Showing 501 - 520 results of 13,226 for search '(( significantly increased decrease ) OR ( significant ((small decrease) OR (teer decrease)) ))', query time: 0.39s Refine Results
  1. 501
  2. 502
  3. 503
  4. 504
  5. 505
  6. 506
  7. 507
  8. 508
  9. 509
  10. 510
  11. 511
  12. 512
  13. 513
  14. 514

    Significant gene set results from EGSEA. by Katherine M. Peterson (19746455)

    Published 2024
    “…The table consists of columns for Gene Set Name, Rank, P-value, adjusted P-value, the general direction (increased or decreased) of the gene expression, and Sample Day.…”
  15. 515
  16. 516
  17. 517

    S1 File - by Luqiong Liu (11537092)

    Published 2024
    “…Compared with LPS treatment alone, BA significantly mitigated the reduction in the TEER, decreased FD-4 flux permeability, increased the mRNA expression of ZO-1 and Occludin, and normalized the distribution of ZO-1 and Occludin in Caco2 cells. …”
  18. 518

    Experimental treatments and groups. by Luqiong Liu (11537092)

    Published 2024
    “…Compared with LPS treatment alone, BA significantly mitigated the reduction in the TEER, decreased FD-4 flux permeability, increased the mRNA expression of ZO-1 and Occludin, and normalized the distribution of ZO-1 and Occludin in Caco2 cells. …”
  19. 519

    Primers for RT-qPCR. by Luqiong Liu (11537092)

    Published 2024
    “…Compared with LPS treatment alone, BA significantly mitigated the reduction in the TEER, decreased FD-4 flux permeability, increased the mRNA expression of ZO-1 and Occludin, and normalized the distribution of ZO-1 and Occludin in Caco2 cells. …”
  20. 520

    Effects of increasing gravel on initial escape latency in non-injured <i>vs.</i> by Ella R. Dockendorf (21533334)

    Published 2025
    “…</b> However latency was significantly decrease for the 40 g condition in the injured day 0 animals. **** indicates significant differences across increasing amounts of gravel (p < 0.0001). * indicates a post-hoc test confirming a significant difference between injured and non-injured animals 40 g (p < 0.05).…”