Results 121 to 130 of about 32,466 (303)
Paternal Circadian Disruption Impairs Offspring Cognition via Sperm microRNAs
Paternal circadian disruption remodels the sperm small RNA payload, elevating miR‐92a‐3p/miR‐25‐3p levels and perturbing early embryonic gene regulatory programs. Microinjection experiments and single‐embryo transcriptomics reveal sex‐specific developmental vulnerabilities, ultimately impairing offspring hippocampal synaptic plasticity and cognition ...
Kexin Zou +22 more
wiley +1 more source
Neuronal PKM2‐driven glycolysis generates excess lactate that triggers histone H3K18 lactylation (H3K18la), establishing a pathogenic metabolic‐epigenetic axis in epilepsy. Elevated H3K18la enriches the Cop1 promoter, transcriptionally upregulating the E3 ubiquitin ligase COP1, which subsequently drives proteasomal degradation of GABAARβ2 and impairs ...
Yuan Meng +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Multi-relational record linkage
. Data cleaning and integration is typically the most expensive step in the KDD process. A key part, known as record linkage or de-duplication, is identifying which records in a database refer to the same entities.
Pedro Domingos
core
Characterizing Outpatient Problem List Completeness and Duplications in the Electronic Health Record
Purpose: To characterize rates of problem list completeness and duplications in outpatient problem lists and to identify any relationships between problem list completeness and duplications and disease type, demographics, and disease severity.
Wang, Edward
core
Dissecting the Ecological Structure of Health and Disease in the Global Gut Microbiome
We introduce Wiredancer, a framework that identifies three continuous ecological factors of the gut microbiota. These factors exhibit distinct patterns across health and disease, jointly capturing disrupted ecological stability and offering a new perspective for precision diagnostics and therapeutic strategies.
Baoyuan Zhu +19 more
wiley +1 more source
The M.A.C. record. Vol. 19 no. 28 (1914 April 28)
Major articles in this issue include: New Honors for Dean Cordley -- Former M.A.C. Student in Action at Vera Cruz -- Alumni Baseball Fans - Attention -- M.A.C.
core
Corals and Reef‐Dwelling Fish Regulate Carbon Storage and Cycling Processes in Coral Reef Ecosystems
Coral reefs are biodiversity hotspots, yet their role in carbon storage and cycling remains poorly understood. Using field surveys and modeling in the South China Sea, we reveal the overlooked potential of carbon storage in reef ecosystems and how reef fish, corals, and surface sediment jointly shape reef carbon reservoirs.
Yiting Chen +8 more
wiley +1 more source
The M.A.C. record. Vol. 19 no. 25 (1914 March 31)
Major articles in this issue include: M.A.C. Facing a Crisis -- Concerning College Hall -- H.E. Thomas, '85, Refuses Lansing Postmastership -- President Snyder Visits Alumni in Western New York -- Quiet Term Ends -- Is There Real Duplication?
core
THUMPD1 drives a tumor‐suppressive signaling cascade in lung adenocarcinoma by promoting IGF2R expression. IGF2R associates with PPP2R1A to suppress AKT and activate AMPK, leading to SLC31A1 upregulation and copper accumulation. Elevated copper disrupts mitochondrial metabolism and induces excessive mitophagy, thereby restraining tumor growth and ...
Kai Wu +10 more
wiley +1 more source
DNA Replication Errors Drive Genome‐Wide Small Inverted Triplication Dynamics
This study provides insight into the dynamic equilibrium mechanism of a novel structural variant, small inverted triplication (SIT), which is generated by misalignment of the 3’ flap generated under DNA replication stress with palindromic sequence. Alternatively, the end sequence may fold back on itself to form an inverted fragment.
Yi Lei +12 more
wiley +1 more source

