Physiological Interaction Articles & Analysis
11 articles found
Cell cultures have played a significant role in the academy and pharmaceutical industry, but conventional 2D cultures fail to provide physiological relevance and communication network as compared to in vivo conditions, since they are unable to mimic the complexity of cellular microenvironment, an essential part for the cell behavior and systematic investigation. Using 2D cell ...
As we glean more about recombinases and the virus's intricate interactions with the host physiology, the future of rAAV-based gene therapy appears brighter than ever. ...
The increased levels of actinomycetes, bifidobacteria, and Enterobacteriaceae, alongside the decreased levels of physiologic bacteria, visceral odor bacteria, and Acetatifactor bacteria, were associated with NNK and BaP-induced lung cancer. ...
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) is a non-radiative energy transition that transfers the energy from the excited state of the donor to the excited state of the acceptor through the electric dipole interaction between molecules. This process does not involve photons, so it is non-radiative. ...
The discovery of new drugs targeting orphan GPCRs underscores the need for a cell-based assay capable of analyzing interactions with molecular-level specificity (in this instance, protein-protein interactions), an importantly, without the use of labels, as they likely affect the natural physiology of a given molecular ...
The microbiome refers to the collection of all microorganisms and their genetic information in a specific environment or ecosystem, and its connotation includes the interaction of microorganisms with their environment and host. Microbiomics is the study of the microbiome, which explores their structure, function, and relationship with the environment or the host. Microbiome ...
Through the detection of the reporter gene, it can in turn determine whether there is an interaction between the bait and the prey. This technology is mainly used for screening of interacting proteins. ...
Each of these equations focuses on key assumptions of how compound physicochemical properties and specific physiological parameters interact to present themselves in this organ-specific equilibrium constant. ...
The microbiome refers to the collection of all microorganisms and their genetic information in a specific environment or ecosystem, and its connotation includes the interaction of microorganisms with their environment and host. Microbiomics is the study of the microbiome, which explores their structure, function, and relationship with the environment or the host. Microbiome ...
Maize ( Zea mays L.) crops were grown at Coimbatore in the years 2009 and 2010 during the kharif season. The treatments imposed were three soil moisture levels: 100% irrigation water supply (0.8 IW/CPE ratio), 75% irrigation water supply (0.6 IW/CPE ratio) and 50% irrigation water supply (0.4 IW/CPE ratio). The plant density treatments adopted were normal spacing (60 × 20 cm), narrow ...
Also involves the characterisation of gene products and the physiological function and interactions of these products. Nutrigenomics focuses on the effect of nutrients on the genome, proteome, metabolome and explains the relationship between these specific nutrients and nutrient-regimes on human health. ...
