid efflux from lysosomes; therefore, it ...
Xuelang Mu, Ampon Sae Her, Tamir Gonen
wiley   +1 more source

Positive solutions of Schrodinger-Poisson systems with Hardy potential and indefinite nonlinearity

open access: yesElectronic Journal of Differential Equations, 2020
In this article, we study the nonlinear Schrodinger-Poisson system $$\displaylines{ -\Delta u+u-\mu\frac{u}{|x|^2}+l(x) \phi u=k(x)|u|^{p-2}u \quad x\in\mathbb{R}^3, \cr -\Delta\phi=l(x)u^2 \quad x\in\mathbb{R}^3, }$$ where $k\in C(\mathbb{R}^3 ...
Yongyi Lan, Biyun Tang, Xian Hu
doaj  

Residual tail twisting in ascidian larvae is stabilized by asymmetric myofibrils that resist bilateral symmetry restoration

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Ascidian Ciona larvae initially show strong clockwise tail twisting, which is largely corrected during development. However, a small residual twist remains. This study shows that organized helical myofibrils in tail muscles mechanically stabilize this residual asymmetry, preventing complete restoration of bilateral symmetry and revealing how embryos ...
Yuki S. Kogure   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Existence and nonexistence of solutions for sublinear equations on exterior domains

open access: yesElectronic Journal of Differential Equations, 2017
In this article we study radial solutions of $\Delta u + K(r)f(u)= 0$ on the exterior of the ball of radius R>0, $B_{R}$, centered at the origin in ${\mathbb R}^{N}$ with u=0 on $\partial B_{R}$ where f is odd with f0 on $(\beta, \infty)$, $f(u)\sim u^
Joseph A. Iaia
doaj  

The human gut microbiome across the life course

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Despite significant individual variation and continuous change throughout life, the human gut microbiome follows some life stage‐specific trends. This article provides a brief overview of how gut microbiome composition shifts across different phases of life. Created in BioRender. Özkurt, E. (2026) https://BioRender.com/8q4nrnc.
Alise J. Ponsero   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

A N A L I S I S Y U R I D I S P E M I D A N A A N B A G I P E L A K U A N A K D A L A M T I N D A K P I D A N A P E R S E T U B U H A N ( P U T U S A N N O M O R 7 8 7 / P I D / 2 0 1 1 / P T . S B Y )

open access: yes, 2014
P e m i d a n a a n t e r h a d a p p e l a k u t i n d a k p i d a n a p e r s e t u b u h a n t e r h a d a p a n a k y a n g d i j a t u h k a n , c e n
C Y N T H I A G A B Y I P R A M I T A S A R I
core  

Septin 9 PB domains coordinate centrosome positioning and microtubule acetylation to control epithelial polarity

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Septin 9 polybasic domains couple phosphoinositide‐rich membrane binding to centrosome positioning, Golgi organization, and microtubule acetylation to control epithelial polarity. Their loss disrupts this axis, causing centrosome mispositioning, Golgi fragmentation, reduced microtubule acetylation, and polarity inversion via upregulation of the ...
Ting ting Cai   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

S T R U K T U R A N A T O M I D A U N L E N G K E N G D IA M O N D R IV E R

open access: yes, 2014
L e n g ke n g S e c a r a m o r f ol o g i k e e m p a t k ul t i va r l e n g ke n g y a i t u L o ka l , I t oh, pi n g pon g da n D i a m ond r i ve r m e m pu n
N u r u l A i n i
core  

Rab14 regulates the transport of human papillomavirus to the trans‐Golgi network for infectious cell entry

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
This study reveals that the small GTPase Rab14 is necessary for human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and plays an essential role in the transport of virions to the trans‐Golgi network (TGN). HPV in the early endosome (EE), which harbors GTP‐bound Rab14, is transported to the TGN through the switch of Rab14 from its GTP‐bound to GDP‐bound form.
Yoshiyuki Ishii, Iwao Kukimoto
wiley   +1 more source

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