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25 matches found for "chloride genes"

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Researchers Find New Actions of Neurochemicals

Now MIT researchers have found novel C. elegans neurochemical receptors, the discovery of which could lead to new therapeutic targets for psychiatric disorders if similar receptors are found in humans...

Life Sciences | nachricht Read more
Researchers discover gene that helps control the production of stomach acid

This data is published in the Nov. 3 edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).UC professor Manoocher Soleimani, MD, and colleagues found that when transporter Slc2...

Life Sciences | nachricht Read more
Family study bolsters link between pesticides and Parkinson’s

Parkinson’s disease is a common neurological disorder affecting about 1 million people in the USA. The disorder typically develops in later life resulting in symptoms such as tremors and muscle rigidi...

Health and Medicine | nachricht Read more
Nature's helpers: Using microorganisms to remove TCE from water

Now Rittmann and his research team, which includes Rosa Krajmalnik-Brown and Jinwook Chung, recently published a paper in the journal Environmental Science & Technology for a new application that remo...

Ecology, The Environment and Conservation | nachricht Read more
Fighting pollution the poplar way: Trees to clean up Indiana site

The researchers plan to plant transgenic poplars at the site, a former oil storage facility near Kokomo, Ind., this summer. In a laboratory setting, the transgenic trees have been shown to be capable ...

Ecology, The Environment and Conservation | nachricht Read more
Neurobiological Pathways between Depression and Cardio-Vascular Disease are Clarified

Depression has long had a popular link to cardiovascular disease and death. However, only during the last 15 years scientific evidence supporting this common wisdom has been available (Glassman et al....

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Scientists ramp up ability of poplar plants to disarm toxic pollutants

The problem with plants that are capable of doing this is that the process is slow and halts completely when growth stops in winter. Using plants in this way, a process called phytoremediation, often ...

Ecology, The Environment and Conservation | nachricht Read more
Nanoengineers mine tiny diamonds for drug delivery

Their study, published online by the journal Nano Letters, is the first to demonstrate the use of nanodiamonds, a new class of nanomaterials, in biomedicine. In addition to delivering cancer drugs, th...

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A new wrinkle in evolution -- Man-made proteins

Inspired by this success, a new Biodesign Institute research team, led by John Chaput, is now trying to mimic the process of Darwinian evolution in the laboratory by evolving new proteins from scratch...

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Protein important in blood clotting may also play a role in fertility

Male mice missing both copies of the gene that produces the protein, called CIB1, have testes about half the normal size, have smaller numbers of the cells that give rise to sperm and produce no matur...

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Johns Hopkins lab scientists tame overactive CF protein

A team led by Johns Hopkins Children’s Center scientists has identified and successfully tamed an overactive protein that plays a key role in cystic fibrosis (CF), a genetic disorder that interferes w...

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UVa Researchers Demonstrate Value for the First Genetic Test for High Blood Pressure and Sensitivity to Salt

Researchers led by UVa Health System pathologist Robin Felder, Ph.D., have demonstrated that looking for several variations of genes that control blood pressure can predict the risk for hig...

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A salty tale: New bacterial genome sequenced from ancient salterns

Tourists in Spain often stop to ogle the country’s many saltwater lagoons, used to produce salt since Roman times. Scientists, too, admire these saltern crystallizers--and even more so, th...

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Why do amyloid diseases strike different tissues?

Part of the answer lies in the secretory aptitude of these tissues, say Scripps research scientists Researchers at The Scripps Research Institute are reporting the results of a...

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Penn study shows how next-generation diabetic drugs could work more selectively

Understanding molecular double action of tzds to reduce side effects In an attempt to find a new generation of diabetic drugs that will minimize side effects, researchers at ...

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