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Results 85261 - 85270 of 85731 for cancer
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Targeted delivery leads to more efficient dosage at the desired site. Because of this, it is of interest to the pharmaceutical industry. Nanomaterials have a size range in the nanometer range, which...
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Multiomics is a new approach where the data sets of different omic groups are combined during analysis. The different omic strategies employed during multiomics are genome, proteome, transcriptome,...
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    The skin microbiota is the term used to describe the collection of microorganisms that live on our skin. More specifically, it refers to the genomes of all these microbes including bacteria, fungi,...
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Protein and peptide microarrays, the emerging tools for proteomics and clinical assays, are high-throughput methods that track binding events and activities, and decide the function of proteins on a...
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Metabolomic studies in plants help to understand plant biology and physiology from the perspective of small chemical molecules. The role of metabolomics has found its way in plant biotechnology,...
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Many different assays are used to detect and measure cellular metabolism, depending on the metabolite being investigated.
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Melanin is synthesised in cytoplasmic organelles called melanosomes, which reside in skin cells and hair follicles called melanocytes. This process is known as melanogenesis.
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Positron emission tomography (PET) is a nuclear imaging tool for molecular and functional imaging of biological processes. While functional imaging is used to monitor parameters such as perfusion and...
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    Recently, metabolic profiling has attracted interest for the validation of biomarkers which can be used to discover the underlying mechanism of a disease.
  • Life Sciences - 26 Feb 2019
    The genetic code consists of 64 triplets of nucleotides called codons. With the exception of three codons, each codon encodes for at least one of the 20 canonical amino acids and most of the amino...

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