Results 211 to 220 of about 753,464 (253)
A urine‐based digital PCR assay targeting two hotspot TERT promoter variants detected bladder cancer with high sensitivity and no false positives in this case–control cohort. The streamlined AbsoluteQ workflow outperformed Sanger sequencing and supports non‐invasive molecular testing for bladder cancer detection.
Anna Nykel +12 more
wiley +1 more source
This study shows that lung adenocarcinomas exploit developmental branching morphogenesis to acquire a therapy resistant basal‐like tumour cell state. This process was found to be regulated by combined TP53 loss‐of‐function and type‐I interferon signalling, identifying a novel axis for biomarker and therapeutic target discovery.
Kamila J Bienkowska +13 more
wiley +1 more source
Combining osimertinib with the STING agonist ADU‐S100 activates innate and adaptive immunity to overcome the non‐inflamed microenvironment of Egfr‐mutant lung cancer. This combination increases NK and CD8+ T‐cell infiltration, associated with activation of the STING‐IRF3 pathway and local immunogenic cell death.
Jun Nishimura +19 more
wiley +1 more source
Application of Single-Cell Assay for Transposase-Accessible Chromatin with High Throughput Sequencing in Plant Science: Advances, Technical Challenges, and Prospects. [PDF]
Lu C +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
Loss of IGF‐1R impairs DNA‐PKcs recruitment to chromatin leading to defective end‐joining
IGF‐1R promotes radioresistance by facilitating DNA‐PKcs recruitment to chromatin, enabling non‐homologous end‐joining (NHEJ) repair of double‐strand breaks. Inhibition or loss of IGF‐1R disrupts this recruitment to damage sites, driving compensatory reliance on microhomology‐mediated end‐joining (MMEJ) repair.
Matthew O. Ellis +3 more
wiley +1 more source
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Multivariate approaches in plant science
Phytochemistry, 2004AbstractFor Abstract see ChemInform Abstract in Full Text.
David M, Gottlieb +4 more
openaire +2 more sources
Carbohydrate Microarrays in Plant Science
2012Almost all plant cells are surrounded by glycan-rich cell walls, which form much of the plant body and collectively are the largest source of biomass on earth. Plants use polysaccharides for support, defense, signaling, cell adhesion, and as energy storage, and many plant glycans are also important industrially and nutritionally.
Fangel, Jonatan Ulrik +8 more
openaire +3 more sources
Plant science in the age of phage
Trends in Plant Science, 2004A wide range of foreign proteins can be expressed at the surface of bacteriophage particles by fusion to phage coat proteins. This powerful molecular technique, known as phage display, has been embraced by the animal and medical research communities but has received less attention from plant scientists.
Bernal Giraldo, Adriana Jimena +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
Science diplomacy for plant health
Nature Plants, 2020Peer ...
Baldissera Giovani +38 more
openaire +5 more sources
Science, 2010
Plants are essential to the survival of our planet—to its ecology, biodiversity, and climate. They maintain human health by providing the basis for nutrition, shelter, clothing, and energy. The study of plants has yielded fundamental insights that have reshaped our understanding of the world and has enabled major human needs to be addressed.
Steven J, McCormick, Robert, Tjian
openaire +2 more sources
Plants are essential to the survival of our planet—to its ecology, biodiversity, and climate. They maintain human health by providing the basis for nutrition, shelter, clothing, and energy. The study of plants has yielded fundamental insights that have reshaped our understanding of the world and has enabled major human needs to be addressed.
Steven J, McCormick, Robert, Tjian
openaire +2 more sources

