Showing 1,921 - 1,940 results of 28,846 for search '(( 50 ((ppm decrease) OR (a decrease)) ) OR ( 5 ((ng decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ))', query time: 0.94s Refine Results
  1. 1921
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  8. 1928

    Differences among the classes of CAMs. by Daniel P. Bradley (10306893)

    Published 2025
    “…Some <i>N</i>-hydroxypyridinedione (HPD) HBV RNaseH inhibitors significantly reduced accumulation of capsids in HBV-replicating cells. A representative HPD <b>1466</b>, with a 50% effective concentration against HBV replication of 0.25 µM, decreased capsid and core protein accumulation by 50–90% in HepDES19 and HepG2.2.15 cells. …”
  9. 1929
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  15. 1935

    Top 50 results of a commercial kinase screen using [γ<sup>33</sup>]-ATP and human obscurin SH3-DH as substrates. by Daniel Koch (388049)

    Published 2023
    “…While MST2 addition resulted in strong and saturable phosphorylation, TBK1 led to much lower phosphorylation levels and CaMK4 addition led to an intermediate phosphorylation level exhibiting a biphasic behaviour with phosphorylation levels decreasing at higher substrate concentrations. …”
  16. 1936
  17. 1937
  18. 1938

    Supramolecular DNA Photonic Hydrogels for On-Demand Control of Coloration with High Spatial and Temporal Resolution by Yixiao Dong (2174902)

    Published 2021
    “…We solve this problem by creating a DNA hydrogel system that shows a 50 000-fold decrease in modulus upon heating by ∼10 °C. …”
  19. 1939

    Supramolecular DNA Photonic Hydrogels for On-Demand Control of Coloration with High Spatial and Temporal Resolution by Yixiao Dong (2174902)

    Published 2021
    “…We solve this problem by creating a DNA hydrogel system that shows a 50 000-fold decrease in modulus upon heating by ∼10 °C. …”
  20. 1940

    Supramolecular DNA Photonic Hydrogels for On-Demand Control of Coloration with High Spatial and Temporal Resolution by Yixiao Dong (2174902)

    Published 2021
    “…We solve this problem by creating a DNA hydrogel system that shows a 50 000-fold decrease in modulus upon heating by ∼10 °C. …”