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Molecular Networks Orchestrating GALT Development
2006During evolution, the development of secondary lymphoid organs has evolved as a strategy to promote adaptive immune responses at sites of antigen sequestration. Mesenteric lymph nodes (LNs) and Peyer's patches (PPs) are localized in proximity to mucosal surfaces, and their development is coordinated by a series of temporally and spatially regulated ...
D, Finke, D, Meier
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MOLECULAR NETWORKS IN MODEL SYSTEMS
Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics, 2004▪ Abstract  Model organisms, especially the budding yeast, are leading systems in the transformation of biology into an information science. With the availability of genome sequences and genome-scale data generation technologies, the extraction of biological insight from complex integrated molecular networks has become a major area of research. Here I
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Molecular Tectonics: From Simple Tectons to Complex Molecular Networks
ChemInform, 2005AbstractChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF.
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Accounts of Chemical Research, 2012
Dynamic combinatorial libraries (DCLs) are molecular networks in which the network members exchange building blocks. The resulting product distribution is initially under thermodynamic control. Addition of a guest or template molecule tends to shift the equilibrium towards compounds that are receptors for the guest.This Account gives an overview of our
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Dynamic combinatorial libraries (DCLs) are molecular networks in which the network members exchange building blocks. The resulting product distribution is initially under thermodynamic control. Addition of a guest or template molecule tends to shift the equilibrium towards compounds that are receptors for the guest.This Account gives an overview of our
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SELFORGANIZATION IN MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NETWORKS
Neurochemistry International, 1980Biological organisation rests on forces among material constituents which manifest themselves in two principal forms, namely as static-conservative and as dynamic-dissipative, the latter being responsible for selforganisational and regulatory behaviour.
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