Showing 94,121 - 94,140 results of 139,560 for search '(( 50 ((nn decrease) OR (a decrease)) ) OR ( 10 ((mean decrease) OR (we decrease)) ))', query time: 1.16s Refine Results
  1. 94121
  2. 94122
  3. 94123
  4. 94124

    Effect of erythropoietin administration on proteins participating in iron homeostasis in <i>Tmprss6</i>-mutated <i>mask</i> mice by Jana Frýdlová (163557)

    Published 2017
    “…In <i>mask</i> mice, the amount of liver hemojuvelin was decreased in comparison with C57BL/6 mice. The pattern of hemojuvelin cleavage was different between C57BL/6 and <i>mask</i> mice: In both groups, a main hemojuvelin band was detected at approximately 52 kDa; in C57BL/6 mice, a minor cleaved band was seen at 47 kDa. …”
  5. 94125

    Critical safety factor of slope <i>F</i><sub>st</sub>. by Yongqing Zeng (8341515)

    Published 2024
    “…As the slope height increases from 5m to 45m, the safety factor of soil slope gradually decreases from 2.21 to 0.94; As the slope gradient increases from 20° to 60°, the safety factor of soil slope decreases approximately linearly from 1.80 to 0.95; As the cohesion of soil increases from 10kpa to 30kpa, the safety factor of soil slope increases approximately linearly from 1.04 to 1.60; As the internal friction angle of soil increases from 10° to 30°, the safety factor of soil slope increases approximately linearly from 1.00 to 1.81; As the unit weight of soil increases from 13kN/m<sup>3</sup> to 21kN/m<sup>3</sup>, the safety factor of soil slope decreases approximately linearly from 1.50 to 1.21. …”
  6. 94126

    Classification of slope stability states. by Yongqing Zeng (8341515)

    Published 2024
    “…As the slope height increases from 5m to 45m, the safety factor of soil slope gradually decreases from 2.21 to 0.94; As the slope gradient increases from 20° to 60°, the safety factor of soil slope decreases approximately linearly from 1.80 to 0.95; As the cohesion of soil increases from 10kpa to 30kpa, the safety factor of soil slope increases approximately linearly from 1.04 to 1.60; As the internal friction angle of soil increases from 10° to 30°, the safety factor of soil slope increases approximately linearly from 1.00 to 1.81; As the unit weight of soil increases from 13kN/m<sup>3</sup> to 21kN/m<sup>3</sup>, the safety factor of soil slope decreases approximately linearly from 1.50 to 1.21. …”
  7. 94127

    The main calculation parameters of slope soil. by Yongqing Zeng (8341515)

    Published 2024
    “…As the slope height increases from 5m to 45m, the safety factor of soil slope gradually decreases from 2.21 to 0.94; As the slope gradient increases from 20° to 60°, the safety factor of soil slope decreases approximately linearly from 1.80 to 0.95; As the cohesion of soil increases from 10kpa to 30kpa, the safety factor of soil slope increases approximately linearly from 1.04 to 1.60; As the internal friction angle of soil increases from 10° to 30°, the safety factor of soil slope increases approximately linearly from 1.00 to 1.81; As the unit weight of soil increases from 13kN/m<sup>3</sup> to 21kN/m<sup>3</sup>, the safety factor of soil slope decreases approximately linearly from 1.50 to 1.21. …”
  8. 94128

    Cell viability in MPC (A) and MTT (B) cells: MPC and MTT cells were pre-treated with lovastatin for 24h before everolimus was added, and the combination of both drugs was incubated... by Svenja Nölting (566453)

    Published 2015
    “…Treatment with 10 μM lovastatin or with 10 nM everolimus separately significantly reduced MPC and MTT cell viability, compared to the control. 48h combination treatment with 10 μM lovastatin and 10 nM everolimus significantly more potently decreased MPC and MTT cell viability compared to each drug given separately. * P ≤ 0.05, ** P ≤ 0.01, *** P ≤ 0.001 (compared to the control); @ P ≤ 0.05, @@ P ≤ 0.01, @@@ P ≤ 0.001 (combination compared to each drug separately).…”
  9. 94129

    miR-142-5p as a blood biomarker of CAMR by Richard Danger (221235)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>A) TLDA and individual qPCR measurements performed in same PBMC samples (10 STA and 9 CAMR) are displayed for miR-142-5p. …”
  10. 94130

    Examples of eCAP acquisition and quantification. by Victor Adenis (5587649)

    Published 2018
    “…Each curve corresponds to the mean response averaged over 128 stimulations after removing the stimulation artifact (see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0201771#sec002" target="_blank">Methods</a>). …”
  11. 94131

    Expression of CD95 and CD95L protein in RCECs. by Yihui Chen (446576)

    Published 2013
    “…RCECs cultured in NOP (normal osmotic pressure, 312mOsM) (1), HOP (high osmotic pressure, 500mOsM) (2), HOP+NAC (10 mM) (3), HOP+ DPI (10 µM) (4), HOP+ JNK inhibitor SP600125 (25 µM) (5) for 24 h. …”
  12. 94132
  13. 94133

    The Axna2/Axna2R axis affected HH signaling. by Jun Yi (839345)

    Published 2016
    “…<b>(E)</b> After inhibition of HH signaling by CYC, the effect of Axna2 in promoting endothelial cell proliferation was significantly decreased. The bars showed the mean±SEM. <b>(A, C and D)</b> *P < 0.05, **P < 0.005,*** P < 0.0005, Mann Whitney test. …”
  14. 94134

    MiR-15a, -16, -195, and -103 expression in peripheral blood and heart tissue in patients with end-stage HF. by Neeta Adhikari (474583)

    Published 2014
    “…(<b>B</b>) Expression of miR-15/107 family in heart samples was not significantly different between non-failing controls (Controls) (n = 9) and end-stage HF samples (HF pre-LVAD) (n = 10). Samples were in duplicate and target expression normalized to SnU6 for A and B (mean ±SE).…”
  15. 94135

    Semi-infectious particles increase reassortment at a given MOI by increasing the proportion of infected cells that are co-infected. by Judith M. Fonville (464053)

    Published 2015
    “…The same P<sub>P</sub> value, plotted on the x-axis, was assigned to all eight segments and was varied from 0.3 to 1.0 in increments of 0.1. Twenty replicates were run, and the mean of these 20 runs is shown. …”
  16. 94136

    Mechanism of multisite protein phosphorylation. by Anneke Brümmer (248898)

    Published 2010
    “…To mirror the <i>in-vitro</i> assay conditions, the model simulation was performed without phosphatase activity. (<b>C</b>) The mean time for complete phosphorylation rises with the number of phosphorylation sites (the increase is less than linear because of the random phosphorylation mechanism), while (<b>D</b>) the temporal coherence of phosphorylation increases (decreasing Δ/<i>τ</i>). …”
  17. 94137

    Expression Profiling of Adult Heart Organogenesis by Bruno Zeitouni (80382)

    Published 2007
    “…Normalized log<sub>2</sub> expression values in gene rows were standardized (mean centered and variance normalized) and color coded according to the legend at the top (red indicates increased transcript levels, whereas green indicates decreased levels).…”
  18. 94138

    Figure 2 by Heidi de Wit (67655)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>Syntaxin deletion decreases the number of morphologically docked secretory vesicles. …”
  19. 94139

    Table_1_Seasonal freeze-thaw characteristics of soil carbon pools under different vegetation restoration types on the Longzhong Loess Plateau.DOCX by Shuainan Liu (4126456)

    Published 2022
    “…Meanwhile, DOC and EOC contents accumulated obviously in the stable freezing period and decreased significantly in the thawing period. We also found that the SOC, MBC, DOC, and EOC contents were higher in the surface soils (0–10 cm) than in the underlying soils (10–20 and 20–40 cm), while the sensitivity of the soil carbon pool fractions to seasonal FT processes differed considerably between soil depths. …”
  20. 94140

    Stimulus-evoked orientation channel response profiles. by Cooper A. Smout (6407888)

    Published 2019
    “…Orientation information (response profile amplitude) was strongest from 100–200 ms and decreased throughout the epoch. Data are available at <a href="https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/a3pfq" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/a3pfq</a>. a.u., arbitrary units.…”