Showing 16,801 - 16,820 results of 108,878 for search '(( 5 ((nn decrease) OR (a decrease)) ) OR ( e ((mean decrease) OR (point decrease)) ))', query time: 1.35s Refine Results
  1. 16801
  2. 16802

    Radioactive methylation assay with <i>E.</i><i>coli</i> DNA. by Janine G. Borgaro (410022)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>On the X-axis, a dilution factor of 0 is the highest concentration of enzyme and corresponds to the highest H<sup>3</sup>-methyl incorporation. Each subsequent data point contains a two-fold decrease in enzyme concentration. …”
  3. 16803
  4. 16804
  5. 16805
  6. 16806
  7. 16807
  8. 16808
  9. 16809
  10. 16810

    Impact of TLR5 knockout on specific taxa in the fecal microbiota of mice and differences in comparing two colonies (TLR5KO1 and TLR5KO2) bred in different laboratories. by Wei Zhang (405)

    Published 2016
    “…<p>Heat map showing statistically significant changes (p<0.05) on different fecal taxa. Red shows a significant increase, blue signifies a significant decrease, and black shows not found. …”
  11. 16811
  12. 16812

    Juvenile demyelination impairs the maturation of PV interneurons in the PFC. by Sara Hijazi (21656615)

    Published 2025
    “…Representative traces of voltage responses following +450 pA current injection. Scale bar: 100 ms, 10 mV. …”
  13. 16813

    Image1_RETRACTED: miR-16 and Fluoxetine Both Reverse Autophagic and Apoptotic Change in Chronic Unpredictable Mild Stress Model Rats.tif by Yang Yang (45629)

    Published 2025
    “…Expression levels of miR-16 and BDNF in the hippocampus were examined with RT-PCR, and it was found that increased 5-HT2a receptor expression induced by CUMS can be decreased by miR-16 and Fluoxetine administration. …”
  14. 16814
  15. 16815

    All data points from Fig 2. by Sara Hijazi (21656615)

    Published 2025
    “…Following a remyelination period of 5 weeks, PV interneuron properties were only partially recovered, suggesting that transient juvenile demyelination leads to long-lasting impairments of PV interneuron function. …”
  16. 16816

    All data points from Fig 8. by Sara Hijazi (21656615)

    Published 2025
    “…Following a remyelination period of 5 weeks, PV interneuron properties were only partially recovered, suggesting that transient juvenile demyelination leads to long-lasting impairments of PV interneuron function. …”
  17. 16817

    All data points from Fig 3. by Sara Hijazi (21656615)

    Published 2025
    “…Following a remyelination period of 5 weeks, PV interneuron properties were only partially recovered, suggesting that transient juvenile demyelination leads to long-lasting impairments of PV interneuron function. …”
  18. 16818

    All data points from Fig 1. by Sara Hijazi (21656615)

    Published 2025
    “…Following a remyelination period of 5 weeks, PV interneuron properties were only partially recovered, suggesting that transient juvenile demyelination leads to long-lasting impairments of PV interneuron function. …”
  19. 16819

    All data points from Fig 4. by Sara Hijazi (21656615)

    Published 2025
    “…Following a remyelination period of 5 weeks, PV interneuron properties were only partially recovered, suggesting that transient juvenile demyelination leads to long-lasting impairments of PV interneuron function. …”
  20. 16820

    All data points from Fig 9. by Sara Hijazi (21656615)

    Published 2025
    “…Following a remyelination period of 5 weeks, PV interneuron properties were only partially recovered, suggesting that transient juvenile demyelination leads to long-lasting impairments of PV interneuron function. …”