Results 11 to 20 of about 1,082 (135)
Full‐Length 16S and 18S rRNA Long‐Read Sequencing Reveals Gut Microbiome Diversity in the European Brown Hare (Lepus europaeus) [PDF]
Full‐length 16S and 18S rRNA Oxford Nanopore sequencing of large intestine contents from 30 healthy European brown hares revealed broad gut microbiome diversity. An 80% identity threshold detected substantially greater taxonomic richness than 95%, emphasizing the value of long‐read sequencing in wildlife microbiome research. ABSTRACT The European brown
Zbigniew Bełkot +7 more
wiley +2 more sources
Observations on Streptolysin [PDF]
Besredka1 found that only those streptococci which were virulent for rabbits produced hemolysin, and he recommended that in the study of the hemolysin, cultures should be made directly from the heart blood of rabbits that are dead from streptococcus infection. Ruediger2 found only a slight hemolytic property in the filtrates of streptococcus culture in
openaire +1 more source
A multifunctional nanomedicine is designed to engineer NK cells for enhanced cancer immunotherapy through perforation and desialylation, enabling real‐time monitoring of ATP and GrB levels for precise efficacy assessment. Abstract Efficient enhanced NK cell therapy is of critical importance in the immune treatment of cancer.
Yuanjiao Yang +8 more
wiley +1 more source
STREPTOLYSIN PRODUCTION IN CARBOHYDRATE MEDIA [PDF]
It is evident that there are numerous interacting factors which affect streptolysin in the presence of fermented sugars. The principal action is the change in the metabolism of the streptococcus by which more carbohydrate and less protein is utilized; although the growth is much increased there is proportionately less hemolysin.
F A, Stevens, S A, Koser
openaire +2 more sources
ABSTRACT Atopic dermatitis and psoriasis are two common cutaneous chronic inflammatory diseases. Although they share similar immunological mechanisms, their clinical implications in the patient are different. This review compares both diseases from different points of view such as genetics, natural history, triggers of disease, and skin barrier defects
Tali Czarnowicki +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Cell membrane‐coated nanoparticles for dermatological diseases
Skin disorders are challenging to treat due to complex barrier functions and limited conventional therapies. Biomimetic cell membrane‐coated nanoparticles (CM‐NPs) offer a superior nanomedicine approach by evading immune detection and enabling precise targeting.
Shuaijun Zou, Baojie Zhang, Yuanjie Zhu
wiley +1 more source
Rapid Proteome‐Wide Discovery of Protein–Protein Interactions With ppIRIS
ppIRIS is a lightweight deep learning framework for proteome‐wide protein–protein interaction prediction directly from sequence. By fusing evolutionary and structural embeddings with a regularized Siamese architecture, ppIRIS achieves state‐of‐the‐art accuracy across species, enables minute‐scale screening, and reveals biologically validated bacterial ...
Luiz Felipe Piochi +4 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Physicians evaluating pediatric movement disorders, especially chorea, should consider a broad differential diagnosis, including vascular etiologies such as moyamoya disease. Prompt recognition, appropriate neuroimaging, and early diagnosis are crucial for guiding management and optimizing patient outcomes.
Lina Okar +4 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT A 25‐year‐old male who had been in good health before presenting with right lower lobe pneumonia, severe hyponatremia (Na 117 mEq/L), distension, and reduced urine output. AKI secondary to acute glomerulonephritis (GN) or interstitial nephritis was suggested by the initial workup. He was discharged for outpatient nephrology follow‐up following
Bassem Al Hariri +5 more
wiley +1 more source
DNA Origami Assembly Inside Liposomes via Nanopore‐Mediated DNA Transportation
DNA origami assembly inside giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) using externally supplied staple strands is demonstrated. Scaffold DNA is pre‐encapsulated inside GUVs, and staple strands are transported via a pore‐forming membrane protein. Subsequent addition of CaCl2 closes the pores.
Shoji Iwabuchi +5 more
wiley +1 more source

