Results 421-430 of about 900
  1. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the leading cause of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). While direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy efficiently eradicates HCV infection, epidemiological studies show that sustained virological response (SVR) following
    Date: (2019)
    Authors: Shira Perez , Meital Gal-Tanamy
    Ref: Hepatitis C Virus Protocols
  2. Date: 2021-05-03
    Authors: Holliday H, Khoury A, Swarbrick A.
    Journal: STAR protocols
  3. HDACs, originally described as histone modifiers, have recently been demonstrated to modify a variety of other proteins that are involved in diverse cellular processes unrelated to the chromatin environment. This includes deacetylation of nonhistone
    Date: (2019)
    Authors: Melissa Hadley , Satish Noonepalle , Debarati Banik , Alejandro Villagra
    Ref: Protein Acetylation
  4. Date: 2021-05-03
    Authors: Liu B, Sun H, Wang J, Liu H, Zhao C.
    Journal: Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology
  5. Mammalian genomes are folded into tens of thousands of long-range looping interactions. The cause-and-effect relationship between looping and genome function is poorly understood, and the extent to which loops are dynamic on short time scales remains
    Date: (2019)
    Authors: Ji Hun Kim , Mayuri Rege , Jacqueline Valeri , Margaret C. Dunagin ... Jennifer E. Phillips-Cremins
  6. Date: 2021-04-27
    Authors: He L, Yu W, Zhang W, Zhang L.
    Journal: STAR protocols
  7. The vast majority of fragile X affected patients do not transcribe FMR1 due to a CGG repeat expansion in the 5′-untranslated region of the FMR1 gene. When the CGGs considerably expand, it elicits abnormal DNA methylation and histone modifications,
    Date: (2019)
    Authors: Silvina Epsztejn-Litman , Rachel Eiges
    Ref: Fragile-X Syndrome
  8. Date: 2021-03-27
    Authors: Williams RM, Sauka-Spengler T.
    Journal: STAR protocols
  9. Endothelin-1 (ET-1), which acts through the endothelin A receptor (ETAR) or ETBR, belonging to the large family of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR), is involved in physiopathological processes, such as cancer. In epithelial ovarian cancer, a
    Date: (2019)
    Authors: Laura Rosanò , Roberta Cianfrocca , Anna Bagnato
    Ref: Beta-Arrestins
  10. Date: 2021-03-23
    Authors: Miyamoto R, Yokoyama A.
    Journal: STAR protocols
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