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1 developmental sensitivity to nitrogen, a key environmental signal.
2 gnal transduction for enhanced perception of environmental signals.
3 g and rate of gene expression in response to environmental signals.
4 s structure can be remodelled in response to environmental signals.
5 "encode" and subsequently "decode" different environmental signals.
6 d disease, and response to pharmacologic and environmental signals.
7 cells can metabolically adapt in response to environmental signals.
8 n ability to sense, evaluate, and respond to environmental signals.
9 ment, is regulated tightly by endogenous and environmental signals.
10 matic cells in response to developmental and environmental signals.
11 , albeit with altered responses to different environmental signals.
12 esponse to presence of a host plant or other environmental signals.
13  sensing systems to appropriately respond to environmental signals.
14 on while maintaining sensitivity to external environmental signals.
15 in enhancers in response to cell lineage and environmental signals.
16  as sensors for a wide range of cellular and environmental signals.
17 n is appropriate to myriad developmental and environmental signals.
18 RNAs (sRNAs) in response to stress and other environmental signals.
19 e endogenous cellular mechanisms to external environmental signals.
20       Sensory systems can adapt to different environmental signals.
21 longation is controlled by many hormonal and environmental signals.
22  are dictated by different physiological and environmental signals.
23 es growth regulation by several hormonal and environmental signals.
24 tomatal aperture according to endogenous and environmental signals.
25 th morphologically and in their responses to environmental signals.
26 oroplast integrates, decodes and responds to environmental signals.
27 ontrolling cellular behaviors in response to environmental signals.
28 hose timing is affected by developmental and environmental signals.
29 of growth in bacteria in response to diverse environmental signals.
30 through gene manipulation or encounters with environmental signals.
31 ynaptic strength and duration in response to environmental signals.
32  differential responses to developmental and environmental signals.
33 ion, and it responds to largely unidentified environmental signals.
34 ssing units to detect and integrate multiple environmental signals.
35 n transcriptionally regulated by a number of environmental signals.
36 ally synthesized and degraded in response to environmental signals.
37 ved in cells responding to developmental and environmental signals.
38 f plant growth in response to endogenous and environmental signals.
39 e happened within the cell or in response to environmental signals.
40 ion and magnitude of phenotypic responses to environmental signals.
41 ains, with several chemoreceptors matched to environmental signals.
42  entraining the circadian clocks to external environmental signals.
43 ading to the idea that most are activated by environmental signals.
44 oot development and response to internal and environmental signals.
45 ation and for mediating precise responses to environmental signals.
46 motes optimal responses to developmental and environmental signals.
47  biological networks to accurately interpret environmental signals.
48 ategy used by the cell to respond rapidly to environmental signals.
49 nitrifying bacteria in response to different environmental signals.
50  and regulation mediate plastic responses to environmental signals.
51  dormancy of her progeny seed in response to environmental signals.
52 estrate their homeostasis and interplay with environmental signals.
53 d global regulators in response to different environmental signals.
54 cks which in turn are entrained to different environmental signals.
55 ate chloroplast transcription in response to environmental signals.
56 cally distributed ILCPs in response to local environmental signals.
57 pendent on developmental stage, genotype and environmental signals.
58 d neurogenesis in response to physiology and environmental signals.
59  activity is controlled by developmental and environmental signals.
60 drA acts upstream of SadB, linking SadB with environmental signaling.
61 pment is highly plastic and is influenced by environmental signals [2].
62 chinery permits mammalian cells to integrate environmental signals(2); however, how these pathways ar
63 or growth promotion by multiple hormonal and environmental signals [8-11].
64                                Together with environmental signals, a core group of transcription fac
65 crossdating must be applied to fully resolve environmental signals, a point we underscore as the fron
66  Effective decision-making can involve using environmental signals about the possible good and bad ou
67 opsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), endogenous and environmental signals acting on the shoot apical meriste
68            These experiments demonstrate how environmental signals acting via FOS/JUN and BAF coordin
69 ulated in response to oxygen, one of the key environmental signals affecting expression of SPI1.
70 ulated dynamically by extra-follicular macro-environmental signals, allowing stem cells to adapt to a
71 cates that genes involved in the response to environmental signals also respond to AP2, suggesting th
72                               This occurs by environmental signal amplification or inhibition through
73 portant in the evolution of linkages between environmental signals and behavior.
74 gement could allow for information from both environmental signals and cell-to-cell communication to
75                       All cells discriminate environmental signals and generate appropriate intracell
76 n, these permeases may help Devosia to sense environmental signals and in chemotaxis at stressed habi
77 involved in relaying plant responses to many environmental signals and in regulating ion fluxes.
78 ores their differential capacities to detect environmental signals and influence the inflammatory mil
79 s problem, because they lie between external environmental signals and internal physiological respons
80 ator of cell growth that responds to diverse environmental signals and is deregulated in many human d
81                 Therefore, autophagy couples environmental signals and metabolic homeostasis to prote
82 transcriptional response regulator to detect environmental signals and modulate gene expression for a
83 hat the functions of CsrABb are dependent on environmental signals and on select residues.
84                                         Many environmental signals and regulatory systems are integra
85                   Mature leaves detect these environmental signals and relay messages to immature lea
86 gulated in response to developmental status, environmental signals and stress is still unknown.
87 meter was determined by a typical pattern of environmental signals and their interactions.
88 imary cilia that can detect several kinds of environmental signals and then transmit this information
89 ence gene expression and responds to various environmental signals and transcription factors.
90 uginosa can sense and respond to a myriad of environmental signals and utilizes a system of small mol
91 lationships between brain anatomy, behavior, environmental signals, and gene expression.
92 ability can compromise cellular responses to environmental signals, and it can also enlarge the reper
93  not abolish the branching response to these environmental signals, and neither signal is dominant ov
94 ed by complex interactions of endogenous and environmental signals, and the knowledge required to ach
95  of heterogeneous soil environments, diverse environmental signals are integrated into root developme
96  endogenous developmental programs, external environmental signals are integrated to modulate organ g
97 onditions, but in certain polycarpic plants, environmental signals are locally gated by the presence
98 challenge because systems-level estimates of environmental signals are only accessible indirectly as
99             Mounting evidence indicates that environmental signals are sensed by discrete neuro-immun
100       The molecular mechanisms through which environmental signals are translated into changes in gen
101 2/3 complex, which might help to explain how environmental signals are translated into changes in mor
102 structed that can detect and integrate three environmental signals (arsenic, mercury and copper ion l
103 cess that is influenced by genetic variants, environmental signals, as well as the nature of the spec
104                                              Environmental signals at the site of inflammation mediat
105 puts from intrinsic follicular and extrinsic environmental signals based on universal patterning prin
106 ceive cytoplasmic signals in addition to the environmental signal blue light.
107 are sensors for a wide range of cellular and environmental signals, but elucidating how these channel
108 in that the pea aphid mother experiences the environmental signals, but it is her offspring that are
109 ptor-like kinases to perceive endogenous and environmental signals, but little is known about their i
110                             Cells respond to environmental signals by altering gene expression throug
111  be highly plastic cells that can respond to environmental signals by changing their phenotype and fu
112                     Keratinocytes respond to environmental signals by eliciting induction of genes th
113 mporal coding theory where information about environmental signals can be encoded, at least partially
114                                              Environmental signals can be translated into chromatin c
115                Our findings demonstrate that environmental signals can initiate C. albicans parasexua
116 tches (RNAs that change shape in response to environmental signals), catalysis, and more roles that a
117              We investigated the impact that environmental signals contribute to cell-to-cell chemica
118 is is an important pathway through which the environmental signals control primary dormancy depth.
119              The regulatory elements and the environmental signals controlling the expression of Long
120 rphogenesis and shows that developmental and environmental signals converge on a common transcription
121    During this process, multiple genetic and environmental signals coordinately regulate protein expr
122 arget of rapamycin (mTOR) integrates various environmental signals/cues to regulate cell growth, prol
123  degree to which developmental programmes or environmental signals determine physiological phenotypes
124  Temperature during seed set is the dominant environmental signal determining the depth of primary do
125       Thus, the integration of two important environmental signals e.g. phosphate availability and th
126 ells differentiate), some respond sharply to environmental signals (e.g. ultrasensitivity), and some
127 on to ultimately regulate ABA content or how environmental signals (e.g., light and cold) might direc
128 ater flexibility when faced with conflicting environmental signals (e.g., seasonal changes in photope
129 ed factors, unpredictability of maternal and environmental signals early in life influences trajector
130 est that, in addition to a range of chemical environmental signals, EHEC is capable of sensing and re
131 tinct transcriptional responses to different environmental signals elicit distinct modes of assembly
132 control FT expression in response to diverse environmental signals, enabling flowering and other deve
133    Regulation of flowering by endogenous and environmental signals ensures that reproduction occurs u
134 hysiology in multicellular organisms and how environmental signals entrain clocks to geophysical time
135 that it may derive from specific patterns of environmental signals, especially those derived from the
136 sence of light by itself is not a sufficient environmental signal for early seedling development [4,
137 es that extracellular Fe(II) is an important environmental signal for P. aeruginosa.
138 erlapping functions with Cbp1 in recognizing environmental signals for Pmk1 activation.
139 d in cyanobacteria that responds to multiple environmental signals, has recently been implicated in t
140                A large number of factors and environmental signals have been implicated in SPI1 regul
141 ession post-transcriptionally in response to environmental signals; however, the molecular mechanisms
142 obal regulators that can integrate different environmental signals (i.e., glucose starvation and the
143     Understanding how developmental cues and environmental signals impact AM development will enable
144 that provide new insights into ways in which environmental signals impact Th17 cell development and f
145  expansion; however, the mechanisms by which environmental signals impinge upon microtubule organizat
146  of KNDy neurons to integrate endogenous and environmental signals important for the regulation of re
147 ur results underscore the role of iron as an environmental signal in multiple signaling pathways that
148 hares homology with proteins associated with environmental signaling in some plants, we hypothesized
149 that multivariate mutual information between environmental signals in a given environment correlates
150 he moss Physcomitrella patens [2] respond to environmental signals in a similar way to those of flowe
151  central role in coordinating endogenous and environmental signals in Arabidopsis.
152  of the complexity of recreating appropriate environmental signals in culture.
153    It also considers the role of the IGFs as environmental signals in linking resource availability t
154 for cells to integrate genetic programs with environmental signals in order produce an adaptive and c
155 eria can be designed to sense and respond to environmental signals in order to consume harmful compou
156 ically sense, process, respond, and adapt to environmental signals in real time.
157 ns are precisely organized to accurately map environmental signals in the brain.
158 ogether, these results provide evidence that environmental signals in the presence of high dietary sa
159 stem to integrate multiple developmental and environmental signals in the regulation of flowering ini
160 l differentiation, is a response to multiple environmental signals including the cytokine milieu.
161 well positioned in host tissue for detecting environmental signals, including allergens, leading to a
162 igella utilizes adhesins that are induced by environmental signals, including bile salts, encountered
163 ng nervous system is remarkably sensitive to environmental signals, including disruptive toxins, such
164 ides rapid responses to various cellular and environmental signals, including energy and nutrient ava
165            Seed germination is controlled by environmental signals, including light and endogenous ph
166 synchronized with a plant's surroundings via environmental signals, including light and temperature.
167 mancy and germination potential modulated by environmental signals, including temperature and soil mo
168                                              Environmental signals induce diverse cellular differenti
169 phagocytes from the bloodstream, yet whether environmental signals influence phagocyte longevity in t
170 evious studies indicated that light is a key environmental signal inhibiting germination in dormant g
171 eveal mechanisms by which disease-associated environmental signals instruct resident and recruited ma
172 a key question in the field: how are complex environmental signals integrated to enforce binary, orga
173 tion of the molecular mechanisms that define environmental signal integration is key to the developme
174 ients permit information acquisition when an environmental signal interacts with specialized protein
175 eprograming of genes central for transducing environmental signals into cellular responses, leading t
176  grouped 21 of the known SPI1 regulators and environmental signals into distinct classes on the basis
177  to monitor their surroundings and translate environmental signals into effector functions that regul
178 macromolecules to rapidly integrate multiple environmental signals into one output.
179 e most prevalent for sensing and transducing environmental signals into the cell.
180 inates and is orchestrated by endogenous and environmental signals involved in the regulation of axil
181  tropical ecosystems and ii) determine which environmental signal is dominating cellulose delta(18)O
182 standing of the perception and processing of environmental signals is needed.
183 tes virulence gene expression in response to environmental signals, is critical for fine-tuning HlyA
184  shape, in relation to the myriad of dynamic environmental signals, is key to understanding normal an
185 directly links the perception of an external environmental signal (light) and internal hormonal signa
186                               In response to environmental signals, macrophages undergo polarized act
187 ractions between intrinsic heterogeneity and environmental signals may help achieve developmental out
188 se expression is regulated by endogenous and environmental signals, may enhance our understanding of
189   Bacterial chemotaxis is a paradigm for how environmental signals modulate cellular behavior.
190 havioral response to suit a range of dynamic environmental signals motivates the use of biological ma
191 ydia-infected cells showing the effect of an environmental signal on transcription factor-DNA binding
192  propose that the induction of IGS lncRNA by environmental signals operates as a molecular switch tha
193                Memory can record a transient environmental signal or cell state that is then recalled
194  (sRNAs) are induced in response to specific environmental signals or stresses and act by base-pairin
195    That is, do they respond independently to environmental signals, or require interactions with each
196 LA proteins mediate the response to multiple environmental signals, our results provide an initial mo
197              This is the first characterized environmental signaling pathway targeted directly to a p
198                                  Light is an environmental signal perceived by most eukaryotic organi
199                                              Environmental signals polarize macrophages to either a p
200  dynamics of sediment-transport systems from environmental signal preservation.
201 al to accurately predicting how stresses and environmental signals propagate through the hydrologic s
202 into specialized effector subsets based upon environmental signals propagated by the cytokine milieu.
203                    Our data suggest that the environmental signals regulating germination are conserv
204 e organismal aging in response to changes in environmental signals remains elusive.
205 the timing of this regulation in response to environmental signals remains elusive.
206 h the SrrAB TCS senses and responds to these environmental signals remains unknown.
207         The observations that very different environmental signals result in a common phenotype (i.e.
208 is a critical element in the transduction of environmental signal(s) required for HmsD-dependent biof
209 ic domain in response to as yet unidentified environmental signal(s).
210 , it has not been fully utilized for complex environmental signal sensing, integration, and actuation
211 ater flexibility when faced with conflicting environmental signals.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT A master ci
212 ts are expected to be sensitive to different environmental signals such as changes in photoperiod, te
213                              Plants perceive environmental signals such as day length and temperature
214 ation feedback loops, which are entrained by environmental signals such as light and temperature to a
215 es flexible organ bending in the presence of environmental signals such as light or gravity.
216 xpression of their respiromes in response to environmental signals such as oxygen, nitrate and nitric
217 ents and must monitor and respond to various environmental signals such as the availability of iron,
218 o perceive and integrate both endogenous and environmental signals, such as carbohydrate and hormonal
219 ridines in mRNA are regulated in response to environmental signals, such as nutrient deprivation in y
220                                              Environmental signals, such as pH, temperature, nutrient
221 he level of toxin synthesis is influenced by environmental signals, such as phosphotransferase system
222 ne-bound PMMs appear to comprise yet another environmental signalling system that regulates the produ
223 ility and defines phosphate limitation as an environmental signal that activates ESX-5 secretion.
224                  Light is the most important environmental signal that entrains the circadian clock l
225 , its production could serve as an important environmental signal that facilitates species evolution
226             In plants, light is an important environmental signal that induces photomorphogenesis and
227                        Light is a ubiquitous environmental signal that many organisms sense and respo
228  carbon donor for photosynthesis but also an environmental signal that regulates stomatal movements a
229 ted that their function is to titrate out an environmental signal that would otherwise promote untime
230  Group 3 innate lymphoid cells (ILC3s) sense environmental signals that are critical for gut homeosta
231           This step is controlled by various environmental signals that are integrated at the molecul
232                   Here, we have examined the environmental signals that CD8(+) T cells use to localiz
233  west coast estuaries and find heterogeneous environmental signals that characterize each estuary, su
234            Blue light is one of the dominant environmental signals that control stomatal movements in
235    Their production of TSP-1 is regulated by environmental signals that establish a threshold for the
236 able of spatially and temporally controlling environmental signals that guide vascular fate and assem
237                                          The environmental signals that promote matrix synthesis rema
238 URs are key effector outputs of hormonal and environmental signals that regulate plant growth and dev
239  pathogenic potential, and identification of environmental signals that regulate swarming.
240 ement complex computations on the continuous environmental signals that they encounter.
241 e aligned to the day-night cycle by multiple environmental signals that vary across the plant.
242 e importance of PIF4 in integrating multiple environmental signals, the mechanisms by which PIF4 cont
243 cells integrate complex genetic, immune, and environmental signals, therefore alterations in their fu
244 ry protein FleQ that is in turn regulated by environmental signals through the Gac/Rsm and SadB pathw
245 e that S. epidermidis is "sensing" disparate environmental signals through the modulation of TCA cycl
246 a icosahedral complex that transmits diverse environmental signals to activate the general stress res
247 scriptional control by sRNAs allows multiple environmental signals to affect synthesis of the transcr
248 are involved in transmitting and transducing environmental signals to biochemical cascades.
249 amycin complex 1 (mTORC1) integrates diverse environmental signals to control cellular growth and org
250 ghlight mechanisms bacteria use to integrate environmental signals to control complex adaptive proces
251 hitecture that responds to developmental and environmental signals to control flowering time and the
252 e pathways by which mature stomata integrate environmental signals to control immature epidermal cell
253  of SEC14L-PITPs integrate developmental and environmental signals to control SEC14L-PITP-mediated me
254 thway that integrates both developmental and environmental signals to control tuberization and is the
255                    Plants integrate multiple environmental signals to detect and avoid shading from n
256               The main factors incorporating environmental signals to developing hematopoietic cells
257 sensory and interaction modules to propagate environmental signals to effector domains.
258 lt, 3D root architecture is shaped by myriad environmental signals to ensure resource capture is opti
259  secondary metabolite in response to various environmental signals to give it an advantage over its c
260 te molecule for sensing or transducing these environmental signals to initiate gametogenesis remains
261 hat, working with Tbx20, integrated multiple environmental signals to maintain ion channel gene expre
262     All animals detect and integrate diverse environmental signals to mediate behavior.
263 ne fish species to illustrate sensitivity of environmental signals to modest dating error rates.
264          Animals integrate physiological and environmental signals to modulate their food uptake.
265 t an organismal level, integrating extrinsic environmental signals to orchestrate ILC3 responses.
266 g-presenting dendritic cells (DCs) interpret environmental signals to orchestrate local and systemic
267      Roots navigate through soil integrating environmental signals to orient their growth.
268      Light and temperature are two important environmental signals to plants.
269 f constans1 (SOC1) integrates endogenous and environmental signals to promote flowering.
270 broad range of biophysical, biochemical, and environmental signals to provide critical insights into
271  making depends on an agent's ability to use environmental signals to reduce uncertainty.
272 rs transduce, store, retrieve, and integrate environmental signals to regulate behavior are poorly un
273 d AHR integrate immunological, metabolic and environmental signals to regulate the immune response.
274                The circadian clock perceives environmental signals to reset to local time, but the un
275 ss information encoded via developmental and environmental signals to survive and reproduce.
276 gene expression by transducing extracellular environmental signals to the cytoplasm via inner-membran
277 of the growing root, perceives and transmits environmental signals to the inner root tissues.
278 bacteriophytochrome-like protein CikA passes environmental signals to the oscillator by directly bind
279 s a 1.8-MDa cytoplasmic complex that conveys environmental signals to the sigma(B) stress factor of B
280 responsible for channeling physiological and environmental signals to their cellular responses.
281 ircuitries coupling extracellular quorum and environmental signals to transcription of T4SS genes are
282 cess controlled by intrinsic programs and by environmental signals transduced by a variety of plant h
283 ript analysis to explore the complexities of environmental signal transmission from the point of perc
284    The genetic loci sensitive to predictable environmental signals underlie local adaptation.
285 and continuously sense, process and react to environmental signals using their inherent signaling and
286 ld modulate the clock response to changes in environmental signals, we identified in a previous large
287 rmanent developmental changes vs. reversible environmental signals, we measured respiratory-related n
288 ells perceive a wide variety of cellular and environmental signals, which are often processed combina
289 tem for disentangling responses to different environmental signals, which balance carbon gain against
290 a role for metabolic activity in integrating environmental signals with activation-induced gene-expre
291                       Sensory neurons detect environmental signals with dendritic processes near the
292                               Integration of environmental signals with endogenous biological process
293 rlying mechanisms by which plants coordinate environmental signals with endogenous pathways are not f
294 ntinuous integration of spatial and temporal environmental signals with inherited information in the
295 s indicate the benefits for GAS to integrate environmental signals with intercellular communication p
296 bout the intersecting pathways that link the environmental signals with rhythms in cellular metabolis
297 opulation density with other physicochemical environmental signals within the broader c-di-GMP signal
298  an organism to respond to developmental and environmental signals without genetic changes.
299 oute cells to divergent fates in response to environmental signals without modification of native gen
300 ormation, and other processes in response to environmental signals, yet little is known about the fun
301 y) is governed by a variety of antigenic and environmental signals, yet the observed clone sizes foll

 
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