コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 al commitment that orchestrates this crucial cell fate decision.
2 ment and differentiation phases of the first cell fate decision.
3 tical modeling to analyze transitions during cell fate decision.
4 m cell regeneration, tissue homeostasis, and cell fate decision.
5 ibution to cell polarization, ACD and binary cell fate decisions.
6 n is tightly controlled and coordinated with cell fate decisions.
7 have the potential to regulate hematopoietic cell fate decisions.
8 are central regulators of cell division and cell fate decisions.
9 iptome will provide invaluable insights into cell fate decisions.
10 hich lysine methylation signaling impacts on cell fate decisions.
11 e causative role of Fus3 dynamics in driving cell fate decisions.
12 ion to mediate cellular responses, including cell fate decisions.
13 proteins as central regulators of murine NKT cell fate decisions.
14 essential roles in embryonic development and cell fate decisions.
15 e pluripotent stem cell cycle contributes to cell fate decisions.
16 t TET2 is an important regulator of CD8(+) T cell fate decisions.
17 , it is unclear how Akt controls alternate T cell fate decisions.
18 ories can unveil how gene regulation governs cell fate decisions.
19 expression of Musashi isoforms may influence cell fate decisions.
20 ansport these lipids to promote inflammatory cell fate decisions.
21 ependent signals that determine inflammatory cell fate decisions.
22 ate Ag and cytokine receptor signals to make cell fate decisions.
23 ssures the correct order of these sequential cell fate decisions.
24 f morphogen exposure is critical for correct cell fate decisions.
25 ernative splicing are important factors in T cell fate decisions.
26 1 as a critical effector of mTORC1 to govern cell fate decisions.
27 m cells and participate in the regulation of cell fate decisions.
28 post-transcriptional regulation of epidermal cell fate decisions.
29 etworks and epigenetic modifiers to instruct cell fate decisions.
30 cells provide instructive inputs that govern cell fate decisions.
31 l shifts in the epigenetic landscape driving cell fate decisions.
32 idermal differentiation, suggesting aberrant cell fate decisions.
33 tochondrial plasticity is a key regulator of cell fate decisions.
34 intracellular signaling, and drive CD4(+) T cell fate decisions.
35 of interest to investigate cell potency and cell fate decisions.
36 ation, duration of exposure also coordinates cell fate decisions.
37 CD4-associated Lck is important for CD4(+) T cell fate decisions.
38 tem cells control developmental programs and cell fate decisions.
39 have dramatic consequences on epidermal stem cell fate decisions.
40 of early DC progenitor versus late-stage DC cell fate decisions.
41 CD3 complex is the primary determinant for T cell fate decisions.
42 signaling pathways directing these critical cell fate decisions.
43 a population of cells that needs to balance cell fate decisions.
44 otch(OFF) or Notch(ON) neurons during binary cell fate decisions.
45 dorsal telencephalic neuronal and astroglia cell fate decisions.
46 anslate parallel signalling information into cell fate decisions.
47 ne design and offer important insight into B cell fate decisions.
48 nduce changes in accessibility that underpin cell fate decisions.
49 to affect cellular signaling, secretion, and cell fate decisions.
50 ve rather than bystander roles in regulating cell fate decisions.
51 ange rapidly compared to the time for making cell fate decisions.
52 gage alternate signaling networks to control cell fate decisions.
53 stemic hormone is shown to direct local stem cell fate decisions.
54 rd mitochondrial dynamics in regulating stem cell fate decisions.
55 ment is essential for inferring the earliest cell fate decisions.
56 l architecture to regulate tissue growth and cell fate decisions.
57 ctuations in acetyl-CoA levels function in T cell fate decisions.
58 go a programme of independent and stochastic cell fate decisions.
59 newal and balancing neural versus mesodermal cell fate decisions.
60 and consequently altering SHH-guided neural cell-fate decisions.
61 foster our understanding of lymphoid/myeloid cell-fate decisions.
62 hresholds required for driving morphogenetic cell-fate decisions.
63 and has also been shown to regulate various cell-fate decisions.
64 otent states, which might affect other early cell-fate decisions.
65 h contribute to a remarkably large number of cell-fate decisions.
66 ion/epigenetic control of a vast majority of cell-fate decisions.
67 very, allowing enhanced control over diverse cell-fate decisions.
68 ing, activate signaling pathways, and direct cell-fate decisions.
69 pretation and discuss how this can impact on cell-fate decisions.
70 g of cellular stress, they drive contrasting cell-fate decisions.
71 cur gradually rather than abruptly to direct cell-fate decisions.
72 ific transcription factors (LS-TFs) underlie cell-fate decisions.
73 a key mediator of developmental programs and cell-fate decisions.
74 important regulators of gene expression and cell fate decisions, although their functions in HSCs ar
75 mplex is a master regulator of developmental cell-fate decisions, although the key target pathways ar
76 n this study, we add to the role of Notch in cell fate decision and demonstrate that the Notch signal
79 rovides a mechanistic basis for the observed cell fate decisions and accounts for the precision and d
80 n mammals, are involved in the regulation of cell fate decisions and cell proliferation in various or
81 regulated by extracellular signals, control cell fate decisions and determine the size and compositi
82 ed epigenetic machineries that regulate stem cell fate decisions and development, and are also implic
83 anscriptional RNA-regulatory machine impacts cell fate decisions and differentiation is poorly unders
86 hanistic understanding of how BCOR regulates cell fate decisions and how loss of function contributes
90 pioneer transcription factors in adult stem cell fate decisions and plasticity, which ensure that se
91 d the co-receptors LRP5 and LRP6 to regulate cell fate decisions and the growth and repair of several
92 gulatory dynamics to present a new model for cell fate decisions and their regulators in NPCs during
95 intuitive role for early p21 dynamics in the cell-fate decision and pinpoints a source of proliferati
96 force on the downstream signal transduction, cell-fate decisions and effector function of immune cell
99 cooperation in controlling anti-tumorigenic cell-fate decisions and reveal these activities to be di
100 rminants coordinate to enhance robustness of cell fate decision, and they provide a safeguard mechani
102 ng MAP kinase cascade signaling dynamics and cell fate decisions, and that signaling outcome can be m
103 contribute to explain stochasticity in stem cell fate decisions, and that the standard model for lat
104 n the lymphoid organ T zone support distinct cell fate decisions, and they establish a function for d
111 mmune system should provide insight into how cell fate decisions are made during infections and poten
112 In contrast to such situations in which cell fate decisions are made in rapidly dividing populat
118 pment, homeostasis, activation, and effector-cell fate decisions, as well as its important impacts on
119 that Cx43-GJIC is responsible for regulating cell fate decisions associated with appropriate joint fo
121 of kidney and vein progenitors by regulating cell fate decisions at the lateral boundary of the IM.
122 or discovering pathways regulating the first cell fate decisions because of the ease with which early
125 indicate that NOG is a critical regulator of cell fate decisions between esophageal and pulmonary mor
126 d by the expression of proteins that dictate cell fate decisions between intervein and vein during de
127 portant cell biological regulators including cell fate decisions but are often ignored in human genet
128 lation regulate cellular differentiation and cell fate decisions, but how these changes affect erythr
129 as gained attention as a key determinant for cell fate decisions, but the contribution of DNA replica
130 sm may be responsible for the earliest T(FH) cell-fate decision, but a critical aspect of the TCR has
131 plex mTORC1 as a central regulator of T(H)17-cell fate decisions by coordinating metabolic and transc
132 nges in mitochondrial dynamics regulate stem cell fate decisions by driving a physiological reactive
134 enance of the blood system requires balanced cell fate decisions by hematopoietic stem and progenitor
135 ical WNT signaling but also alters granulosa cell fate decisions by maintaining epithelial-like trait
136 ch RNA-binding protein HuR orchestrates Th17 cell fate decisions by posttranscriptionally regulating
138 d stress granules actively signal to mediate cell fate decisions by signaling to the translation appa
140 nome-wide analyses showed that Tet3 mediates cell-fate decisions by inhibiting Wnt signaling, partly
141 ion, as early as the 4-cell stage, initiates cell-fate decisions by modulating the balance of pluripo
142 ctuation-driven patterning mechanism for how cell fate decisions can be initiated through a random ye
145 of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), crucial cell fate decisions depend on the duration and dynamics
146 tyrosine kinases (RTKs) determine different cell-fate decisions despite sharing the same signalling
149 erlying these structures and how they affect cell fate decision during embryonic development are poor
150 Notch signaling controls a wide range of cell fate decisions during development and disease via s
151 d site-specific demethylation, they regulate cell fate decisions during development and in embryonic
153 rder to understand the mechanisms that guide cell fate decisions during early human development, we c
154 tion factor (TF) Eomes is a key regulator of cell fate decisions during early mouse development.
155 he Hedgehog (Hh) family of morphogens direct cell fate decisions during embryogenesis and signal to m
158 We tie cell-cycle progression with early cell fate decisions during neurogenesis, demonstrating t
159 rgize with the activities of another family, cell fate decisions during pathogenic encounters are unp
160 regulatory mechanisms that guide trophoblast cell fate decisions during placenta development remain i
161 s) provide a unique experimental platform of cell fate decisions during pre-implantation development,
162 otch ligands and receptors determines binary cell fate decisions during progenitor cell divisions, wi
164 hatidic acid regulates Notch-mediated binary cell-fate decisions during asymmetric cell divisions, an
165 entified mouse Ptf1a as a novel regulator of cell-fate decisions during both early and late brainstem
166 erogeneity drives organ-scale patterning and cell-fate decisions during cardiac trabeculation in zebr
167 s unclear how networks that control critical cell-fate decisions (e.g., cell division and apoptosis)
168 Transcriptional regulation during CD4(+) T cell fate decisions enables their differentiation into d
169 ich to study regulatory mechanisms governing cell fate decisions, extracellular signaling, cell and t
174 of m(6)A for gene expression regulation and cell fate decisions has been well acknowledged in the pa
175 rotein Notch, which is crucial for embryonic cell fate decisions, has 36 extracellular EGF domains th
176 is will allow new levels of understanding of cell fate decisions, identity, and function in normal de
177 embryo coordinate epithelial plasticity with cell fate decision in a fast changing cellular environme
179 blast stem cells (TSCs) arise from the first cell fate decision in the developing embryo and generate
181 intricate microfibrillar networks influence cell fate decisions in a contextual manner, more informa
183 cycle and mechanisms required for executing cell fate decisions in a wide-range of developmental con
184 sults highlight how temperature can modulate cell fate decisions in an invertebrate model of stem cel
185 trast to a prior emphasis on the finality of cell fate decisions in developmental systems, cellular p
186 ption factor TCF-1 (Tcf7) regulates CD8(+) T cell fate decisions in double-positive (DP) thymocytes t
188 stem cell biology have enabled the study of cell fate decisions in early human development that are
189 ng plays key roles in tissue homeostasis and cell fate decisions in embryonic and post-embryonic deve
192 at cell cycle regulators Cyclin D1-3 control cell fate decisions in human pluripotent stem cells by r
194 nscriptional regulatory networks controlling cell fate decisions in mammalian embryonic development r
195 ral integration site (MEIS) proteins control cell fate decisions in many physiological and pathophysi
200 riming gene regulatory networks for critical cell fate decisions in rapidly proliferating postimplant
201 d NF-kappaB survival pathways in driving the cell fate decisions in response to antiestrogens in ER(+
202 PML and PML NBs can also regulate mTOR and cell fate decisions in response to cellular stresses.
203 udy the dynamics of single adult neural stem cell fate decisions in response to competing juxtacrine
204 in operates as a molecular switch to dictate cell fate decisions in response to different cellular st
206 essential morphogenetic signal that dictates cell fate decisions in several developing organs in mamm
208 he transcriptional repressor Blimp1 controls cell fate decisions in the developing embryo and adult t
209 lling cues regulate germ cell versus somatic cell fate decisions in the early posterior epiblast.
210 Notch has a well-defined role in controlling cell fate decisions in the embryo and the adult epidermi
212 molecular mechanisms that regulate the first cell fate decisions in the human embryo are not well und
213 igated whether Kremen1 functions to modulate cell fate decisions in the prosensory domain of the deve
214 chanism mediating inflammatory responses and cell fate decisions in various organs including the live
215 mena, particularly in biology, including the cell-fate decision in developmental processes as well as
218 ein (SSDP) (ChiLS) complex controls numerous cell-fate decisions in animal cells, by mediating transc
219 Such bursting has important consequences for cell-fate decisions in diverse processes ranging from HI
220 between the two TOR complexes that controls cell-fate decisions in response to nutrient availability
222 um and spinal cord, the mechanisms mediating cell-fate decisions in the brainstem, which regulates a
223 a rate-limiting step in regulating critical cell-fate decisions in various inflammatory scenarios.
224 and external cues from the environment drive cell fate decisions. In budding yeast, the decision to e
226 tumor suppressor protein p53 is critical for cell fate decisions, including apoptosis, senescence, an
229 cal for understanding gene regulation during cell fate decisions, inflammation and stem cell heteroge
232 e molecular mechanisms that coordinate these cell fate decisions is an active area of investigation.
234 ations here suggest that the role of Tcf3 in cell-fate decision is more complex than previously appre
236 o elucidate the regulatory mechanisms behind cell fate decisions, it is highly desirable to synthesiz
237 5 and 8 of development) promotes the first 2 cell fate decisions leading to increased differentiation
239 lecules are essential to the coordination of cell-fate decision making in multicellular organisms.
243 y achieve robust functionality, for example, cell-fate decision-making and signal transduction, throu
244 Quantitative live imaging of asymmetric cell-fate decision-making and their live shape manipulat
245 tic or lysogenic pathway is followed; hence, cell-fate decision-making appears not to be correlated w
250 secreting alveolar cell lineage by driving a cell fate decision of the mammary luminal progenitor cel
251 that these ICOS signals critically impacted cell fate decisions of Ag-specific CD8(+) T cells, resul
254 nge of biological processes, including early cell fate decisions, organogenesis and adult tissue home
255 as being important for the induction of Tfh cell fate decision, other molecules may play key roles i
257 ic roles of polycomb repressive complex 2 in cell fate decisions.Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2)
258 otch signaling pathway, a known regulator of cell fate decisions, proliferation, and apoptosis, has r
259 r epigenetically primed or remodelled before cell-fate decisions, providing the molecular framework f
260 Mechanical cues have important roles in cell fate decisions regarding proliferation, survival, a
267 ng the regulatory interactions that underlie cell fate decisions requires characterizing TF binding s
269 ch loss of function during the sheath-neuron cell fate decision, suggesting the miRNAs facilitate Not
270 ammalian embryo is fundamental for the first cell fate decision that sets aside progenitor cells for
271 on protein Connexin 43 (Cx43) contributes to cell fate decisions that determine the location of fin r
272 tarting point for the predictive modeling of cell fate decisions that include AKT1-driven senescence,
273 ns a multitude of developmental pathways and cell fate decisions that include MNT's ability to fortif
274 m Phospholipase D leads to defects in binary cell-fate decisions that are compatible with ectopic Not
275 A clear example is the series of binary cell-fate decisions that take place during asymmetric ce
277 the search for an early onset of the second cell-fate decision, the specification of the inner cell
278 -transcriptional regulators of hematopoietic cell-fate decisions, though little remains known about t
279 undary between tendon and bone by regulating cell fate decisions through a mechanism that employs Not
280 ein (CBP) and beta-catenin, resulting in the cell fate decision to differentiate rather than prolifer
282 developing mesothelium and allow appropriate cell fate decisions to occur in this multipotent mesoder
284 m cells (ESCs) that balance self-renewal and cell-fate decisions to establish a protective barrier, w
289 any of these functions ultimately impinge on cell fate decisions via apoptosis-dependent or -independ
291 ssion is critically shaped by IL-4, altering cell fate decisions, which are likely important for the
292 ogramming provides fundamental insights into cell fate decisions, which in turn reveal strategies to
293 s gene regulatory changes directing mesoderm cell fate decisions, which lead to the differentiation o
294 s of Bicoid activity alter the most anterior cell fate decisions, while prolonged inactivation expand
295 Disentangling the role of heterogeneity in cell fate decision will likely rely on the refined integ
296 derstanding of the contribution of mTOR to T-cell fate decisions will ultimately aid in the therapeut
297 and may facilitate correlating hematopoietic cell fate decisions with the extrinsic cues that elicite
298 bolites and dietary manipulations can impact cell fate decisions, with a focus on the regulation of a
299 Bam and COP9 signalosome components regulate cell fate decisions within the Drosophila ovarian germli
300 ese more efficient schemes complete reliable cell fate decisions within the short embryological times