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- 1From:Women's Health Weekly2019 AUG 29 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Investigators discuss new findings in Biology - Molecular Biology. According to news reporting originating in Konstanz, Germany,...
- 2From:Women's Health Weekly2019 MAR 28 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Researchers detail new data in Cancer. According to news reporting originating in Houston, Texas, by NewsRx journalists, research...
- 3From:The Economist (Vol. 421, Issue 9020)Doctors should look to proteins as well as genes to tackle tumours ONE of the most important medical insights of recent decades is that cancers are triggered by genetic mutations. Cashing that insight in clinically,...
- 4From:DVM Newsmagazine (Vol. 41, Issue 12)BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, UK -- A new research project, funded through The Horse Trust in Buckinghamshire, UK, shows that genes classified as mucins may regulate mucous proteins and change over the course of equine respiratory...
- 5From:Science News (Vol. 162, Issue 18)Flicking a switch can now turn on much more than just the lights. Thanks to a technique developed by a team of biologists in California, a light pulse can activate or deactivate selected genes in cells. Sae...
- 6From:Women's Health WeeklyResearch findings, "Genetic regulation of antibody responses to human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 in breast cancer," are discussed in a new report. According to the authors of a study from Charleston, South...
- 7From:Science News (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Research indicates that insulin may manage the activity of some genes that direct energy production in the body. In the nematode C elegans proteins encoded by a gene called daf-16 cause a form of diabetes when insulin is...
- 8From:Life ExtensionChronic inflammation and dietary fat consumption correlates with an increase in prostate cancer. Our previous studies in the colon have demonstrated that gamma-tocopherol treatment could upregulate the expression of...
- 9From:Women's Health Weekly"Heparanase that was cloned from and is abundant in the placenta is implicated in cell invasion, tumor metastasis and angiogenesis. Recently, we demonstrated that heparanase is directly involved in the regulation of the...
- 10From:Science News (Vol. 145, Issue 14)Geneticist Richard A. Young and colleague Anthony J. Koleske have determined that SRB proteins perform three functions: they help connect RNA polymerase with general transcription factors, they enable the activation of...
- 11From:Women's Health WeeklyAccording to the authors of recent research published in the journal Placenta, "The AQP9 gene contains a negative insulin response element, suggesting that it may be modulated by insulin. Previously, we reported AQP9...
- 12From:Arena Magazine (Issue 77)While scientists around the globe disagree about the fundamentals of genomics and whether or not DNA can be controlled, governments have grasped the Genetic Modification (GM) industry as an engine of economic growth....
- 13From:Feedstuffs (Vol. 72, Issue 32)Without settling any of their differences, leaders of the world's major industrialized countries agreed July 23 to push forward with efforts to deal with genetically modified foods and plans to start a new round of...
- 14From:Modern Healthcare (Vol. 42, Issue 37)I too iz very prepared for some bad happeneez Looking at adorable cat pictures on the Internet may be a bit of a national obsession, and the American Public Health Association is looking to tap into that feline...
- 15From:Esquire (Vol. 144, Issue 6)One day, Greg Hannon might stop me from farting so much. By my wife's measure, this would represent the most important biological advance in history. She might not be far off. I'm not gassy just because I eat too...
- 16From:Women's Health Weekly"The PTEN pseudogene, PTENP1, was recently shown to play a role in cell proliferation in a prostate cancer model. In the present study, we sought to determine whether PTENP1 is expressed in endometrial cancer (EMCA)...
- 17From:Women's Health Weekly2003 FEB 20 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- "HOXA10 is necessary for mammalian reproduction; however, its transcriptional targets are not completely defined. EMX2, a divergent homeobox gene, is necessary for urogenital...
- 18From:Life ExtensionSirtuin1 or simply SIRT1 is a gene involved in the regulation of cellular energy metabolism and functions as a cellular supervisor by preventing DNA damage and regulating gene transcription. (1,2) It has been observed...
- 19From:Science News (Vol. 152, Issue 4)From the creation of the overall body plan to the formation of specific organs, widely divergent animals depend on similar developmental genes. This unexpectedly close correspondence, revealed over the last decade, has...
- 20From:Science News (Vol. 141, Issue 13)Researchers know from past experiments that morning light calibrates the biological clock in the brain to keep it running on a 24-hour schedule. But scientists have only a dim understanding of how this process works....