Results 211 to 220 of about 331,596 (261)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 2003
Proteomics encompasses a group of technologies that attempt to separate, identify and characterize a global set of proteins. This review will highlight the technologies available, outline the capabilities, advantages and disadvantages of each and briefly describe applications in nephrology.Proteomics provides information about abundance, location ...
J C, Betts, M A, Smith
+11 more sources
Proteomics encompasses a group of technologies that attempt to separate, identify and characterize a global set of proteins. This review will highlight the technologies available, outline the capabilities, advantages and disadvantages of each and briefly describe applications in nephrology.Proteomics provides information about abundance, location ...
J C, Betts, M A, Smith
+11 more sources
Critical Care Medicine, 2005
Proteomics is the measurement of one or more protein populations or proteomes, preferably in a quantitative manner. A protein population may be the set of proteins found in an organism, in a tissue or biofluid, in a cell, or in a subcellular compartment.
John T, Stults, David, Arnott
+6 more sources
Proteomics is the measurement of one or more protein populations or proteomes, preferably in a quantitative manner. A protein population may be the set of proteins found in an organism, in a tissue or biofluid, in a cell, or in a subcellular compartment.
John T, Stults, David, Arnott
+6 more sources
Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics, 2004
▪ Abstract The genome sequences of important model systems are available and the focus is now shifting to large-scale experiments enabled by this data. Following in the footsteps of genomics, we have functional genomics, proteomics, and even metabolomics, roughly paralleling the biological hierarchy of the transcription, translation, and production ...
de Hoog, C.L., Mann, Matthias
openaire +5 more sources
▪ Abstract The genome sequences of important model systems are available and the focus is now shifting to large-scale experiments enabled by this data. Following in the footsteps of genomics, we have functional genomics, proteomics, and even metabolomics, roughly paralleling the biological hierarchy of the transcription, translation, and production ...
de Hoog, C.L., Mann, Matthias
openaire +5 more sources
Chemoisosterism in the Proteome
Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, 2013The concept of chemoisosterism of protein environments is introduced as the complementary property to bioisosterism of chemical fragments. In the same way that two chemical fragments are considered bioisosteric if they can bind to the same protein environment, two protein environments will be considered chemoisosteric if they can interact with the same
Xavier Jalencas, Jordi Mestres
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Proteomics, 2011
We believe that this JoP special issue on Redox Proteomics not only represents one of the numerous attempts to start a network of information among multiplelaboratories working on this delicate topic, but it also promises to start bridging the persisting gaps between the clinical and the academic milieu, hopping that, for the foreseeable future, this ...
Scaloni A, Zolla L
openaire +5 more sources
We believe that this JoP special issue on Redox Proteomics not only represents one of the numerous attempts to start a network of information among multiplelaboratories working on this delicate topic, but it also promises to start bridging the persisting gaps between the clinical and the academic milieu, hopping that, for the foreseeable future, this ...
Scaloni A, Zolla L
openaire +5 more sources
2010
Visual proteomics attempts to generate molecular atlases by providing the position and angular orientation of protein complexes inside of cells. This is accomplished by template matching (pattern recognition), a cross-correlation-based process that matches the structure of a specific protein complex to the densities of the whole volume or subvolume of ...
Förster, F., Han, B., Beck, M.
openaire +4 more sources
Visual proteomics attempts to generate molecular atlases by providing the position and angular orientation of protein complexes inside of cells. This is accomplished by template matching (pattern recognition), a cross-correlation-based process that matches the structure of a specific protein complex to the densities of the whole volume or subvolume of ...
Förster, F., Han, B., Beck, M.
openaire +4 more sources
2007
Proteomics has been widely applied to several biomedical fields in recent years. The high-throughput capability of proteomics allows simultaneous examination of numerous proteins and offers the possibility of a global analysis of proteins in cells, tissues or biofluids.
openaire +2 more sources
Proteomics has been widely applied to several biomedical fields in recent years. The high-throughput capability of proteomics allows simultaneous examination of numerous proteins and offers the possibility of a global analysis of proteins in cells, tissues or biofluids.
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Nephrology, 2010
Abstract In the last thirty decade, with the emergence of new trends in molecular biology and advances in high throughput technologies, much progress has been made in basic renal physiology. Molecular genetics has allowed the identification and elucidation of the structure, function and effects of the mutations of sev eral of the main
VILASI A, CAPASSO, Giovambattista
openaire +3 more sources
Abstract In the last thirty decade, with the emergence of new trends in molecular biology and advances in high throughput technologies, much progress has been made in basic renal physiology. Molecular genetics has allowed the identification and elucidation of the structure, function and effects of the mutations of sev eral of the main
VILASI A, CAPASSO, Giovambattista
openaire +3 more sources

