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- 1From:Northwestern Naturalist: A Journal of Vertebrate Biology (Vol. 102, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedMESSAGE FROM THE EDITOR OF NORTHWESTERN NATURALIST: With the next issue, Spring 2022 (Volume 103, Number 1), we start year 103 of publishing peerreviewed original contributions concerned with the biology and ecology of...
- 2From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 17, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedCyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) cation channels are important heterotetrameric proteins in the retina, with different subunit composition in cone and rod photoreceptor cells: three CNGA3 and one CNGB3 in cones and three...
- 3From:PLoS Biology (Vol. 20, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedParvoviruses (family Parvoviridae) are small DNA viruses that cause numerous diseases of medical, veterinary, and agricultural significance and have important applications in gene and anticancer therapy. DNA sequences...
- 4From:Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week2021 JUN 19 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- A new study on hantavirus is now available. According to news originating from Brno, Czech Republic, by NewsRx...
- 5From:eLife (Vol. 11) Peer-ReviewedA newly discovered enhancer region may have allowed vertebrates to evolve the ability to open and close their jaws. Byline: Thomas F Schilling, Pierre Le Pabic...
- 6From:Diversity (Vol. 14, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedIdentifying indicator taxa is a solution to the problem of a lack of diverse data. However, the variation between studies on richness correlations (RCs) among taxa from different climate regions makes the application...
- 7From:BMC Genomics (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground The group XIV of C-type lectin domain-containing proteins (CTLDcps) is one of the seventeen groups of CTLDcps discovered in mammals and composed by four members: CD93, Clec14A, CD248 and Thrombomodulin,...
- 8From:BMC Biology (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground The three-dimensional (3D) architecture of the genome has a highly ordered and hierarchical nature, which influences the regulation of essential nuclear processes at the basis of gene expression, such as...
- 9From:BMC Biology (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Cytosine DNA methylation is a heritable epigenetic mark present in most eukaryotic groups. While the patterns and functions of DNA methylation have been extensively studied in mouse and human, their...
- 10From:ZooKeys (Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAbstract Knowledge about the biodiversity of Baja California has been obtained mainly from natural protected areas (NPAs), while some unprotected natural areas have been poorly studied. The Sierra Cucapá in the...
- 11From:ZooKeys (Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed
Biodiversity of vertebrates in Argentina: patterns of richness, endemism and conservation status.
Abstract Optimising conservation efforts requires an accurate record of the extant species as well as their geographic distributions. Nevertheless, most current conservation strategies start from an incomplete... - 12From:BMC Genomics (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Snakes exhibit extreme intestinal regeneration following months-long fasts that involves unparalleled increases in metabolism, function, and tissue growth, but the specific molecular control of this process...
- 13From:Atlantic Geoscience (Vol. 58) Peer-ReviewedThe Maritimes Basin of Atlantic Canada is well known for its rich ichnological resources that span the Mississippian through earliest Permian periods. Upper Pennsylvanian strata along the Northumberland Strait of Nova...
- 14From:Atlantic Geoscience (Vol. 58) Peer-ReviewedNewly discovered tetrapod and invertebrate ichnofossils from the Pennsylvanian (Westphalian C) Stellarton Formation represent the first ichnofossil assemblage to be described in the Stellarton Basin of Nova Scotia. The...
- 15From:Virology Journal (Vol. 18, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Rodents are widely distributed and are the natural reservoirs of a diverse group of zoonotic viruses. Thus, analyzing the viral diversity harbored by rodents could assist efforts to predict and reduce the...
- 16From:Nature (Vol. 599, Issue 7885) Peer-ReviewedProtein expression and turnover are controlled through a complex interplay of transcriptional, post-transcriptional and post-translational mechanisms to enable spatial and temporal regulation of cellular processes. To...
- 17From:Journal of Micropalaeontology (Vol. 40, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedVertebrate microfossils have broad applications in evolutionary biology and stratigraphy research areas such as the evolution of hard tissues and stratigraphic correlation. Classification is one of the basic tasks of...
- 18From:PLoS Genetics (Vol. 17, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedOscillatory and sequential processes have been implicated in the spatial patterning of many embryonic tissues. For example, molecular clocks delimit segmental boundaries in vertebrates and insects and mediate lateral...
- 19From:Nature Reviews Neuroscience (Vol. 22, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedIn their seminal 1983 paper, Gans and Northcutt proposed that evolution of the vertebrate 'new head' was made possible by the advent of the neural crest and cranial placodes. The neural crest is a stem cell population...
- 20From:Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology (Vol. 22, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedIn multicellular systems, oriented cell divisions are essential for morphogenesis and homeostasis as they determine the position of daughter cells within the tissue and also, in many cases, their fate. Early studies in...