戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

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 s (DPRs) via repeat associated non-AUG (RAN) translation.
2  the rapidly growing field of local synaptic translation.
3 otes is RNA splicing, which readies mRNA for translation.
4 18S and 28S rRNA levels and elevated protein translation.
5 sm, ubiquitination, chromatin regulation and translation.
6 icles will result in more effective clinical translation.
7  therefore offer key advantages for clinical translation.
8 ordingly, it was blocked by an inhibition of translation.
9  kissing stem-loop interaction to facilitate translation.
10  the largest group being involved in protein translation.
11 iation factors that dampens synaptic protein translation.
12 electivity for the inhibition of prokaryotic translation.
13 uction, demonstrating potential for clinical translation.
14 rd interviews, and possible subtle errors in translation.
15 roplast thylakoids, vesicle trafficking, and translation.
16 hed on diverse sequence motifs known to slow translation.
17 ely charges leucine to tRNA(Leu) for protein translation.
18 - representing a further barrier to clinical translation.
19 re tissue-specific cis-regulators of protein translation.
20 ze candidate selection through discovery and translation.
21  research area, with an emphasis on clinical translation.
22 anning of ORFs outside periods of productive translation.
23 p depletion was simulated, confirming slowed translation.
24 t the growth defect stems from a shutdown of translation.
25 PAF1/2 dimer induces A/U-tailing to activate translation.
26 e uptake, and integrity of transcription and translation.
27 ool and thus presumed to not directly impact translation.
28 a, including genes involved in mitochondrial translation.
29 ad the highest upregulation in mitochondrial translation.
30  regulation to ensure proper mRNA export and translation.
31 arbons to support the bioenergetic demand of translation.
32 ing RNAs strongly positions it to act beyond translation.
33 y, centrality and antiquity are ingrained in translation.
34 icles for nanomedicine and eventual clinical translation.
35  associated, at least in part, with enhanced translation.
36 abundance estimation and infer mechanisms of translation.
37 ve challenges, and outlook on the pathway to translation.
38 evance of ex vivo activity assays to in vivo translation.
39 s in the inner ear sense both head tilts and translations.
40 l an unexpected high-degree of asynchrony in translation activity between mRNA molecules.
41 news translation in preserving text meaning (translation adequacy).
42 d consequently led to increased JNK2 protein translation and c-Jun activation.
43 ion of miR-1185-1 and further repressed CD24 translation and colorectal cancer stemness.
44 ement of protein dynamics, including protein translation and degradation.
45 t screenings combining coupled transcription/translation and droplet-based microfluidics.
46 es is the intimate interplay between protein translation and folding, and within this the ribosome pa
47 erential expression of host genes related to translation and innate immune response could contribute
48 o membraneless sites usually occurs prior to translation and involves specific sequences known as zip
49 iated cell signaling will hasten therapeutic translation and is reported herein.
50 RP) is an RNA binding protein that regulates translation and is required for normal cognition.
51 ion is a rate-limiting step in cap-dependent translation and is the main target of translational cont
52 a-catenin pathway by inhibiting beta-catenin translation and mTOR activity and thereby reduces HCC ce
53 4E (EIF-4E) protein, a key regulator of gene translation and protein function, is controlled by mTORC
54 ys which lead to adaptive regulation of mRNA translation and protein synthesis.
55 cells, we show that Ifit1b can modulate host translation and restrict WT mouse coronavirus infection.
56 scriptional program leading to enhanced mRNA translation and resulting in an increased PD-1 amount in
57 er hemi pelvises are symmetrical in terms of translation and rotation using 3D reconstruction, point
58 owing Noblit and Hare's seven-step method of translation and synthesis to generate a novel conceptual
59            Noblit and Hare's methodology for translation and synthesis was followed in developing a n
60                    Our findings suggest that translation and tilt signals reach Purkinje cells via se
61  mutant is globally defective in chloroplast translation, and has varying deficiencies in the accumul
62  important roles in RNA stability, efficient translation, and immune evasion.
63 etic autism risk factor Nlgn3, regulation of translation, and oxytocinergic signalling.
64 nized role of Pdcd4 in controlling BDNF mRNA translation, and provided a new method that boosting BDN
65 t viral entry, endocytosis, genome assembly, translation, and replication.
66 ay, observed at cellular (eg, transcription, translation, and signaling), organ (eg, contractility an
67  this review, we discuss how OCM impacts the translation apparatus (composed of ribosome, tRNA, mRNA,
68 tides in tRNA are critical components of the translation apparatus, but their importance in the proce
69 tions and challenges for their discovery and translation are discussed.
70 nd potential avenues for future research and translation are discussed.
71 o steps of gene expression-transcription and translation-are spatially and temporally coupled.
72                                 Api-mediated translation arrest leads to the futile activation of the
73 ere used to validate MetAB transcription and translation as present in the IA3902 DeltaluxS::metAB mu
74 revealed eIF4G1, a protein for Cap-dependent translation, as a potential target of CUL3.
75  translation in both cell-based and in vitro translation assays.
76  Here, we show that TGFbeta promotes protein translation at least in part by increasing the mitochond
77                               IFIT1 inhibits translation at the initiation stage by competing with th
78 luding cryptic sense/antisense promoters and translation, attenuation, incorrect start codons, and a
79 ne in the ribosome's P- or A-site slows down translation, but the effect of other pairs of amino acid
80 uromycin is a tyrosyl-tRNA mimic that blocks translation by labeling and releasing elongating polypep
81 elligence and deep learning to medical image translation, by employing a theoretical framework capabl
82 rgely unfolded, lacking the PK helix so that translation can be initiated at the ribosome binding sit
83 during slowed cell cycles by down-regulating translation capacity.
84 ein kinase C decreased and phase-shifted the translation component of Purkinje cell responses, but di
85                                        Among translation components, RNA association was most reduced
86    However, mechanistic insight and clinical translation continue to lag the pace of risk variant ide
87 nse-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a conserved translation-coupled quality control mechanism in all euk
88                            How transcription-translation coupling mitigates these conflicts is unknow
89 iates NusG- and NusA-dependent transcription-translation coupling.
90 perturbation of RAB13 mRNA targeting-but not translation-depolarised filopodia dynamics in motile end
91 gulated at the level of messenger RNA (mRNA) translation during human hematopoietic development.
92 es of hibernation that suggests induction of translation during interbout arousals.
93 n near the LLO N terminus cause enhanced LLO translation during intracellular growth, leading to host
94 teria regulate translation of LLO to promote translation during starvation in a phagosome while repre
95                               Examination of translation efficiency across the yeast membrane proteom
96 ults were further validated by assessing the translation efficiency of KRAS in cell lines that differ
97 amily to experimentally demonstrate that the translation efficiency of oncogenes that are preferentia
98 th translation, we also assessed its role in translation efficiency.
99 native to other methods to assess transcript translation efficiency.
100 of these two amino acids, leading to reduced translation efficiency.
101 ort that MCMV RNA contains a cap-independent translation element (CITE) in its 3' untranslated region
102 n important quality control mechanism during translation elongation and suggest that translational si
103 tein synthesis in a mouse liver by targeting translation elongation factor 2 (eEF2) with RNAi.
104 f Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) perturb translation elongation.
105 principles surprisingly similar to canonical translation elongation.
106 logs, or release of mRNAs from ribosomes via translation elongation.
107 osome intersubunit rotation that accompanies translation elongation.
108                                              Translation-elongation speed is influenced by molecular
109 that SgrS forms a duplex with a uridine-rich translation-enhancing element in the manY 5' untranslate
110 y control (RQC) system that resolves stalled translation events is activated when ribosomes collide a
111 nthesis and that high expression of ABCE1, a translation factor directly upregulated by N-MYC, is its
112 es among cohorts, we introduced a horizontal translation factor to the dataset of each cohort.
113 ratus (composed of ribosome, tRNA, mRNA, and translation factors) and regulates crucial steps in prot
114 s of ARF include many ribosomal proteins and translation factors.
115 st radiographs after the cycle-GAN's texture translation (fake chest radiographs), showed decreased i
116 lizing the negative arm of the transcription/translation feedback loop without affecting period lengt
117 en by a functionally conserved transcription-translation feedback loop.
118 s are generated by interlocked transcription-translation feedback loops that establish cell-autonomou
119 amined in humans without success in clinical translation for infection imaging.
120               Protrusions act as hotspots of translation for RP-mRNAs, enhancing RP synthesis, riboso
121  harbor the potential to facilitate clinical translation for the treatment of both liquid and solid t
122               This study reports on a method translation from conventional one-dimensional (1D) GC to
123 ntly described system to visualize and track translation from individual HIV-1 RNA molecules in livin
124 effects in cellulo are unclear, delaying the translation from preclinical studies to clinical trials.
125                                              Translation from the laboratory to the field is likely t
126 ardiovascular diseases, attempts at clinical translation have shown mixed results.
127  individual domains in large proteins during translation helps to avoid otherwise prevalent inter-dom
128  rodent analog BC1 as negative regulators of translation in both cell-based and in vitro translation
129  of endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-targeted mRNA translation in DIS3L2-deficient cells.
130                  To visualize the process of translation in human mitochondria, we report ~3.0 angstr
131 ence of mTOR, CDK1 activates eIF4E-dependent translation in MPs through phosphorylation of 4E-BP1.
132 ed professional-agency English-to-Czech news translation in preserving text meaning (translation adeq
133 onditioned-threat responses, whereas de novo translation in protein kinase Cdelta-expressing inhibito
134 roach to explore the timing of maternal mRNA translation in quiescent oocytes as well as in oocytes p
135                         We show that de novo translation in somatostatin-expressing inhibitory neuron
136 ng revealed an uncharacterized complexity of translation in this archaeon with bacteria-like, eukarya
137 otein kinase C-dependent mechanisms regulate translation information processing in cerebellar cortex
138  sRNA-mRNA annealing, typically resulting in translation inhibition and RNA turnover.
139                                              Translation inhibition dissociated the expressome, where
140                            The mechanism for translation inhibition involved the phosphorylation of e
141 r for both Ifit1 and Ifit1b, promoting their translation inhibition.
142 es recently identified several candidate RAN translation inhibitors from a high-throughput small-mole
143 ct the evolution and function of prokaryotic translation initiation and other RNA-mediated processes.
144 F2B to block eIF2 recycling, thereby halting translation initiation and reducing global protein synth
145 ion results in specific misregulation of the translation initiation and ribosome biogenesis machinery
146 sential for post-transcriptional processing, translation initiation and stability.
147                Modulation of the fidelity of translation initiation by OCM opens new avenues to under
148 or start codon and prevents formation of the translation initiation complex.
149 nase R [PKR]) that phosphorylates eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 alpha (eIF2alpha), which
150 tein kinase R, phosphorylation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 subunit 1 (eIF2alpha), t
151  the reversible polymerization of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2B, an essential enzyme in
152                               The eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E (EIF-4E) protein, a key
153 e cap, inhibits interactions with eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E, and resists decapping.
154 dditionally, expression levels of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4GI (eIF4GI) and of its ho
155  the synthesis of proteins controlled by the translation initiation factor eIF2(11).
156 lation is supported by the localization of a translation initiation factor eIF4E and by ribosome-boun
157 s, including therapy resistance, require the translation initiation factor initiation elongation fact
158 tion of eIF2alpha (P-eIF2alpha), a conserved translation initiation factor, is clock controlled in Ne
159  report a neuron-specific microexon in eIF4G translation initiation factors that dampens synaptic pro
160 etabolites regulate the fidelity and rate of translation initiation in bacteria and eukaryotic organe
161                       In G0 cells, canonical translation initiation is inhibited; yet we find that in
162  resistance strategies, we characterized the translation initiation mechanism of MCMV.
163 RISPR technology to mutate a single internal translation initiation site in Cx43 (M213L mutation), wh
164 d upstream of open reading frames facilitate translation initiation.
165 tial GTPase Initiation Factor 2 (IF2) during translation initiation.
166 ype level by a feedback mechanism increasing translation initiation.
167  S-box riboswitches is predicted to regulate translation initiation.
168 tRNA synthetases, tRNA-modification enzymes, translation-initiation and elongation factors, and ribos
169 ing gene circuits by cell-free transcription-translation into cell-sized compartments, such as liposo
170 lished methods are costly which limits their translation into clinical practice.
171 l decision making, with the aim to encourage translation into day-to-day practice.
172                    DAZL binds to mRNAs whose translation is both repressed and activated during matur
173             Here, we argue that this limited translation is driven by a combination of intersubject h
174                     Inhibiting mitochondrial translation is known to increase lifespan in C. elegans,
175  localization, we show that peripheral RAB13 translation is not important for the overall distributio
176       Here we show that, unlike replication, translation is not inhibited by arrested transcription e
177                              Since bacterial translation is often modulated by enhancer-like elements
178                                  While human translation is still rated as more fluent, CUBBITT is sh
179                                      On-site translation is supported by the localization of a transl
180                      We also found that JUND translation is unaffected by inhibition of mTOR, unless
181                                        RAB13 translation leads to a co-translational association of n
182  opens new avenues to understand alternative translation mechanisms involved in stress tolerance and
183 ia-like, eukarya-like, and potentially novel translation mechanisms.
184 ystems, including signaling, RNA processing, translation, metabolism, nuclear integrity, protein traf
185 ternative to state-of-the-art MR-to-CT image translation methods.(C) RSNA, 2020.
186 involves differential gene expressions, post-translation modifications, and signaling cascades.
187 ove in opposite directions along the genome, translation must be inhibited at a defined point followi
188 on with (35)S-labeled methionine resulted in translation of a 47 aa micropeptide.
189 ubjective and current techniques require the translation of a continuous variable to a categorical va
190  signal a promising step toward the clinical translation of a functional bioengineered ACL matrix.
191 nts, indicating that UPF1/NMD suppresses the translation of aberrant RNAs.
192 al changes in the active site, including the translation of an alpha-helix by 1 angstrom.
193 tes may be a significant barrier to clinical translation of cardiomyocyte cell therapies for heart di
194 y incomplete protein products resulting from translation of damaged or problematic mRNAs.
195 type, and environment will require extensive translation of data into a standard, computable form and
196 be made to increase the perception, use, and translation of directives of the neurocritically ill.
197 alyses, both of which will inform the future translation of E. faecium sequencing into routine outbre
198     We demonstrated that WDR77 regulated the translation of E2F1 and E2F3 mRNAs through the 5' untran
199 ionably the most critical step in the future translation of genome editing technologies.
200                       As the development and translation of GTs gain pace, success can only ultimatel
201 ggregates, which was not linked to increased translation of IgG mRNA, but rather to impairment of aut
202 giography) provides an unrivaled way for the translation of images from one domain to the other.
203                       To accelerate clinical translation of imaging techniques, we also describe exam
204 d molecular insights into prion biology, but translation of in vitro to in vivo findings is often dis
205 ndings suggest that m6A functions to enhance translation of key morphogenetic regulators, while also
206 inate the transport, localization, and local translation of key mRNAs in learning and memory and expa
207  target sites for microRNAs known to repress translation of LDLR.
208 chanism to explain how the bacteria regulate translation of LLO to promote translation during starvat
209                Our work highlights extensive translation of lncRNAs during hESC pancreatic differenti
210 provide a potential roadmap for accelerating translation of microbiome science toward microbiome-targ
211 1 and establishes a roadmap towards clinical translation of modulating miRs for various cancer types.
212                                              Translation of modulation of drug target activity to the
213 o that functional investigation and clinical translation of molecular research data are still inhibit
214                          Up to now, however, translation of MS-based proteomics to the clinic has bee
215                                     However, translation of MSOT to the clinic is still in its prelim
216 ations must be carried out prior to clinical translation of nanomaterials-based formulations to avoid
217 s thought to be facilitated by the pervasive translation of non-genic transcripts, which exposes a re
218     cGAN-aided motion correction enables the translation of noninvasive clinical absolute quantificat
219 filtration function will be instrumental for translation of organoid technology for clinical applicat
220                                 The accurate translation of reads into the monomer alphabet turns the
221  reduces cell growth, polysome assembly, and translation of reporter mRNAs with structured 5'UTRs.
222 s associated with a specific decrease in the translation of ribosomal proteins.
223  FMRP, an RNA binding protein that represses translation of some of its target transcripts.
224 nthesis were unaffected by nsun-1 depletion, translation of specific mRNAs was remodeled leading to r
225  become an alternative to better balance the translation of spraying effort into impact, particularly
226 in complexes contributes to the preferential translation of stress-responsive gene transcripts during
227 y and present a conceptual framework for the translation of such findings into clinical practice, and
228 erial small RNAs (sRNAs) efficiently inhibit translation of target mRNAs by forming a duplex that seq
229                  Similar to DNA replication, translation of the genetic code by the ribosome is hypot
230 will be unavoidably required for the further translation of these agents/approaches.
231                                              Translation of these mRNAs occurs during early seed germ
232  This poses a serious roadblock for clinical translation of this approach.
233 erspectives for future research and clinical translation of this new theranostic modality are also di
234 gations, arguing that the time is coming for translation of this work into clinical practice.
235 populations, and identifying ways to improve translation of trial results to general practice.
236 or self-renewal is driven by eIF2B5-mediated translation of ubiquitination genes.
237 r, fundamental discoveries and technological translations of chiral nanoceramics have received substa
238                     For the Bengali and Urdu translations of the abstract see Supplementary Materials
239  inversion, time-reversal, and an additional translation operation.
240 f toxic protein aggregates that occur during translation or periods of stress.
241 escribe how unexpanded CGG repeats and their translation play conserved roles in regulating fragile X
242 ple binomial probability metric to ascertain translation probability.
243 opt native conformations early on during the translation process, with each subsequently translated r
244 revealing complex age-related changes in the translation process.
245 ations in cell cycle, metabolic, and protein translation processes.
246                                      Aborted translation produces large ribosomal subunits obstructed
247  most genes, one ORF represents the dominant translation product, but we also detect genes with trans
248      This two-tier functional redundancy for translation quality control breaks down during oxidative
249 erful technology for globally monitoring RNA translation; ranging from codon occupancy profiling, ide
250 lizes stimulus-induced and constitutive mRNA translation rate, decreases lactate and key glycolytic a
251                                      Protein translation rates serve as the integrator that proportio
252 isions would allow cells to dynamically tune translation rates while ensuring fidelity of the resulti
253 ce is the key to understand the mechanism of translation regulation and mRNA metabolism.
254 therefore important that the process of mRNA translation remains in excellent synchrony with cellular
255                                         mRNA translation represents the last step of genetic flow and
256 ion of the target mRNA and the efficiency of translation repression is the base pairing between the '
257 n of PDCD4 mRNA and prevents miR-21-mediated translation repression.
258  the PDCD4 mRNA and mitigate miR-21-mediated translation repression.
259   Filament formation transformed Orb2 from a translation repressor to an activator and "seed" for fur
260 sulting in predictions enriched for Ribo-seq translation signals.
261     These findings reveal key differences in translation, solubility, and protein aggregation of DPRs
262 t molecule (RBM3) whose manipulation affects translation specifically in synapses, and not at the who
263 he slow-moving to the fast-moving end of the translation-speed distribution in the future.
264  In Caenorhabditis elegans, RBPs control the translation, stability, or localization of maternal mess
265 uced ribosome stalling, which causes bias at translation start sites.
266 ociated with ribosomal synthesis and protein translation, suggesting the importance of protein synthe
267   Crystals having orientational and periodic translation symmetries are usually both short-range and
268 ow fluctuations spontaneously break the time-translation symmetry of a driven oscillator.
269 irst, we use an in vitro reconstituted yeast translation system to demonstrate that inhibitory codon
270 lthough HIV-1 RNA serves two functions, as a translation template and as a viral genome, individual R
271 apid degradation of mRNA harboring premature translation termination codons (PTCs) serves to protect
272                      Using a global model of translation that included aaRS recharging, Gln4p depleti
273 ddition to GCN2 activation and reduced total translation, the reduced charging of tRNA(Gln) in amino-
274 stimulus-dependent ATP synthase beta subunit translation; this increases the ratio of ATP synthase en
275 n from initiation to the elongation phase of translation, thus blocking further initiation events.
276 nd 3) an immature phenotype which may impact translation to adult cardiac response.
277 of risk-modeling methods, considerations for translation to clinical practice, and considerations and
278 sed, but such a goal would require equitable translation to country-level contributions.
279 nd sepsis supported by clinical data and the translation to experimental models.
280 he Ts65Dn mouse model of Down syndrome (DS), translation to human clinical trials to improve cognitio
281                      As such, we favor rapid translation to human patients as an antiscarring therapy
282 n dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) and its translation to humans stimulated development of pH-sensi
283  mechanisms, implications of these findings, translation to humans, and future work, especially with
284 statin may be a candidate for human clinical translation to rescue fetal cardiovascular dysfunction i
285 protective agent in experimental stroke, but translation to the clinic is impeded by the large doses
286  successful preclinical therapies upon their translation to the clinic.
287 evaluation of immunogenicity to enable rapid translation to the clinic.
288 al frequency make this method attractive for translation to the clinical setting.
289 on of the contributions of transcription and translation to the reduced performance of some unnatural
290 Lu and are promising candidates for clinical translation to treat metastatic castration-resistant pro
291                                        Their translation toward biological applications is limited ow
292 are independently required for regulation of translation under cellular stress.
293 osome and leads to global inhibition of mRNA translation upon infection.
294 uR regulates autophagy by modulating ATG16L1 translation via interaction with circPABPN1 in the intes
295 surements to identify gene transcripts whose translation was up-regulated in response to the stress i
296 nslational mRNA decay is interconnected with translation, we also assessed its role in translation ef
297 Taking a cue from recent advances in machine translation, we train a recurrent neural network to enco
298                                     In vitro translation with (35)S-labeled methionine resulted in tr
299 fore, LNP uptake, endosomal escape, and mRNA translation with and without TLR4 activation are quantif
300 morphism that results in a premature stop in translation, yielding a truncated, nonfunctional enzyme.

 
Page Top