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1 re studied with the QM/MM method ONIOM(B3LYP:AMBER).
2 rock and as inclusions in fossilized resins (amber).
3 n Collembola (the first is also preserved in amber).
4 ototransistors from 495 nm (blue) to 590 nm (amber).
5 f any phytophagous insect group preserved in amber.
6 force fields available for RNA, the parmbsc0 AMBER.
7 iments using a 20-million-year-old Dominican amber.
8  Ma older than the earliest prior records in amber.
9 croscopic "conservation traps" comparable to amber.
10 and three-dimensional specimens preserved in amber.
11 d-Cretaceous (ca. 100 Mya) Myanmar (Burmese) amber.
12 ophoroideans from the mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber.
13  but occasionally they are well-preserved in amber.
14 tra are found only in much younger Dominican amber.
15  with specialized programs such as CHARMM or AMBER.
16 ids from two specimens of fossil feathers in amber.
17  the few mantidflies hitherto described from amber.
18 ine rove beetles from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber.
19 in Data Bank files via the cpptraj module in AMBER.
20 tudies of protein preservation in fossils in amber.
21 emidid damselfly from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber.
22 at are exclusively described from Cretaceous ambers.
23        We found that MD simulations with the AMBER-03w force field and the TIP4P/2005s water model ar
24 likely-termitophilous rove beetle in Burmese amber [2].
25                                   We use the AMBER 96 potential function with an implicit (GB/SA) mod
26 te termitophiles from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber (99 mya).
27           Over the last three years, Burmese amber (~99 Ma, from Myanmar) has provided a series of im
28 e potentials, including a new variant of the AMBER-99 force field, denoted AMBER-99 phi, which shows
29 variant of the AMBER-99 force field, denoted AMBER-99 phi, which shows improved agreement with experi
30  Escherichia coli for suppression of the lac amber A24 mutation; then relevant tRNA(Pyl) mutants were
31 Figure 1, left), from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber, about 99 million years old.
32 between 1 and 14 days for two beer types: an amber ale and an India pale ale.
33 ing evidence for melanin pigmentation in the amber and compression fossils, but Raman spectral bands
34 lains the historical differentiation between amber and copal.
35 ized orthogonal translation system that uses amber and evolved quadruplet-decoding transfer RNAs to e
36 our of honey ranged from 34 to 85 with light amber and extra light amber colours.
37 ody variable fragment (ScFv), in response to amber and quadruplet codons.
38 cantly smaller than those generated by blue, amber and red lights.
39                    David Grimaldi introduces amber and the fossils contained therein.
40 ial molecular dynamics (C(pH,E)MD) method in AMBER and we have shown how multidimensional replica exc
41 ith comedication, the prevalence of combined amber and yellow PDDIs was 43% (33% amber - mostly with
42                         Molecular mechanics (Amber) and semiempirical (AM1) calculations suggested si
43 b files or trajectories taken from; Gromacs, Amber, and DL_POLY.
44 mbion compactus gen. et sp. nov., in Burmese amber ( approximately 99 million years old), displaying
45 from two specimens in mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber ( approximately 99 million years old).
46  (new family)] from Early Cretaceous Burmese amber (approximately 100 million years before the presen
47 eptor (A), and a photo-insensitive molecule (Amber) as a nonfluorescent (N) place holder: namely, NDA
48            It also suggests that the Burmese amber avifauna was distinct from other Mesozoic assembla
49                          An aphid within the amber belongs to Cretamyzidae, a Cretaceous family sugge
50 ular mechanics method (SORCI+Q//B3LYP/6-31G*:Amber) between vertebrate (bovine) and invertebrate (squ
51                    Additionally, the "Latest Amber Bioinclusions Gap" (LABG) since the late Miocene t
52                     Here, we report a unique amber biota (50-53 million years ago) from the Lower Eoc
53 ted so far, making it among the most diverse amber biotas.
54 timated for the monopole-based force fields, AMBER, CHARMM, and OPLSAA.
55 yl- l-phenylalanine (Bpa) in response to the amber codon allowed the biosynthesis of Bpa-substituted
56 ded this unique amino acid in response to an amber codon allowing a single 1 to be placed at any loca
57 n from approximately 20% to >60% on a single amber codon and from <1% to >20% on two amber codons.
58 media and the protein of interest with a TAG amber codon at the desired incorporation site.
59  of unnatural amino acids in response to the amber codon in Escherichia coli.
60             Pyrrolysine is represented by an amber codon in genes encoding proteins such as the methy
61 oration of this amino acid in response to an amber codon in mammalian cells.
62 e activity in vitro is not solely due to the amber codon in ureD.
63    Expression of pylTSBCD also suppressed an amber codon introduced into the E. coli uidA gene.
64                                          The amber codon is recognized in the 30S subunit-decoding ce
65                     In nearly all cases, the amber codon is used as a sense codon, and an orthogonal
66  the radical trap 3-amino tyrosine (NH2Y) by amber codon suppression at positions Y731 or Y730 and in
67                                              Amber codon suppression for the insertion of non-natural
68                              Here we utilize amber codon suppression in a membrane-bound transporter
69 ite-specific incorporation into proteins via amber codon suppression in Escherichia coli and mammalia
70 vo incorporation of unnatural amino acids by amber codon suppression is limited by release factor-1-m
71 S can be redesigned to achieve high-fidelity amber codon suppression through delivery of p-bromopheny
72                                      We used amber codon suppression to introduce the photoreactive u
73 site-specific introduction into proteins via amber codon suppression using the wild-type pyrrolysyl-t
74 tem cells and mouse embryonic fibroblasts to amber codon suppression.
75 ters and (ii) selection of tRNA for enhanced amber codon suppression.
76 nzymes are encoded by genes with an in-frame amber codon that is translated as pyrrolysine.
77 fluoromethylphenylalanine in response to the amber codon UAG.
78 g the efficiency of suppression at a gene II amber codon upstream from the gene X start, the already
79 ne dihydrofolate reductase in response to an amber codon with at least 98% fidelity.
80 ight unnatural amino acids in response to an amber codon with high yields and fidelities.
81  cognate orthogonal tRNA that recognizes the amber codon, are encoded on the plasmid pSUPAR6-L3-3SY,
82 ecodes a series of quadruplet codons and the amber codon, providing several blank codons on an orthog
83 efficiently incorporated at a predefined UAG amber codon, thereby competing with RF1 rather than RF2.
84 system that site-specifically--using the UAG amber codon--inserts Sec depending on the elongation fac
85  cysteine codon has been replaced by the UAG amber codon.
86 ally encode this initiator in response to an amber codon.
87 the MaThg1 gene and transcript confirmed the amber codon.
88 Thg1 (MaThg1) gene contains an in-frame TAG (amber) codon.
89  addition reaction between a cysteine and an amber-codon-encoded N(e) -acryloyl-lysine (AcrK).
90 -X) improves tRNA(CUA)-dependent decoding of amber codons placed in orthogonal mRNA.
91 ural amino acid incorporation in response to amber codons.
92 ngle amber codon and from <1% to >20% on two amber codons.
93 be a new specimen of enantiornithine bird in amber, collected at the Angbamo locality in the Hukawng
94 cent experimental observation of the unusual amber coloration of aluminum doped sol-gel glass that ha
95 ter stability i.e. 63 days when stored under amber-colored vial compared to only 35 days when stored
96 om 34 to 85 with light amber and extra light amber colours.
97  superinfection immunity of phages to enrich amber-containing clones, thus avoiding the observed bias
98 lycentropodidae, from mid-Cretaceous Myanmar amber, contains Parapolycentropus.
99 an remains trapped in Cretaceous-age Burmese amber continue to be uncovered, revealing a diversity of
100  an additional 17 fossil anoles in Dominican amber dating to 15-20 My before the present.
101 hetase, ligates pyrrolysine to tRNA(Pyl) for amber decoding as pyrrolysine.
102 rrolysine requires the pylT gene product, an amber-decoding tRNA(Pyl) that is aminoacylated with pyrr
103   This discovery highlights the potential of amber deposits to reveal the lowest limits of vertebrate
104                 The primary dentition showed amber discoloration, pulp obliteration, and severe attri
105 may have contributed to the formation of the amber droplets, but we find that the abundance of amber
106  droplets, but we find that the abundance of amber during the Carnian (ca. 230 Ma) is globally anomal
107           Previous attempts to visualize the amber-encoded residue by mass spectrometry identified on
108 m mass spectrometry revealed the mass of the amber-encoded residue in MtmB, MtbB, and MttB as 237.2 +
109  and feather development of DIP-V-15103, the amber-entombed tail section that we recently reported [2
110 stinct from other Mesozoic assemblages, with amber entrapment including representatives from unusual
111              The occurrence of arthropods in amber exclusively from the Cretaceous and Cenozoic is wi
112 DP agar and smaller amounts of yellow-brown (amber) extracellular pigment(s).
113 h a force field, the relative weights of the Amber ff03 all-atom potential supplemented by an explici
114 ll-atom molecular dynamics simulations using AMBER FF03 and the generalized-Born solvation model.
115 d-long molecular dynamics simulations, using AMBER FF03 force field and a generalized-Born solvation
116 ions, while that of PARSE, AMBER parm99, and AMBER ff03 performed more poorly.
117 "transferable." Here we show that, while the AMBER ff03 potential is known to favor helical structure
118 he relative weights of the components of the Amber ff03 potential on a large set of decoy structures
119 figurations, simulations of both proteins in Amber ff03( *) in explicit solvent fold to within 2.0 A
120 idues with two recent additive force fields, Amber ff03w and Amber ff99SB( *).
121 h an optimized all-atom protein force field (Amber ff03w) and an accurate water model (TIP4P/2005) to
122  an 0.8 mus MD simulation computed using the Amber ff10 force field as well as to determine an atomic
123 dilution by simulation with the CHARMM36 and Amber ff12SB force fields.
124 eine residues; the net simulation time using Amber ff14SB force field was 61 mus.
125 s by using new generation TIP4P-Ew water and Amber ff99SB protein force fields, in which the NMR vali
126 captured well by both energy functions, with Amber ff99SB( *) being more accurate.
127 g of residue charges for charged residues in Amber ff99SB( *) significantly improves their helix prop
128 ecent additive force fields, Amber ff03w and Amber ff99SB( *).
129                    We identify AMBER ff99SB, AMBER ff99SB*, and OPLS-AA/L to be most suitable for stu
130                                  We identify AMBER ff99SB, AMBER ff99SB*, and OPLS-AA/L to be most su
131 erent simulation force fields (OPLS-AA/L and AMBER ff99SB-ILDN).
132 d flagged), of potential clinical relevance (amber flagged) or of weak clinical significance (yellow
133 hlights the unique preservation potential of amber for understanding the morphology and evolution of
134                                          The AMBER force field and generalized Born implicit solvent
135 inst various types of experimental data, the AMBER force field ff99SB was benchmarked in recent years
136 h B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) for the QM part and the AMBER force field for the MM part were used to examine t
137    Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations using AMBER force field in explicit solvent were run for over
138 nctional and the environment by means of the AMBER force field.
139 P2/6-31+G* level and the MM method using the AMBER force field.
140                                        Among Amber force fields tested, ff14SB and its derivatives ra
141 ical force fields such as the ENZYMIX or the AMBER force fields.
142 ble, those obtained using last generation of AMBER force-fields (BSC1 and BSC0OL15) show predictive p
143 le isotope composition (H and C) suggest the amber formed from resins exuded by cupressaceous conifer
144 nsistent with previous suggestions that this amber formed on an island within the Trans-Tethyan arc(1
145       nov., from Early Cenomanian La Buzinie amber (France), preserved with its marsupial pouch and c
146 he first fossil neotropical flowers found in amber from a representative of the asterids.
147             Recent discoveries in Cretaceous amber from Canada, France, Japan, Lebanon, Myanmar, and
148       n the study of fossil insects, Chinese amber from Fushun has been largely overlooked.
149 ( approximately 52 million years old) Cambay amber from India.
150 nchans found as inclusions in mid-Cretaceous amber from Kachin state (northern Myanmar), which repres
151 ved in mid-Cretaceous ( approximately 99 Ma) amber from Kachin State, Myanmar [17], with plumage stru
152                                              Amber from Myanmar (Burmese amber) is an important sourc
153 quisitely preserved myxomycete sporocarps in amber from Myanmar, ca. 100 million years old, one of th
154  preserved in Early Cretaceous (ca. 100 mya) amber from Myanmar, one described as Krishnatermes yoddh
155 tebrate remains trapped in middle Cretaceous amber from northern Myanmar [1, 2] have provided insight
156 lusions in approximately 99-million-year-old amber from northern Myanmar provide unprecedented insigh
157                 New zhangsolvid specimens in amber from Spain (ca. 105 mega-annum [Ma]) and Myanmar (
158 er pieces from the Early Cretaceous (Albian) amber from Spain are studied.
159 f a green lacewing larva in Early Cretaceous amber from Spain with specialized cuticular processes fo
160                Abundant 230 million-year-old amber from the Late Triassic (Carnian) of northeastern I
161 xylid fossils in mid-Cretaceous and Cenozoic ambers from Myanmar (ca. 99 million years ago [Mya]), Ru
162 files can be used for CHARMM, NAMD, GROMACS, AMBER, GENESIS, LAMMPS, Desmond, OpenMM, and CHARMM/Open
163 itive, and user-friendly environment and the AMBER GPU code for a robust and high-performance simulat
164 ent of an automated workflow tool to perform AMBER GPU MD simulations.
165 th an 'Anton' machine and large ensembles of AMBER GPU simulations.
166  lipid force fields (FF) such as the CHARMM, AMBER, GROMOS, OPLS, and MARTINI families.
167 sible traces of colour, while discoveries in amber have been disassociated from their source animals.
168   With the taxa reported herein, the Mexican amber holds the greatest diversity of fossil copepods wo
169      All the honeys, except for a Malaysian "Amber honey" stimulated the release of TNF-alpha from mo
170 nsect inclusions from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber in astonishing detail.
171        We have found Class I (polylabdanoid) amber in Carboniferous sediments dating to approximately
172 roplebeia dominicana, recovered from Miocene amber in the Dominican Republic, that is 15-20 million y
173 esy in 16 million-year-old Miocene Dominican amber involving a springtail being transported by a mayf
174                       Mid-Tertiary Dominican amber is a rich source for such fossils, and representat
175                                   Cretaceous amber is also relatively abundant, yet it is seldom foun
176                                       Fushun amber is derived from cupressaceous trees, as determined
177 anine-related phenotypic suppression of lacZ amber is enhanced by mutations in genes related to the p
178                                     Although amber is particularly noted for its detailed preservatio
179 rther recovery of arthropods in Carnian-aged amber is promising and will have profound implications f
180    The preservation of aquatic arthropods in amber is unusual but offers a unique insight into ancien
181                  Amber from Myanmar (Burmese amber) is an important source of new information on the
182 ies were carried out at the ONIOM(B3LYP/BP86/Amber) level on the non-heme diiron enzyme benzoyl coenz
183                            Illumination with amber light acidified the surrounding interstitium and l
184        Distinct tooth row impressions on the amber match the hadrosaur's alveolar bone ridges, provid
185 tected without sample destruction through an amber matrix using confocal Raman spectroscopy.
186                         Fossils preserved in amber may provide significant palaeoevolutionary and bio
187  of carotenoids in six feathers preserved in amber (Miocene to mid-Cretaceous) and in a feather prese
188 combined amber and yellow PDDIs was 43% (33% amber - mostly with cardiovascular drugs - and 20% yello
189                                      T4 motA amber [motA(Am)] or asiA(Am) phage grows poorly in wild-
190 with plasmids carrying the genes for a pyrE2 amber mutant and the serine amber suppressor tRNA yielde
191 s a test, Bpa was incorporated using a Phe14 amber mutant isolated from the scanning library.
192 h a mutant N4 isolate (N4am229) harboring an amber mutation in Orf65 yielded virions containing (N4gp
193                         Thus, an auxotrophic amber mutation in the pyrE2 gene can be complemented by
194  superfolder green fluorescent protein at an amber mutation site in Escherichia coli.
195 ne, was genetically encoded in E. coli by an amber nonsense codon and corresponding orthogonal tRNA/a
196 oded in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by using an amber nonsense codon and corresponding orthogonal tRNA/a
197 g the modified amino acid in response to the amber nonsense codon TAG.
198 lly inserts sulfotyrosine in response to the amber nonsense codon, TAG.
199 protein in mammalian cells in response to an amber nonsense codon.
200 amino acids in response to three independent amber nonsense codons in sperm whale myoglobin or green
201  amino acids at specific sites designated by amber nonsense codons.
202      Here we report new Pangean and Gondwana amber occurrences dating from ~230 to 40 Ma from Austral
203  using the beta-gal gene as a reporter, that amber, ochre, and opal suppressors derived from the seri
204 il specimens from the Late Cretaceous Kachin amber of northern Myanmar.
205 lized pollination mode from Early Cretaceous amber of Spain, wherein four female thrips representing
206                                       Fossil amber offers the opportunity to investigate the dynamics
207 eadache significantly less than white, blue, amber or red lights.
208 mplicit-solvent model, as implemented in the AMBER package.
209 zations, parm99chi_YIL and parm99TOR, of the AMBER parm99 force field improve the agreement between s
210 arger rmsd value of 1.28 pH units, while the AMBER parm99 parameter set resulted in a considerably po
211 bly robust predictions, while that of PARSE, AMBER parm99, and AMBER ff03 performed more poorly.
212 cations according to packaging material (PET amber, PET transparent and tinplate can) and light expos
213                                          The amber pieces containing pseudoinclusions are fossilized,
214 Here, dark pseudoinclusions in kidney-shaped amber pieces from the Early Cretaceous (Albian) amber fr
215 om simulations under several variants of the AMBER potential in explicit solvent using a global distr
216 of a set of eight helical peptides under the AMBER potential using implicit solvent.
217        Here we report the first discovery of amber-preserved harpacticoid copepods, represented by te
218 40 ns MD trajectories were obtained with the AMBER program suite.
219              Fossilized remains preserved in amber provide abundant data on the paleobiota surroundin
220  materials, such as limestone, claystone, or amber, provide detailed information on extinct species t
221 rich deposits of 99 million-year-old Burmese amber resolves ambiguity regarding sociality and diversi
222                            These feathers in amber reveal a unique ventrally concave and dorsoventral
223 ight characteristics and feathers in Burmese amber reveal how multi-dimensional functionality can be
224 using enzyme design modules from Rosetta and AMBER's MMPBSA.
225 t evidence in 99 million-year-old Cretaceous amber showing that hard ticks and ticks of the extinct n
226 tic affinities to those from coeval European ambers, showing a biotic interchange between the eastern
227  the unique fossilisation environment inside amber shows potential for the recovery of ancient amino
228  persists for at least 1 mus, whereas in the AMBER simulation, it remains highly dynamic; additional
229   The simulations were carried out using the Amber software on inexpensive GPUs, providing approximat
230 A. margulisae from Late Albian Penacerrada I amber (Spain) possess four pairs of rudimentary oostegit
231 ribed from ca. 105-million-year-old San Just amber (Spain), representing the oldest and one of the fe
232          Here we describe an unusually large amber specimen attached to a Prosaurolophus jaw, which r
233     McKellar et al. analyzed Late Cretaceous amber specimens from Canada and identified some filament
234 respond to droplets of phloem sap containing amber spheroids and preserving both organic and inorgani
235  lcrV alleles with missense mutations in its amber stop codon (lcrV(*327)).
236  amino acid incorporation in response to the amber stop codon (UAG) in mammalian cells is commonly co
237 n of different amino acids in response to an amber stop codon by utilizing switchable designer transf
238 dentified, resulting in a substitution of an amber stop codon for glutamine.
239 )-phenylalanine (VSF, 3), in response to the amber stop codon in Escherichia coli.
240               We observed extensive opal and amber stop codon reassignments in bacteriophages and of
241 sidues introduced into viral capsids through amber stop codon suppression.
242 amino acids into proteins in response to the amber stop codon UAG.
243 l) was developed to scan a gene with the TAG amber stop codon with complete synthetic control.
244 o acid, is incorporated in response to a UAG amber stop codon.
245 nd nsP4 was replaced with an opal, ochre, or amber stop codon.
246 nical translation machinery and can suppress amber stop codons to incorporate selenocysteine with hig
247 urine dihydrofolate reductase in response to amber stop codons with at least 98% fidelity.
248 ues into recombinant proteins in response to amber stop codons.
249 nonical amino acids (ncAAs) into proteins at amber stop codons.
250 om unmeasurably low levels up to 43% of a no amber stop control.
251  in vitro translation of mRNAs containing an amber-stop codon in the signal peptide in the presence o
252    The calculations were performed using the AMBER suite of programs and the parm94 force field, vali
253 ) calculations were then performed using the AMBER suite to validate the newly generated force field.
254 nce of RF1, however, endogenous near-cognate amber suppressing tRNAs can lead to contaminating protei
255 RNA synthetase (RS) pair is used to generate amber suppressing tRNAs charged with the UAA.
256 nthetase (PylRS) attaches pyrrolysine to the amber-suppressing tRNA(Pyl).
257                                    Using the amber suppression approach, N() -(4-azidobenzoxycarbonyl
258  a variant exhibiting significantly improved amber suppression efficiency.
259                                        Using amber suppression in coordination with a mutant pyrrolys
260 -coumarin-yl)-ethylglycine, using orthogonal amber suppression machinery in Escherichia coli MS metho
261 st incorporated into phage libraries through amber suppression nearly two decades ago, their applicat
262 in a photoswitchable variant, Dronpa2, using amber suppression to introduce electron-donating and ele
263                   In this work, by combining amber suppression-mediated non-natural amino acid incorp
264 ve site are replaced by 3-chlorotyrosine via amber suppression.
265                            Here, we used the amber-suppression technology to site-specifically introd
266 mino acids (ncAAs) by introducing orthogonal amber suppressor aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase/tRNA pairs in
267 ylation modulates RAD52 function, we used an amber suppressor technology to substitute tyrosine 104 w
268 eRS (T415G) and a mutant yeast phenylalanine amber suppressor tRNA (ytRNAPheCUA_UG) into an E. coli e
269 ystem, multiple copies of a gene encoding an amber suppressor tRNA derived from a Methanocaldococcus
270            This mutant aaRS together with an amber suppressor tRNA from Bacillus stearothermophilus i
271 suppressor tRNAs are less efficient than the amber suppressor tRNA THG73 (Tetrahymena thermophila G73
272 g aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases aminoacylate an amber suppressor tRNA with a desired unnatural amino aci
273 enes for a pyrE2 amber mutant and the serine amber suppressor tRNA yielded transformants that grow on
274 on levels of the orthogonal Escherichia coli amber suppressor tRNA(CUA) and cognate aminoacyl-tRNA sy
275 ttaches Pyl to its cognate tRNA, the special amber suppressor tRNA(Pyl).
276              In the process of developing an amber suppressor tRNA, we discovered that the Escherichi
277 ene can be complemented by expression of the amber suppressor tRNA.
278 don with high efficiency using an orthogonal amber suppressor tRNA/aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (aaRS) p
279 was responsible for misacylating the initial amber suppressor version of the yeast tryptophanyl tRNA.
280 ilon)-(5-azido-2 nitrobenzoyl)-Lys-tRNA(amb) amber suppressor.
281 hogonal pairs, including three highly active amber suppressors, and evolve new amino acid substrate s
282                           1', 'New Big' and 'Amber Sweet Goji').
283 id residues in Ste2p with Bpa by engineering amber TAG stop codons into STE2 encoded on a plasmid.
284 rolysine, the 22nd amino acid, is encoded by amber (TAG=UAG) codons in certain methanogenic archaea a
285 a 28 bp deletion that introduces a premature amber termination codon into the open reading frame of a
286 gment of a fertile leaf preserved in Burmese amber that represents the first fossil evidence of the f
287 preserved feathers in mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber that share macro-morphological similarities (e.g.,
288  leaves enclosed in a piece of Eocene Baltic amber that share relevant morphological features with ex
289                              The presence of amber, the fossil form of the resins produced by many ty
290  (Staphylinidae) from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber, the latter belonging to Oxyporinae, modern member
291 band (NEB) technique has been implemented in AMBER to calculate low-energy paths for conformational c
292 d specimens have been described from Burmese amber: two isolated wings, an isolated foot with wing fr
293  bound to the 70S ribosome in response to an amber (UAG) codon at 3.6-A resolution.
294 g from two different DNA conformations using AMBER v8.0.
295               The 25-nt region 3' of the HDV amber/W site in HDV genotype I RNA consists of a conserv
296 antioxidant capacity and arbutin levels than amber walnuts.
297 of fossilized remain, abundant in Cretaceous ambers, was first interpreted as fossilized vacuole-bear
298 irst skeletal remains of avians preserved in amber were described in 2016, new avian remains trapped
299 rap-jaw ant from 99 million-year-old Burmese amber with head structures that presumably functioned as
300 Mesozoic and Cenozoic fossilized tree resin (amber) with few findings from the high southern paleolat
301 onally preserved theropod wings from Burmese amber, with vestiges of soft tissues.

 
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