Search alternatives:
point decrease » point increase (Expand Search)
fold decrease » fold increase (Expand Search), fold increased (Expand Search)
ng decrease » nn decrease (Expand Search), _ decrease (Expand Search), we decrease (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
5 ng » 5 mg (Expand Search), 5 g (Expand Search), 5 nm (Expand Search)
point decrease » point increase (Expand Search)
fold decrease » fold increase (Expand Search), fold increased (Expand Search)
ng decrease » nn decrease (Expand Search), _ decrease (Expand Search), we decrease (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
5 ng » 5 mg (Expand Search), 5 g (Expand Search), 5 nm (Expand Search)
-
601
-
602
-
603
-
604
-
605
-
606
-
607
-
608
Overexpression of Pax6 decreases Olig2 protein levels.
Published 2011“…(<b>a</b>) Oli-Neu cells were transfected with flag-tagged WT Pax6 (WT), Pax6(5a)R128C (128), or eGFP control vector (-). …”
-
609
CD34<sup>+</sup> cell populations decreased in malaria.
Published 2015“…<p>(A) CD34<sup>+</sup> hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell populations are significantly decreased in malaria patients. …”
-
610
<i>Dmxl2</i> knockdown in INS-1E cells decreases glucose-induced insulin release.
Published 2014“…In the presence of various concentrations of glucose (5 and 20 mM), <i>Dmxl2</i>-siRNA–transfected cells displayed only a small increase in insulin release, at a glucose concentration of 20 mM only, whereas a 2- to 3-fold increase was observed with NT siRNA-transfected cells. …”
-
611
-
612
-
613
-
614
-
615
-
616
-
617
-
618
-
619
-
620
Wnt5a expressing tumors demonstrate a decrease in markers of the basal tumor subtype.
Published 2014“…Values are means +/− standard error (n = 6 MMTV-Wnt1, 3 fields per tumor; n = 5 MMTV-Wnt1;MMTV-Wnt5a, 3 fields per tumor). MMTV-Wnt1;MMTV-Wnt5a tumors demonstrated a significant decrease in K6-expressing cells as measured by T-test (* = p<0.05).…”