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1 me since the last encounter with a harvested mushroom.
2 ated for green extraction of ergosterol from mushroom.
3 Ganoderma lucidum is a well-known medicinal mushroom.
4 at was equivalent to 2142.01 ug/g dry weight mushroom.
5 nosodium glutamate (MSG)-like amino acids in mushrooms.
6 the risk associated with the consumption of mushrooms.
7 s contribute to the odor of the studied wild mushrooms.
8 hest concentrations of FAAs in analysed wild mushrooms.
9 ompounds linked to the sensory properties of mushrooms.
10 cooked food, freshwater fish, carnivores, or mushrooms.
11 atophytes and multiple ATG15 duplications in mushrooms.
12 ll as ergothioneine, in different species of mushrooms.
13 the growth and fructification of cultivated mushrooms.
14 t an obligate association with soft-textured mushrooms.
15 derived from selected fruit, vegetables, and mushrooms.
16 the main soluble sugars in the five kinds of mushrooms.
17 t generated after ergosterol extraction from mushrooms (A. bisporus) is rich in polysaccharides (beta
19 for mushroom cultivation by the white button mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) fruit body was investigated
20 is a psychoactive isoxazole derived from the mushroom Amanita muscaria and a potent orthosteric agoni
22 nolic content (291.51 +/- 1.83 mg GAE/ 100 g mushroom) and antioxidant activity (58.15 +/- 0.86 DPPH
23 -dimensional (3D) analysis to quantify thin, mushroom, and stubby spines from CA1 dendrites, distingu
24 rom powdered mycelium samples, grocery store mushrooms, and capsules from commercial dietary suppleme
33 tive preservation methodology for Portobello mushrooms, as it was effective in maintaining their chem
34 Consistent with the thermal melanism theory, mushroom assemblages are significantly darker in areas w
35 Here, we test whether the color lightness of mushroom assemblages is related to climate using a datas
37 ine transfers from contaminated substrate to mushrooms at concentrations ranging from 0.87 to 72.3 ug
38 ic carbon content in the surface soil of the mushroom bed, which was thereafter consumed during morel
39 stimulation of 0273-GAL4 neurons showed that mushroom bodies (MB) and central complex (CX) both play
42 ted Rac1 or dominant-negative cofilin in the mushroom bodies (MBs) abolishes experience-dependent alc
44 ns between olfactory sensory input and bees' mushroom bodies [6], incorporating empirically determine
45 diated by distinct neurons of the Drosophila mushroom bodies and require the function of the dBtk non
46 hers to promote the very opposite view: that mushroom bodies are a derived trait of hexapods and that
51 se models, we examine reconstructions of the mushroom bodies from the first instar larva and adult Dr
53 ion of centers that are comparable to insect mushroom bodies in processing olfactory information.
54 ral arrangements, we demonstrate insect-like mushroom bodies in stomatopod crustaceans (mantis shrimp
55 t evolution, describing in detail the paired mushroom bodies in the lateral protocerebrum of a decapo
56 odal input and the exceptional size of their mushroom bodies may support the navigational capabilitie
57 te of neuroanatomical characters that define mushroom bodies of dicondylic insects have been identifi
59 taceans possess structures equivalent to the mushroom bodies that play a role in associative memories
61 that sparse odor responses are preserved in mushroom bodies with reduced cellular repertoires, sugge
63 ting neural network and demonstrate that the mushroom bodies, a sleep-regulatory center, are a module
64 the vertebrate hippocampus and the arthropod mushroom bodies, are both structurally and functionally
65 ters in the forebrain of insects, called the mushroom bodies, have become the most investigated brain
66 dditionally, intense signals derive from the mushroom bodies, higher-order integration centers for ol
67 calcium imaging suggests that, as in insect mushroom bodies, the output regions exhibit stimulus-spe
68 expressed in the adult brain, mainly in the mushroom bodies, though sema1a.2 was expressed most robu
69 mantis that he claimed correspond to insect mushroom bodies, today recognized as cardinal centers th
70 pair of dopaminergic neurons afferent to the mushroom bodies, via the D5-like DAMB dopamine receptor.
80 nd an axon from the AL to the calyces of the mushroom body (CA) as well as the lateral horn (LH) of t
81 a specific set of wake-promoting neurons-the mushroom body (MB) alpha'beta' cells that link sleep to
82 nt center of memory consolidation within the mushroom body (MB) implicated in arousal, and a structur
84 Dopaminergic signaling in the Drosophila mushroom body (MB) is involved in olfactory learning and
86 est that the compartment architecture of the mushroom body (MB) is the relevant resolution for distin
90 cute neurotransmission from adult alpha/beta mushroom body (MB) neurons prevents premature stimulus d
91 Most NBs, with the exception of those of the mushroom body (MB), are decommissioned by the ecdysone r
92 y through points of synaptic contacts on the mushroom body (MB), is essential for training during olf
93 first time distinct roles for dTau in adult mushroom body (MB)-dependent neuroplasticity as its down
96 ve and appetitive learning: Octbeta1R in the mushroom body alphabeta neurons processes aversive learn
98 e antennal lobe, and then transferred to the mushroom body and lateral horn through dual pathways ter
99 ation to higher brain centers, including the mushroom body and lateral horn, seats of learned and inn
105 ons ascend to the brain and terminate in the mushroom body calyx on a set of secondary olfactory glom
106 These features are less prominent in the mushroom body calyx, the insect analog of the mammalian
107 orating empirically determined properties of mushroom body circuitry (random connectivity [7], sparse
108 fly feeding circuits and suggest a role for mushroom body circuits in processing naive taste respons
112 ith functions in long-term memory formation, mushroom body development, and visual processing, traits
113 the presence of taste ligands, and find that mushroom body dopaminergic input neurons and their respe
114 tomically defined compartments of the insect mushroom body function as parallel units of associative
117 detailed neural circuit model of the insect mushroom body implements sensory processing, learning, a
119 reasing Tip60 HAT levels specifically in the mushroom body learning and memory center in the Drosophi
121 odifications of the columnar organization of mushroom body lobes that, as shown in Drosophila and oth
123 n Eyeless is ectopically expressed, some non-mushroom body neuroblasts divide independent of dietary
129 ever, sleep and memory are coupled such that mushroom body neurons required for sleep-dependent memor
132 s recruits activity in specific parts of the mushroom body output network and distinct subsets of rei
133 t different combinations of junctions in the mushroom body output network; combining two outputs appe
134 s two main targets, the Kenyon cells and the mushroom body output neuron MBON-i1, further suggest tha
137 direct recurrent feedback from gamma5beta'2a mushroom body output neurons (MBONs) and behavioral expe
138 show that odor tracking is regulated by two mushroom body output neurons (MBONs) connecting the MB t
140 lation of neurons that provide feedback from mushroom body output neurons and link distinct memory sy
141 Surprisingly, downstream of Kenyon cells, mushroom body output neurons show stereotypy in their re
144 sic temporal programs, we studied Drosophila mushroom body progenitors (neuroblasts) that sequentiall
146 signalling mediates an energy switch in the mushroom body that controls long-term memory encoding.
147 al anesthetic procaine [15, 17, 18] into the mushroom body vertical lobes (VLs) to selectively inhibi
148 ta provide neurobiological evidence that the mushroom body vertical lobes are necessary for retrievin
150 ist in Reptantia thereby indicating that the mushroom body, not the hemiellipsoid body, provides the
151 ond order projection neurons target both the mushroom body, required for learning, and the lateral ho
152 H projections converge with outputs from the mushroom body, site of olfactory learning and memory.
153 with bidirectional neural plasticity in the mushroom body, the associative olfactory center of the f
156 udy homeostatic plasticity in the Drosophila mushroom body, where Kenyon cells receive feedforward ex
157 ndrites in the alpha and alpha' lobes of the mushroom body, which drive negatively reinforcing dopami
158 terior-posterior alpha'/beta' neurons of the mushroom body, while memory under starvation is mediated
159 We addressed this problem in the Drosophila mushroom body, whose principal neurons, Kenyon cells, re
161 d in Eumalacostraca, the possibility is that mushroom body-like centers may have undergone convergent
173 displaying similarly increased frequency of mushroom-body beta-lobe midline crossing, a metric of ax
174 emory expression, whereas it activates other mushroom-body-innervating DANs to facilitate hunger-depe
178 monas tolaasii severely damages white button mushrooms by secretion of the pore-forming toxin tolaasi
181 s indicate a more complex ecological role of mushroom colors and suggest functions beyond thermal ada
183 We consistently found no association between mushroom consumption and the aforementioned cardiometabo
187 this study was to examine the association of mushroom consumption with major cardiometabolic diseases
190 on of a 130-amino-acid protein, Y3, from the mushroom Coprinus comatus Biochemical studies of recombi
194 of doxycycline uptake from the substrate for mushroom cultivation by the white button mushroom (Agari
197 , lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) and magic mushrooms; demographics, current well-being and past-yea
199 nd prevented BCCAO-induced loss of total and mushroom dendritic spines in the hippocampal CA1 region.
200 is study provides an entry point to studying mushroom development and complex multicellularity in one
207 of oral administration of vitamin D-enriched mushrooms extracts on high-fat diet (HFD) animal model o
210 otein concentrate from a Pleurotus ostreatus mushroom flour, its characterization, and nutritional an
228 e compounds in the New Zealand native edible mushroom Hericium sp., a high-performance liquid chromat
229 g with fungal hyphae, and both configure the mushroom holobiont, understood as the fungus plus associ
231 eous diffusion of NaCl and KCl in champignon mushrooms in static brine and brine under agitation was
233 ee amino acids (FAAs) from the six different mushrooms including shiitake (Lentinus edodes), oyster (
234 The SV technique enabled analysis of entire mushrooms, including the liquid released during cooking.
235 ungus Ophiocordyceps sinensis is a medicinal mushroom increasingly used as a dietary supplement for v
236 The main psychedelic component of magic mushrooms is psilocybin, which shows promise as a treatm
238 ere, we demonstrated that vertically aligned mushroom-like gold nanowires (v-AuNW) could serve as str
239 substrate, which consists of densely packed mushroom-like nanostructures with silicon dioxide stems
243 s to affect elemental accumulation by edible mushrooms more than inedible ones, especially for uptake
245 ased products, six organic composts (manure, mushroom, peat, and untreated wood), and one food and ya
246 s, participants who consumed >=5 servings of mushrooms per week had no significantly different risk o
247 idron cave, Spain, and dietary components of mushrooms, pine nuts, and moss reflected forest gatherin
249 ol overdose, n = 6; viral infections, n = 3; mushroom poisoning, n = 5; indeterminate, n = 20) were c
250 To understand the conformational changes of mushroom PPO, the secondary structural change of the enz
254 ulants as agronomical amendments to increase mushroom productivity through growth promotion or as bio
258 latiles were extracted from sous vide cooked mushroom samples (Boletus edulis, Lactarius camphoratus,
260 nic acid (MA), the arsenic speciation in all mushroom samples consisted solely of dimethylarsinic aci
261 s in substrate and analyte concentrations in mushroom samples were measured using ultra-high performa
265 nteric swirl, small-bowel obstruction (SBO), mushroom sign, clustered loops, hurricane eye, small bow
267 osides were analyzed from four Nordic forest mushroom species (Lactarius camphoratus, Boletus edulis,
268 he genomes and transcriptomes of five bonnet mushroom species (Mycena spp.), a diverse lineage compri
269 ct of cooking on the taste compounds of five mushroom species Agaricus bisporus, Lactarius trivialis,
270 hat included published data on the use of 18 mushroom species by people in five villages of eastern I
272 ize the aroma compounds of four Finnish wild mushroom species with trained assessors using gas chroma
274 lucans, alpha-glucans and beta-glucans in 39 mushrooms species were performed, leading to very remark
276 postsynaptic cadherins-6 and -10 to regulate mushroom spine density and high-magnitude LTP in the SO
278 his pathway plays a key role in stability of mushroom spines and is compromised in different mice mod
279 Overexpression of EB3 causes increase of mushroom spines fraction and is able to restore their de
280 mpounds to validate their ability to protect mushroom spines from amyloid toxicity and determined tha
281 rget their motile processes to interact with mushroom spines on abGCs, and when microglia are absent,
283 med a second primary dendrite, acquired more mushroom spines, and had enlarged mossy fiber presynapti
285 a set in which five NIR instruments measured mushroom substrate and a publicly available data set mea
287 mercury, cadmium, lead, and arsenic in dried mushrooms, to determine the effect of cooking on the con
288 MI-1 significantly increased spine width and mushroom-type spines and also increased the cluster size
289 usively on biological assays performed using mushroom tyrosinase (abTYR), producing a plethoric liter
290 ctivation of two polyphenol oxidases (PPOs): mushroom tyrosinase in buffer and the PPO present in coc
292 nell and Volk) was once an uncultivable wild mushroom, until the development of exogenous nutrient ba
295 ves, parsley waste, pumpkin kernel cake, and mushroom waste), which ones have valuable proteins, but
296 study, the elemental concentrations in five mushrooms were compared as a function of species and geo
301 ly evaluated the potential health effects of mushrooms with respect to major cardiometabolic diseases