Showing 66,501 - 66,520 results of 103,198 for search '(( 5 ((c decrease) OR (a decrease)) ) OR ( 50 ((nn decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ))', query time: 1.90s Refine Results
  1. 66501

    Image_2_Physiological and Expressional Regulation on Photosynthesis, Starch and Sucrose Metabolism Response to Waterlogging Stress in Peanut.TIF by Ruier Zeng (11064012)

    Published 2021
    “…However, the imbalance of the source–sink relationship under waterlogging was the main cause of yield loss, and waterlogging caused an increase in the sucrose and soluble sugar contents and a decrease in the starch content; it also decreased the activities of sucrose synthetase (SS) and sucrose phosphate synthetase (SPS), which may be due to the changes in the expression of genes related to starch and sucrose metabolism. …”
  2. 66502

    Table_1_Long-Term Grazing Exclusion Reduces Species Diversity but Increases Community Heterogeneity in an Alpine Grassland.DOCX by Shanshan Song (500562)

    Published 2020
    “…However, long-term grazing exclusion reduced species richness and increased the Simpson dominance index. This decrease in plant species richness was mainly attributable to the decrease in common species richness (defined as species with a relative coverage of 1∼5%). …”
  3. 66503
  4. 66504

    Table_2_Physiological and Expressional Regulation on Photosynthesis, Starch and Sucrose Metabolism Response to Waterlogging Stress in Peanut.XLS by Ruier Zeng (11064012)

    Published 2021
    “…However, the imbalance of the source–sink relationship under waterlogging was the main cause of yield loss, and waterlogging caused an increase in the sucrose and soluble sugar contents and a decrease in the starch content; it also decreased the activities of sucrose synthetase (SS) and sucrose phosphate synthetase (SPS), which may be due to the changes in the expression of genes related to starch and sucrose metabolism. …”
  5. 66505

    Image_3_Physiological and Expressional Regulation on Photosynthesis, Starch and Sucrose Metabolism Response to Waterlogging Stress in Peanut.TIF by Ruier Zeng (11064012)

    Published 2021
    “…However, the imbalance of the source–sink relationship under waterlogging was the main cause of yield loss, and waterlogging caused an increase in the sucrose and soluble sugar contents and a decrease in the starch content; it also decreased the activities of sucrose synthetase (SS) and sucrose phosphate synthetase (SPS), which may be due to the changes in the expression of genes related to starch and sucrose metabolism. …”
  6. 66506

    Data_Sheet_1_Physiological and Expressional Regulation on Photosynthesis, Starch and Sucrose Metabolism Response to Waterlogging Stress in Peanut.docx by Ruier Zeng (11064012)

    Published 2021
    “…However, the imbalance of the source–sink relationship under waterlogging was the main cause of yield loss, and waterlogging caused an increase in the sucrose and soluble sugar contents and a decrease in the starch content; it also decreased the activities of sucrose synthetase (SS) and sucrose phosphate synthetase (SPS), which may be due to the changes in the expression of genes related to starch and sucrose metabolism. …”
  7. 66507

    Supplementary Figures 1 through 13 from Chronic Stress Facilitates Lung Tumorigenesis by Promoting Exocytosis of IGF2 in Lung Epithelial Cells by Hyun-Ji Jang (12389892)

    Published 2023
    “…Supplementary Figure 6. Knockdown of RAB27A transcription by siRNA transfection. Supplementary Figure 7. …”
  8. 66508

    Effects of the prophylactic use of escitalopram on the prognosis and the plasma copeptin level in patients with acute cerebral infarction by Jin-Xia Cao (10461533)

    Published 2021
    “…<div><p>This study aimed to investigate whether the routine administration of escitalopram for three months would improve the prognosis of patients with ischemic stroke and decrease the plasma copeptin level. A total of 97 patients with acute cerebral infarction were randomly allocated to receive escitalopram (5-10 mg once per day, orally; n=49) or not to receive escitalopram (control group; n=48) for 12 weeks starting at 2-7 days after the onset of stroke. …”
  9. 66509

    Low-dose formaldehyde induces γH2AX formation. by Sascha Beneke (174438)

    Published 2012
    “…Cells were split into three groups with (i) less than 5, (ii) between 5 and 20, (iii) more than 20 foci, and percent of total cells was calculated. 10 min 1% paraformaldehyde (1% FA) induces more than sevenfold increase in cells with more than 20 foci, and a decrease in cells with less than 5 foci compared to 4% paraformaldehyde (4% FA). …”
  10. 66510

    Sensitivity analysis of the associations between ASD status and the 7 Factors or the 4 individual measures. by Colin D. Steer (242329)

    Published 2010
    “…R<sup>2</sup> are reported as the increase in the explanation of the log-likelihood compared to a model involving gender only. Gender explained about 5% of the log likelihood in all models. …”
  11. 66511

    SMG6 Cleavage Generates Metastable Decay Intermediates from Nonsense-Containing β-Globin mRNA by Roshan Mascarenhas (463060)

    Published 2013
    “…In cells knocked down for Upf1 a reciprocal increase in full-length and decrease in shortened RNA confirmed the role of NMD in this process. …”
  12. 66512

    CDDP-induced rictor downregulation in CDDP-sensitive cells involves caspase-3-mediated cleavage. by Akechai Im-aram (5656237)

    Published 2013
    “…Results are presented as mean ± SEM (n=3 and n=5 in OV2008 and in A2780s, respectively). …”
  13. 66513

    Effect of oral potassium supplementation on urinary potassium excretion and its diagnostic value for primary aldosteronism by Ke Zhang (115386)

    Published 2025
    “…</p> <p>The patients had a mean age of 49.38 years and 70% were male. Following a median potassium supplement dose of 8.50 g, serum potassium increased from 3.25 to 3.90 mmol/L (<i>p</i> < .001), and 24-hour urinary potassium (24 h UK) rose from 41.40 to 59.75 mmol/24 h (<i>p</i> = .004). …”
  14. 66514
  15. 66515
  16. 66516
  17. 66517

    Datasheet1_Differences in cardiovascular risk factors associated with sex and gender identity, but not gender expression, in young, healthy cisgender adults.pdf by Jennifer S. Williams (12291680)

    Published 2024
    “…Participants completed a questionnaire capturing sex category (50 male/80 female), gender identity category (49 men/79 women/2 non-binary), and aspects of gender expression assessed by the Bem Sex Role Inventory-30 (39 androgynous/33 feminine/29 masculine/29 undifferentiated). …”
  18. 66518

    Datasheet1_Differences in cardiovascular risk factors associated with sex and gender identity, but not gender expression, in young, healthy cisgender adults.pdf by Jennifer S. Williams (12291680)

    Published 2024
    “…Participants completed a questionnaire capturing sex category (50 male/80 female), gender identity category (49 men/79 women/2 non-binary), and aspects of gender expression assessed by the Bem Sex Role Inventory-30 (39 androgynous/33 feminine/29 masculine/29 undifferentiated). …”
  19. 66519
  20. 66520

    The IgE repertoire is closely related to the IgG1 repertoire. by Adriana Turqueti-Neves (820798)

    Published 2015
    “…(C) Heat maps show the overlap between the first 50 most frequent CDR3 sequences in the IgE repertoire with the same CDR3 sequences in the IgG1 and IgM repertoires from 3 mice. …”