Showing 12,821 - 12,840 results of 21,687 for search '(( 5 ((step decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ) OR ( 100 ((we decrease) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 0.70s Refine Results
  1. 12821

    Intraperitoneal injection of NLP caused anorectic effect with no change in energy expenditure. by Kavishankar Gawli (4047721)

    Published 2017
    “…<p>NLP was injected at 100 μg/kg BW before the dark phase. A decrease in food intake, but no significant difference in water intake (mg/g BW; a & b) was observed. …”
  2. 12822

    Fermenting with the strain with higher glycerol production level leads to stronger dough structure. by Elham Aslankoohi (701337)

    Published 2015
    “…<p>(A) <i>GPD1</i> overexpression results in a 30% (bakery strain, left) or 100% (laboratory strain, right) increase in glycerol levels in dough. …”
  3. 12823

    Lid Movement in <i>P. aeruginosa</i> Lipase: Qualitative Representation by Subbulakshmi Latha Cherukuvada (10623)

    Published 2013
    “…There appears to be nearly a 100% decrease in the solvent-accessible area when the lids close (structure on right [ii]).…”
  4. 12824

    Effect of the overexpression of Mfn2 or the truncated Mfn2 mutant on mitochondrial function in GCDCA-treated L02 cells. by Yongbiao Chen (418836)

    Published 2013
    “…The results are expressed as a percentage of the control value, which was set at 100%. …”
  5. 12825

    <sup>45</sup>Ca uptake assays. by Robert Little (338608)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>Uptake of <sup>45</sup>Ca by SaOS-2 cells (A: <i>P</i> = 0.76) , TE-85 cells (B: <i>P</i> = 0.69) and 16HBE14o- cells (C: <i>P</i> = 0.0003) in the absence (open bar) and presence (solid bar) of 100 µM ruthenium red. …”
  6. 12826

    Competitive ELISA results obtained for WCA and EEA generated monoclonal antibodies. by Lorna M. O’Brien (2185822)

    Published 2016
    “…Negative control wells received assay buffer followed by the antibody. A decrease in absorbance values in the presence of ‘free MAP cells’ over negative control wells is indicative of MAP binding. …”
  7. 12827

    Clinical Response and Remission Results During the 12-Week Induction Period. by Satish Keshav (65388)

    Published 2013
    “…a<p>Clinical response is defined as a decrease in CDAI score from baseline ≥70.…”
  8. 12828

    Effect of supression of adiponectin receptor gene expression on androstenedione production by bovine theca cells. by Fabio V. Comim (486376)

    Published 2013
    “…After 24-h treatment with adiponectin (3 μg/mL), a relative decrease in androstenedione secretion was observed in the control group (adiponectin alone) and the scrambled RNA group, whereas an increase over 100% (dotted line) was detected in all siRNA groups. …”
  9. 12829

    G protein involvement in US28-mediated Tcf-Lef activation. by Ellen V. Langemeijer (120625)

    Published 2012
    “…Tcf-Lef reporter gene activation was measured 24 hr after transfection and is displayed here as the percentage of the mock control that is set at 100%. B, HEK293T cells were co-transfected with the Tcf-Lef reporter gene construct, US28-expressing construct or empty plasmid control (mock) and an shRNA construct to decrease protein levels of Gα<sub>q</sub>. …”
  10. 12830

    Analysis of vesicle recruitment to the RRP for models covered by Eq 1. by Kashif Mahfooz (2586439)

    Published 2016
    “…The exponential constant for acceleration (<i>τ</i> ⋅ <i>ν</i> in <a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004855#pcbi.1004855.e026" target="_blank">Eq 2</a>) was 10 action potentials for 100<i>Hz</i> and 300<i>Hz</i> stimulation alike, and fatigue was modeled as a 10%/<i>s</i> linear decrease. …”
  11. 12831

    HIMF-stimulated HMSC migration is PI-3K-dependent. by Daniel J. Angelini (363843)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>A: HMSCs (10<sup>5</sup> cells) were cultured in the upper chamber of a transwell plate; the lower chamber held medium containing BSA (control) or HIMF (100 nM). …”
  12. 12832

    Data_Sheet_2_A Comparative Analysis of Reactive Müller Glia Gene Expression After Light Damage and microRNA-Depleted Müller Glia—Focus on microRNAs.pdf by Seoyoung Kang (10033280)

    Published 2021
    “…We found: (1) The vast majority of MG miRNAs declined in reactive MG 7 days after light damage. (2) Only four miRNAs increased after light damage, which included miR-124. (3) The top 10 genes found upregulated in reactive MG after light damage include Gfap, Serpina3n, Ednrb and Cxcl10. (4) The miRNA decrease in reactive MG 7 days after injury resembles the profile of Dicer-depleted MG after one month. (5) The comparison of both mRNA expression datasets (light damage and Dicer-cKO) showed 1,502 genes were expressed under both conditions, with Maff , Egr2, Gadd45b, and Atf3 as top upregulated candidates. (6) The DIANA-TarBase v.8 miRNA:RNA interaction tool showed that three miRNAs were found to be present in all networks, i.e., after light damage, and in the combined data set; these were miR-125b-5p, let-7b and let-7c. …”
  13. 12833

    Data_Sheet_1_A Comparative Analysis of Reactive Müller Glia Gene Expression After Light Damage and microRNA-Depleted Müller Glia—Focus on microRNAs.pdf by Seoyoung Kang (10033280)

    Published 2021
    “…We found: (1) The vast majority of MG miRNAs declined in reactive MG 7 days after light damage. (2) Only four miRNAs increased after light damage, which included miR-124. (3) The top 10 genes found upregulated in reactive MG after light damage include Gfap, Serpina3n, Ednrb and Cxcl10. (4) The miRNA decrease in reactive MG 7 days after injury resembles the profile of Dicer-depleted MG after one month. (5) The comparison of both mRNA expression datasets (light damage and Dicer-cKO) showed 1,502 genes were expressed under both conditions, with Maff , Egr2, Gadd45b, and Atf3 as top upregulated candidates. (6) The DIANA-TarBase v.8 miRNA:RNA interaction tool showed that three miRNAs were found to be present in all networks, i.e., after light damage, and in the combined data set; these were miR-125b-5p, let-7b and let-7c. …”
  14. 12834

    Theoretical model of the transcription cycle and experimental setup. by Jonathan Liu (769699)

    Published 2021
    “…Because elongation continues after initiation has ceased, the 5’ MS2 signal begins decreasing before the 3’ PP7 signal. …”
  15. 12835

    Data_Sheet_1_A Comparative Analysis of Reactive Müller Glia Gene Expression After Light Damage and microRNA-Depleted Müller Glia—Focus on microRNAs.pdf by Seoyoung Kang (10033280)

    Published 2021
    “…We found: (1) The vast majority of MG miRNAs declined in reactive MG 7 days after light damage. (2) Only four miRNAs increased after light damage, which included miR-124. (3) The top 10 genes found upregulated in reactive MG after light damage include Gfap, Serpina3n, Ednrb and Cxcl10. (4) The miRNA decrease in reactive MG 7 days after injury resembles the profile of Dicer-depleted MG after one month. (5) The comparison of both mRNA expression datasets (light damage and Dicer-cKO) showed 1,502 genes were expressed under both conditions, with Maff , Egr2, Gadd45b, and Atf3 as top upregulated candidates. (6) The DIANA-TarBase v.8 miRNA:RNA interaction tool showed that three miRNAs were found to be present in all networks, i.e., after light damage, and in the combined data set; these were miR-125b-5p, let-7b and let-7c. …”
  16. 12836

    Data_Sheet_2_A Comparative Analysis of Reactive Müller Glia Gene Expression After Light Damage and microRNA-Depleted Müller Glia—Focus on microRNAs.pdf by Seoyoung Kang (10033280)

    Published 2021
    “…We found: (1) The vast majority of MG miRNAs declined in reactive MG 7 days after light damage. (2) Only four miRNAs increased after light damage, which included miR-124. (3) The top 10 genes found upregulated in reactive MG after light damage include Gfap, Serpina3n, Ednrb and Cxcl10. (4) The miRNA decrease in reactive MG 7 days after injury resembles the profile of Dicer-depleted MG after one month. (5) The comparison of both mRNA expression datasets (light damage and Dicer-cKO) showed 1,502 genes were expressed under both conditions, with Maff , Egr2, Gadd45b, and Atf3 as top upregulated candidates. (6) The DIANA-TarBase v.8 miRNA:RNA interaction tool showed that three miRNAs were found to be present in all networks, i.e., after light damage, and in the combined data set; these were miR-125b-5p, let-7b and let-7c. …”
  17. 12837

    Anteriorly traveling Lfng stripes and segmentation-clock period. by Susan D. Hester (204004)

    Published 2011
    “…We increase or decrease the segmentation-clock period by varying how long we integrate the segmentation-clock ODEs during each time step; by doing so, we easily vary the clock period relative to other processes in the simulation without altering parameters within the segmentation-clock submodel or changing the clock response to FGF8, Wnt3a or Delta/Notch signaling. …”
  18. 12838

    Acoustics of breath noises in human speech (Werner et al., 2024) by Raphael Werner (17350943)

    Published 2024
    “…</p><p dir="ltr"><b>Results: </b>For human inhalations, we found spectra with a decreasing slope and several weak peaks below 3 kHz. …”
  19. 12839

    Presentation_1_Hormetic effect of 17α-ethynylestradiol on activated sludge microbial community response.pdf by Phumudzo Budeli (5066495)

    Published 2022
    “…Although environmental concentrations showed a slight decrease in microbial counts (5.6 × 10<sup>6</sup> to 4.6 × 10<sup>6</sup> CFU/ml) after a 24-h incubation for the culturable approach, the predictive elevated concentrations (5 to 100 mg/L) revealed a drastic microbial counts reduction (5.6 × 10<sup>6</sup> to 8 × 10<sup>2</sup> CFU/ml). …”
  20. 12840

    Quantitative Venn diagram of proteins expressed in sera of patients with clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH) and non-CSPH group. by Frane Pastrovic (18349349)

    Published 2024
    “…Abbreviations: ATX–Autotaxin; BPI–Bactericidal permeability increasing protein; CAT–Catalase; CD44 –Cluster of differentiation 44; FN1 –Fibronectin; HIST1H2BN–Histone H2B; HIST1H4A –Histone H4; LYVE1 –Lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronic acid receptor 1; MPO–Myeloperoxidase; NPNT–Nephronectin; PAI-1 –Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1; PRDX2 –Peroxiredoxin-2; S100-A9—Protein S100-A9.…”