Rethinking Substance Use as Social History: Charting a Way Forward. [PDF]
Bozinoff N +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
Barbara Bates, Bargaining for life: a social history of tuberculosis, 1876–1938, Studies in Health, Illness, and Caregiving in America, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1992, pp. xii, 435, £43.50 (hardback, 0-8122-3120-1), £17.95 (paperback, 0-8122-1376-X). [PDF]
Stephen Lock
openalex +1 more source
Tumors contain diverse cellular states whose behavior is shaped by context‐dependent gene coordination. By comparing gene–gene relationships across biological contexts, we identify adaptive transcriptional modules that reorganize into distinct vulnerability axes.
Brian Nelson +9 more
wiley +1 more source
The New Social History and the Southwest: the Dallas Social History Project [PDF]
Graff, Henry D
core +1 more source
Matthewramsey, Prof essional and popular medicine in France, 1770–1830. The social world of medical practice, Cambridge History of Medicine, Cambridge University Press, 1988, 8vo, pp. xvii, 406, illus., £35.00, $49.50. [PDF]
Jacalyn Duffin
openalex +1 more source
RIPK4 function interferes with melanoma cell adhesion and metastasis
RIPK4 promotes melanoma growth and spread. RIPK4 levels increase as skin lesions progress to melanoma. CRISPR/Cas9‐mediated deletion of RIPK4 causes melanoma cells to form less compact spheroids, reduces their migratory and invasive abilities and limits tumour growth and dissemination in mouse models.
Norbert Wronski +9 more
wiley +1 more source
The establishment history panel BHP 1.0 : handbook version 1.0.0 [PDF]
"The Establishment History Panel was formed on the basis of the Employee and Benefit Recipient History (BLH), version 4.00, for the years 1993 to 2003. The BLH is made up of the social security agencies' processed notifications to the Federal Employment ...
Adler, Silke +2 more
core
Images of depression in Charles Baudelaire: clinical understanding in the context of poetry and social history. [PDF]
Stanghellini G, Ikkos G.
europepmc +1 more source
COMP–PMEPA1 axis promotes epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition in breast cancer cells
This study reveals that cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP) promotes epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition (EMT) in breast cancer. We identify PMEPA1 (protein TMEPAI) as a novel COMP‐binding partner that mediates EMT via binding to the TSP domains of COMP, establishing the COMP–PMEPA1 axis as a key EMT driver in breast cancer.
Konstantinos S. Papadakos +6 more
wiley +1 more source

