Showing 141 - 160 results of 99,561 for search '(( 500 ng decrease ) OR ( 5 ((((point decrease) OR (fold decrease))) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 1.40s Refine Results
  1. 141

    Aquaporin 2 Mutations in <i>Trypanosoma brucei gambiense</i> Field Isolates Correlate with Decreased Susceptibility to Pentamidine and Melarsoprol by Fabrice E. Graf (469055)

    Published 2013
    “…Here we describe two different kinds of <i>TbAQP2</i> mutations found in <i>T. b. gambiense</i> field isolates: simple loss of <i>TbAQP2</i>, or loss of wild-type <i>TbAQP2</i> allele combined with the formation of a novel type of <i>TbAQP2/3</i> chimera. The identified mutant <i>T. b. gambiense</i> are 40- to 50-fold less sensitive to pentamidine and 3- to 5-times less sensitive to melarsoprol than the reference isolates. …”
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    Eltrombopag markedly decreases levels of ROS in MOLM14 cells. by Anna Kalota (7415)

    Published 2015
    “…B) Graphic presentation of ROS levels measured by flow cytometry in cells treated with E (5 μM) or DPI (25 μM), an inhibitor of NADPH oxidase known to decrease an intracellular level of ROS, or untreated (CTR) cells. …”
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    Frictional Effects on RNA Folding: Speed Limit and Kramers Turnover by Naoto Hori (767562)

    Published 2018
    “…In the high-friction regime (η ≳ 10<sup>–5</sup> Pa·s), for both HP and PK, <i>k</i><sub>F</sub> values decrease as 1/η, whereas in the low friction regime, <i>k</i><sub>F</sub> values increase as η increases, leading to a maximum folding rate at a moderate viscosity (∼10<sup>–6</sup> Pa·s), which is the Kramers turnover. …”
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    TRIM5 restriction of HIV-1 has decreased during evolution leading to humans. by Michael Emerman (12304)

    Published 2013
    “…Original data is found in <a href="http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000301#pbio.1000301-Goldschmidt1" target="_blank">[30]</a> and shows that the antiviral gene TRIM5 restricted HIV-1 better at points in evolution earlier than the chimp–human common ancestor than it does after that. …”
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