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The high temperature of 30 °C had a harmful effect on mice
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
” Effect of Different Ambient Temperatures on Reproductive Outcome and Stress Level of Lactating Females in Two Mouse Strains Ambient temperature has an important effect on the physiology of mice, from heart rate and blood pressure to tumor growth and immune parameters.
” Effect of Different Ambient Temperatures on Reproductive Outcome and Stress Level of Lactating Females in Two Mouse Strains
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Cell: Bacteria previously considered harmless are now found to exacerbate existing lung disease
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
An international team of scientists led by NTU Singapore found that Neisseria — a bacterium that lives in humans — is not as harmless as previously thought, and can cause infections in patients with bronchiectasis, asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
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Stress granules can lead to obesity-related pancreatic cancer
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
A new study in Dr. Elda Grabocka's lab suggests that obesity may drive cancer formation in a new way for pancreatic cancer, with a 5-year survival rate of 11 percent for most patients.
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Mol Cell+iSciecne Jixiong's team revealed RNA polymerase II subunit heteroplasmism and CTCF insulation mechanism
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
On September 15, 2022, Ji Xiong's research group at the Center for Life Sciences and the School of Life Sciences of Peking University published a research paper entitled "Targeted protein degradation
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Driven by therapeutic drugs, tumors have changed from fuel vehicles to electric vehicles
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
The research team recruited prostate cancer patients for longitudinal studies to take biopsy samples before enzalumide treatment and when tumors develop drug resistance.
The research team recruited prostate cancer patients for longitudinal studies to take biopsy samples before enzalumide treatment and when tumors develop drug resistance.
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Yi Li's research group and the Wang Qiandong research group of Beijing Normal University cooperated to publish a paper in Autism to reveal the variability of visual attention in autistic children during face processing
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
In September 2022, Autism, an authoritative journal in developmental psychology, officially published the paper "Investigating intra-individual variability of face scanning in autistic children" joint
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New mechanisms that lead to rare brain diseases
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
1093/brain/awac295 The gene responsible for transporting zinc, an essential dietary micronutrient, out of cells has mutated, leading to a disease known as hypomyelin leukodystrophy.
1093/brain/awac295 The gene responsible for transporting zinc, an essential dietary micronutrient, out of cells has mutated, leading to a disease known as hypomyelin leukodystrophy.
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Cell membranes play a bigger role than imagined in allowing the spike proteins on the virus to infect cells
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
e. , whether spike proteins (such as those found on SARS-CoV-2 virus) bind to cell membranes.
e. , whether spike proteins (such as those found on SARS-CoV-2 virus) bind to cell membranes.
e. , whether spike proteins (such as those found on SARS-CoV-2 virus) bind to cell membranes.
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Science Immunology: When alveolar macrophages do not work properly
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
(2022): “C/EBPβ regulates lipid metabolism and Pparg isoform 2 expression in alveolar macrophages,” Science Immunology, DOI: 10.
(2022): “C/EBPβ regulates lipid metabolism and Pparg isoform 2 expression in alveolar macrophages,” Science Immunology, DOI: 10.
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Science Your family has a long history and unique gut "army"
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Scientists at the Tübingen Institute for Biological Research have now found that gut microbes have a parallel evolutionary history with their human hosts: these microbes co-evolved in the human gut environment for hundreds of thousands of years.
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One of the three major challenges of the Great Breakthrough Human Proteome Project - protein identification of shear variants
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Professor Zhang Gong of Jinan University developed the three-generation full-length translation group sequencing technology, broke through the protein product identification of shear variants of one of the three major problems of the human proteome project, found that there are thousands of mRNA shearing variants in human cells that have never been included in the database can be translated into proteins, and identified the characteristic peptides of some of the new shear variants at the protein level by mass spectrometry.
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Nanjing Medical University Cancer Cell published a paper: A new genetic mechanism of lung cancer pathogenic variants
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
On September 15, 2022, Shen Hongbing and Hu Zhibin's research group at the School of Public Health of Nanjing Medical University published a report entitled "Analyses of rare predisposing variants of
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Cell's new research reveals the molecular origins of the genetic disease cystine disease
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
Structural and biophysical studies of human cystine have revealed the molecular mechanisms and conformational kinetics of proton-coupled lysosomal amino acid transport.
Structural and biophysical studies of human cystine have revealed the molecular mechanisms and conformational kinetics of proton-coupled lysosomal amino acid transport.
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Causes of brain dysfunction in patients with Huntington's disease
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
It is reported that the research team of the Institute of Brain Science of the Korea Academy of Science and Technology (KIST, President Yoon Seok-jin) found that the activity of the focus adhesion kinase (FAK) protein, which plays an important role in the movement of nerve processes and normal synaptic formation in the brain tissue of HD patients, was significantly reduced.
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Cell Systems: The universal rules that shape cellular power stations
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
essayEvolutionary inference across eukaryotes identifies universal features shaping organelle gene retention Mitochondria are compartments within cells, the so-called "organelles," that provide chemical energy for our activities, thoughts, and lives.
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For the first time, Guo Song's team from the School of the Environment quantified the full volatile components of catering sources, revealing the effects of cooking methods and edible oil types on cooking emissions
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
2c00207 On August 2, 2022, the Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics published the latest research results of researcher Guo Song's research group in the School of Environmental Science and Engineering of Peking University 。 The article is titled "Impact of cooking style and oil on semi-volatile and intermediate volatility organic compound emissions from Chinese domestic cooking", Song Kai, a 2019 doctoral student in the research group, is the first author of this paper.
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Huazhong University of Science and Technology: Using microbiome big data to help predict the three-dimensional structure of proteins
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
At present, the interrelationship between the environment and human health is receiving more and more attention, especially in today's society where the new crown pneumonia is ravaging the world, and
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Childhood obesity rebounds are associated with disconnections in the brain and intestines
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
In the study, Professor Roth of Seattle Children's Hospital and his colleagues compared the appetite-regulating activity of the brain of obese children before and after the 24-week weight loss program with the gut hormone response.
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Mind Reading – How does a dog's brain express what it sees?
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
”The project was inspired by recent advances in machine learning and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technology, which can decode visual stimuli from the human brain, providing new insights into the nature of perception.
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The Nature sub-journal breaks with conventional wisdom and discovers new mechanisms for immune system longevity
Time of Update: 2022-10-03
essayIntercellular telomere transfer rescues T cells from senescence and promotes long-term immunological memory An international team led by scientists at University College London has discovered a new mechanism that can slow or possibly stop natural aging of immune cells – one of the nine hallmarks of aging.