Showing 1,281 - 1,300 results of 12,166 for search '(( 50 ((teer decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ) OR ( 5 ((fold decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ))', query time: 0.68s Refine Results
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    Depletion of the Chromatin Looping Proteins CTCF and Cohesin Causes Chromatin Compaction: Insight into Chromatin Folding by Polymer Modelling by Mariliis Tark-Dame (641719)

    Published 2014
    “…The molecular basis for this counter-intuitive behaviour is explored by polymer modelling usingy the Dynamic Loop model (Bohn M, Heermann DW (2010) Diffusion-driven looping provides a consistent framework for chromatin organization. PLoS ONE 5: e12218.). We show that compaction can be explained by selectively decreasing the number of short-range loops, leaving long-range looping unchanged. …”
  5. 1285

    Basin architecture and growth folding of the NW Zagros early foreland basin during the Late Cretaceous and early Tertiary by Eduard Saura (2847014)

    Published 2016
    “…Growth synclines and local palaeoslope variations indicate syndepositional folding from Maastrichtian to Eocene time and suggest forelandward migration of the deformation front. …”
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    VRK1 overexpression is seen in human breast cancer and is associated with decreased relapse-free survival. by Aye M. Mon (5714912)

    Published 2018
    “…Data for cancer subtypes are shown in boxes numbered 1–11: 1: benign breast neoplasm (rank 6459, 1.4 fold-change, NS), 2: breast carcinoma (rank 833, 1.5 fold-change, p = 3.83x10<sup>-5</sup>), 3: breast phyllodes tumor (rank 512, 1.2 fold-change, p = 0.002), 4: ductal breast carcinoma in situ (rank 1969, 1.5 fold-change, p = 0.002), 5: invasive breast carcinoma (rank 1060, 1.6 fold-change, p = 1.28x10<sup>-5</sup>), 6: invasive ductal and invasive lobular breast carcinoma (rank 941, 1.5 fold-change, p = 6.76x10<sup>-22</sup>), 7: invasive ductal breast carcinoma (rank 613, 1.5-fold change, p = 2.71x10<sup>-71</sup>), 8: invasive lobular breast carcinoma (rank 947, 1.3 fold-change, p = 3.64x10<sup>-28</sup>), 9: medullary breast carcinoma (rank 400, 1.8 fold-change, p = 3.25x10<sup>-12</sup>), 10: mucinous breast carcinoma (rank 1932, 1.4 fold-change, p = 7.41x10<sup>-10</sup>) and 11: tubular breast carcinoma (rank 1253, 1.4 fold-change, p = 1.24x10<sup>-17</sup>). …”
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    K-means grouping of gene expression fold changes during adaptation of N202 cells to brain tissue. by Gaelle Rondeau (5649340)

    Published 2014
    “…The central black line in each frame represents no change, i.e. 1-fold changes, and the gray lines represent 4-fold increases or decreases, relative to the parental cell line. …”
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    Mutations affecting the Pho regulon can decrease stress-induced Lac<sup>+</sup> reversion. by Janet L. Gibson (736950)

    Published 2015
    “…Strains (top to bottom in legend): SMR5235, SMR4953, SMR4059, SMR7351, SMR6762, SMR6760, SMR6759, SMR4061, SMR5860, SMR4047, and SMR4604. Fold decrease in the change in Lac<sup>+</sup> from day 4 to day 5 relative to the <i>pho</i><sup>+</sup> strain SMR4562 was calculated for each genotype in several experiments of multiple cultures (like that shown in A). …”
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    Belinostat decreases both male and female bladder weights in transgenic superficial bladder cancer mice by Michael T Buckley (37161)

    Published 2011
    “…Normal non-transgenic mouse bladders weigh approximately 10.0 mg at the same age, and Ha-transgenic mice with superficial bladder cancer have a 3 fold and higher bladder weight. , Male belinostat-treated mice (n = 4, 327.5 mg average weight) showed a two-fold decrease (50%, p = 0.03) in bladder weight versus control (n = 4, 652.5 mg average weight). , Female belinostat-treated mice (n = 5, 34.0 mg average weight) showed a 36% decrease (p = 0.04) in bladder weight versus control (n = 6, 53.3 mg average weight).…”
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    Gene ontology biological processes overrepresented among genes exhibiting decreased expression in human psoriasis. by William R. Swindell (175427)

    Published 2011
    “…<p>A total of 3540 transcripts were identified as significantly decreased in psoriatic plaques obtained from human patients relative to normal skin obtained from control subjects (FDR-adjusted P<0.05 and log<sub>2</sub>-transformed fold-change less than -0.50). …”
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