Results 71 to 80 of about 16,014,283 (355)

Responsibility in the age of precision genomics

open access: yesVoices in Bioethics, 2017
What is normal, anyway? Genetically speaking, that’s precisely the question that the Obama administration’s Precision Medicine Initiative (PMI) seeks to answer.
Alexa Woodward
doaj   +1 more source

Organoids in pediatric cancer research

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Organoid technology has revolutionized cancer research, yet its application in pediatric oncology remains limited. Recent advances have enabled the development of pediatric tumor organoids, offering new insights into disease biology, treatment response, and interactions with the tumor microenvironment.
Carla Ríos Arceo, Jarno Drost
wiley   +1 more source

High-field MRI findings in epileptic dogs with a normal inter-ictal neurological examination

open access: yesFrontiers in Veterinary Science
IntroductionEpilepsy is one of the most common chronic neurological conditions affecting dogs. Previous research exploring the likelihood of a structural cause of epilepsy specifically in dogs with a normal inter-ictal examination is limited to a small ...
Stephanie Phillipps, Rita Goncalves
doaj   +1 more source

Reciprocal control of viral infection and phosphoinositide dynamics

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Phosphoinositides, although scarce, regulate key cellular processes, including membrane dynamics and signaling. Viruses exploit these lipids to support their entry, replication, assembly, and egress. The central role of phosphoinositides in infection highlights phosphoinositide metabolism as a promising antiviral target.
Marie Déborah Bancilhon, Bruno Mesmin
wiley   +1 more source

Silence and its mechanisms as the discursive production of the ‘normal’ in the early childhood classroom

open access: yesJournal of Childhood, Education & Society, 2020
In this paper, we aim to better understand and trouble the discursive (re)production of what is taken as the ‘normal’ in ‘inclusive’ early childhood classrooms.
Karen Watson   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Spatiotemporal and quantitative analyses of phosphoinositides – fluorescent probe—and mass spectrometry‐based approaches

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Fluorescent probes allow dynamic visualization of phosphoinositides in living cells (left), whereas mass spectrometry provides high‐sensitivity, isomer‐resolved quantitation (right). Their synergistic use captures complementary aspects of lipid signaling. This review illustrates how these approaches reveal the spatiotemporal regulation and quantitative
Hiroaki Kajiho   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Assuming an inadequate posture: is it a bad costume or part of the normal development? [PDF]

open access: yesRevista Ciencias de la Salud, 2003
Children adopt different postures as a normal consequence oftheir development, sometimes these attitudes are erroneouslycalled postural vicious. This article summarizes the childrenpostural development, explains why most of the positionsadopted by ...
Juan Carlos Rodríguez
doaj  

A Cre‐dependent lentiviral vector for neuron subtype‐specific expression of large proteins

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
We designed a versatile and modular lentivector comprising a Cre‐dependent switch and self‐cleaving 2A peptide and tested it for co‐expression of GFP and a 2.8 kb gene of interest (GOI) in mouse cortical parvalbumin (PV+) interneurons and midbrain dopamine (TH+) neurons.
Weixuan Xue   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

Normalizers and self-normalizing subgroups II

open access: yesOpen Mathematics, 2011
Abstract Let $\mathbb{K}$ be a field, G a reductive algebraic $\mathbb{K}$-group, and G 1 ≤ G a reductive subgroup. For G 1 ≤ G, the corresponding groups of $\mathbb{K}$-points, we study the normalizer N = N G(G 1).
openaire   +4 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy