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largest decrease » largest decreases (Expand Search), larger decrease (Expand Search), marked decrease (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
latent decrease » latency decreased (Expand Search), content decreased (Expand Search), greatest decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
largest decrease » largest decreases (Expand Search), larger decrease (Expand Search), marked decrease (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
latent decrease » latency decreased (Expand Search), content decreased (Expand Search), greatest decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
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47241
Reintroduction of Rnd3 corrects Rho and Notch signaling in H520 and H358 cells.
Published 2014“…<p>(<b>A</b>) <b>&</b> (<b>B</b>) Decreased NICD expression in H520-Rnd3 cells compared to H520 cells. …”
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47242
Flowchart of participants during the study.
Published 2025“…Individuals were asked to complete the WURSS-21 Daily Symptom Report over the course of the three-month study period using a diary. Regular gargling with the mouthwash containing CPC+Zn was efficacious in decreasing both the frequency (21.5% lower) and severity (11% lower) of respiratory symptoms throughout the study. …”
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47243
Raw dataset of the study.
Published 2025“…Individuals were asked to complete the WURSS-21 Daily Symptom Report over the course of the three-month study period using a diary. Regular gargling with the mouthwash containing CPC+Zn was efficacious in decreasing both the frequency (21.5% lower) and severity (11% lower) of respiratory symptoms throughout the study. …”
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47244
Depletion of endogenous miR-BART9 suppresses the migration and invasiveness of EBV-positive NPC cells.
Published 2014“…<p>(A) LNA-modified anti-BART9 efficiently decreases the level of mature miR-BART9 in EBV-positive HK1-EBV and C666-1 cells. …”
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47245
Table_1_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47246
Table_9_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47247
BBS1 protein interacts with the LRb and regulates its trafficking to the cells surface.
Published 2016“…(D-E) Silencing of BBS2, another BBSome protein, lowers the surface levels of Flag-LRb, but not HA-LRa or endogenous TrR in HEK 293 cells (n = 6 per group). (F–G) Blockade of Rab8a using a dominant negative (DN) form decreases the surface expression of Flag-LRb, HA-LRa and endogenous TrR in HEK 293 cells (n = 6 per group). …”
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47248
Table_5_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47249
Pre-Existing T- and B-Cell Defects in One Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy Patient
Published 2012“…The data were compared to those of untreated and natalizumab-treated MS patients and healthy donors. Before therapy, a patient who developed PML had a low TREC and KREC number; TRECs remained low, while KRECs and pre-B lymphocyte gene 1 transcripts peaked at 6 months of therapy and then decreased at PML diagnosis. …”
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47250
Table_3_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.xlsx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47251
Table_10_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47252
Effects of Water Depth, Seasonal Exposure, and Substrate Orientation on Microbial Bioerosion in the Ionian Sea (Eastern Mediterranean)
Published 2015“…<div><p>The effects of water depth, seasonal exposure, and substrate orientation on microbioerosion were studied by means of a settlement experiment deployed in 15, 50, 100, and 250 m water depth south-west of the Peloponnese Peninsula (Greece). …”
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47253
Table_7_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47254
Spontaneous replay switches between multiple environments.
Published 2022“…<p>In the (A) mesoscopic and (B) microscopic ring-attractor network storing multiple environments, metastable replay dynamics spontaneously emerge due to finite-size fluctuations when decreasing the population size from <i>N</i> = 500 (orange/red in panels i) to <i>N</i> = 50 (blue/black) per unit. …”
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47255
Table_2_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47256
Updating representation of position by betasort on an incorrect trial
Published 2015“…The initial conditions show the beta distributions of a well-learned list, with means labeled with a vertical line. …”
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47257
Long-term effect of soil and water conservation measures on runoff, sediment and their relationship in an orchard on sloping red soil of southern China
Published 2018“…The results showed that the first 4 years was the key period to prevent soil erosion for this orchard, and then the intensity of soil erosion decreased below 500 t·km<sup>–2</sup>·a<sup>–1</sup>. …”
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47258
Massively parallel unsupervised single-particle cryo-EM data clustering via statistical manifold learning
Published 2017“…However, traditional algorithms for unsupervised classification, such as K-means clustering and maximum likelihood optimization, may classify images into wrong classes with decreasing signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) in the image data, yet demand increased computational costs. …”
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47259
Table_6_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”
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47260
Table_4_Mycobiome of Fraxinus excelsior With Different Phenotypic Susceptibility to Ash Dieback.docx
Published 2021“…<p>For the last two decades, large-scale population decline of European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) has occurred in Europe because of the introduction of the alien fungal pathogen, Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, from East Asia. Since European ash is a keystone species having critical importance for biodiversity, and only a small percentage of the ash population appears to show some tolerance against the pathogen, the loss of ash trees means that other associated organisms, especially those with high or obligate associations to ash, are at risk of further species declines. …”