Showing 201 - 220 results of 843 for search '(( significant proteomic decrease ) OR ( significant ((nn decrease) OR (step decrease)) ))', query time: 0.42s Refine Results
  1. 201

    Behavioral data. by Xiao Zhang (152326)

    Published 2025
    Subjects:
  2. 202
  3. 203
  4. 204
  5. 205
  6. 206
  7. 207
  8. 208
  9. 209
  10. 210
  11. 211
  12. 212
  13. 213
  14. 214
  15. 215
  16. 216
  17. 217

    Table 1_Lignocellulose adaptation drives polysaccharide biosynthesis in Tremella fuciformis: metabolomic and proteomic insights into CAZyme regulation.xls by Yingyin Xu (10507772)

    Published 2025
    “…The polysaccharide content of T. fuciformis grown on a Cyclobalanopsis substrate (TY3) was significantly higher than those grown on a mixed substrate (TF1) made of wheat bran and cottonseed hull.…”
  18. 218

    Table 3_Lignocellulose adaptation drives polysaccharide biosynthesis in Tremella fuciformis: metabolomic and proteomic insights into CAZyme regulation.docx by Yingyin Xu (10507772)

    Published 2025
    “…The polysaccharide content of T. fuciformis grown on a Cyclobalanopsis substrate (TY3) was significantly higher than those grown on a mixed substrate (TF1) made of wheat bran and cottonseed hull.…”
  19. 219

    Table 4_Lignocellulose adaptation drives polysaccharide biosynthesis in Tremella fuciformis: metabolomic and proteomic insights into CAZyme regulation.xlsx by Yingyin Xu (10507772)

    Published 2025
    “…The polysaccharide content of T. fuciformis grown on a Cyclobalanopsis substrate (TY3) was significantly higher than those grown on a mixed substrate (TF1) made of wheat bran and cottonseed hull.…”
  20. 220

    Table 2_Lignocellulose adaptation drives polysaccharide biosynthesis in Tremella fuciformis: metabolomic and proteomic insights into CAZyme regulation.xls by Yingyin Xu (10507772)

    Published 2025
    “…The polysaccharide content of T. fuciformis grown on a Cyclobalanopsis substrate (TY3) was significantly higher than those grown on a mixed substrate (TF1) made of wheat bran and cottonseed hull.…”