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  • Articles  (30,797)
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  • 1995-1999  (12,147)
  • 1990-1994  (18,819)
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  • Articles  (30,797)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Dimerization is a biological regulatory mechanism employed by both soluble and membrane proteins. However, there are few structural data on the factors that govern dimerization of membrane proteins. Outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is an integral membrane enzyme which participates in ...
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  • 2
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 399.1999, Supplementary, A7-, (8 S.) 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] There is growing optimism among researchers in the field of brain ischaemia, as human stroke has at last become treatable and current research efforts delineate several new, potential therapies. Most strokes are caused by acute interruption of the brain arterial blood supply by a thrombus, leading ...
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  • 3
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 399.1999, Supplementary, A15-, (8 S.) 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Epilepsy, a brain disorder that is characterized by recurrent seizures, refers to a collection of disorders that affect 1–2% of the population worldwide. A seizure is a brief change in behaviour caused by the disordered, synchronous and rhythmic firing of populations of neurons in the ...
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  • 4
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 399.1999, Supplementary, A23-, (9 S.) 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Studies of the molecular basis of Alzheimer's disease exemplify the increasingly blurred distinction between basic and applied biomedical research.The four genes so far implicated in familial Alzheimer's disease have each been shown to elevate brain levels of the self-aggregating amyloid-β ...
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  • 5
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 399.1999, Supplementary, A32-, (8 S.) 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Parkinson's disease (PD) is one of the major neurodegenerative disorders of middle and old age, and was originally described by James Parkinson in 1817. It is characterized by a trio of cardinal symptoms—muscle rigidity, tremor and bradykinesia—but can also involve postural deficits and ...
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  • 6
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 399.1999, Supplementary, A40-, (8 S.) 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The cause of multiple sclerosis remains unknown after more than a century of study. Unconfirmed work has once more indicated that a viral infection may be important in the aetiology of the disease, and there is considerable evidence for an important genetic influence on disease susceptibility. The ...
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  • 7
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 4-5 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] On 13 January this year, Brazil suffered a shock which, if you listen to some commentators abroad, shook it to its very core. In São Paulo the following week, however, the locals were unfazed. By Latin American standards, a devaluation of 25 per cent (later 45 per cent) is not much to get ...
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  • 8
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 7-9 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...Last year, Luis Herrera-Estrella thought he saw an opportunity to use his science to contribute to Mexico's economy. Herrera-Estrella, a plant biotechnologist at the Centre for Research and Advanced Studies of the National Polytechnic Institute (CINVESTAV), was one of several scientists invited ...
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  • 9
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 10-10 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Even for those fortunate scientists in Latin America who manage to obtain adequate funding, have bright graduate students to work with and fast Internet links connecting them to the world of science, a major obstacle remains on the road to first-rate research: fast access to equipment and ...
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  • 10
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 9-20 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The challenge of combining high-quality basic research with a mission to address the country's wider needs is embodied in the experience of UNAM's Nitrogen Fixation Research Centre, in Cuernavaca. The centre was founded in 1980 with the aim of studying the molecular basis of biological nitrogen ...
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  • 11
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 11-12 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...Whichever way you look at it — by the reputation of its leading researchers abroad or the orderliness of its universities, by the amount its government spends on science or the number of papers its researchers publish each year in international journals — Chile's small scientific ...
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  • 12
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 13-13 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...Many astronomers regard Chile as the best place on Earth for astronomy. A stroll at night outside the dome at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) near La Serena in northern Chile reveals why. The sky is crystal clear, and so still that stable images of stars are a near certainty. ...
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  • 13
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 14-15 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...After a hectic day fighting to save his country from currency contagion — it's Monday on the week after the Brazilian réal collapsed, and speculators have the Argentinian peso in their sights — the Argentinian chef de cabinet, Jorge Rodríguez, is relaxed and relieved to ...
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  • 14
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 16-18 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...One of the least welcome tasks facing researchers at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro — the second largest research university in Brazil — is to review grant applications from their colleagues 300 miles inland in São Paulo. “They ask for money for ...
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  • 15
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 19-19 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...This year, if schedules hold, Brazil will finally realize its 20-year ambition to join the first rank of spacefaring nations. The agenda for 1999 has all the ingredients of a mature space programme, from the debut of a new Brazilian rocket to the selection of astronauts to fly on the ...
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  • 16
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 20-21 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...The people of the Amazon basin are among the poorest of South America, but the region's rainforests are home to the richest diversity of life in the world. The potential of that wealth for the region was recognized implicitly for the first time in 1992, when representatives of 150 nations ...
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  • 17
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    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 398 (1999), S. 22-23 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] ...“Cuba's future must, by necessity, be a future of scientists,” Fidel Castro declared in 1960, soon after the Cuban revolution. Almost 40 years later, his prophesy is some way from fulfilment. But in one area of applied science — biotechnology — a concerted national effort ...
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  • 18
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    Balkema
    In:  Brookfield, Vt., Balkema, vol. 5, no. 22, pp. 662-664, (ISBN 1-4020-1244-6)
    Publication Date: 1999
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Earthquake hazard ; Earthquake risk ; NOModelling ; Strong motions ; Site amplification ; doubtful ; approach
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  • 19
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    In:  Proceed. 2nd Internat. Symp. on the Effects of Surface Geology on Seismic Motion ESG98, Yokohama, Japan, Dec. 1-3, 1998, Rotterdam/Brookfield, Balkema, vol. 1, no. 16, pp. 1251-1279, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1999
    Keywords: Seismology ; Site amplification ; Earthquake engineering, engineering seismology ; Volcanology
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2017-07-06
    Description: Five hormone-treated female Japanese silver eels Anguilla japonica were tagged with ultrasonic transmitters and released by submersible in the West Pacific at seamounts of the West Mariana Ridge, their supposed spawning grounds. Four eels were tracked for 60 to 423 min in the vicinity of the seamounts. They did not settle at the seamounts but swam at a mean speed of 0.37 m s-1 into open water above deep ground. Their mean swimming depth ranged from 81 to 172 m. Experiments suggest that pre-matured A. japonica migrate to their spawning grounds in temperate warm water and at shallow depths.
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  • 21
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    Inter Research
    In:  Aquatic Microbial Ecology, 19 . pp. 139-148.
    Publication Date: 2016-05-26
    Description: Phosphatase (P-ase) activity was determined together with other extracellular enzyme activities, bacterial abundance and production rates during the 2 SW Monsoon process studies of the German JGOFS Arabian Sea Program. Water samples were collected along the cruise tracks from the equator to the upwelling region at the shelf edge off Oman. Depth profiles of P-ase activity were strikingly different from those of the other enzymes. While values of aminopeptidase and β-glucosidase generally decreased below the euphotic zone, P-ase increased by factors of 1 to 7. The relation between peptidase- and P-ase activity was from 4 to 21 at the surface and from 3 to 5 at 800 m depth. Because P-ase production (dissolved and cell-bound) in deep waters is mainly dependent on bacteria, P-ase activities per bacterial cell were calculated: these were, on average, 37 times higher at 800 m than at the surface. We also observed a positive correlation of P-ase activity with phosphate concentrations in the depth profiles below the euphotic zone, while this relationship was much more variable in the mixed surface layer. These observations suggest that C-limited bacteria in the deep strata did not primarily focus on the phosphate generated by their P-ase activity but on the organic C compounds which were simultaneously produced and which could probably not be taken up prior to the hydrolytic detachment of phosphate. It is hypothesised that a considerable part of the measured P-ase activity was dissolved (though it might have originated from bacteria). These enzymes may be important for the slow, but steady regeneration of phosphate and organic C in mesopelagic waters.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Stomach contents of 17 sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus stranded in Scotland and Denmark during 1990-96 were analysed. All were sub-adult or adult males and stranded between November and March. They had presumably entered the North Sea during their southward migration from feeding grounds in Arctic waters. Other studies indicate that the majority of the whales were apparently healthy. The diet of these whales was found to consist almost entirely of cephalopods, principally squid of the genus Gonatus (hereafter 'Gonatus', but probably G. fabricii, an oceanic species characteristic of Arctic waters). The other prey species identified were also mostly oceanic cephalopods: the squids Histioteuthis bonnellii, Teuthowenia megalops and Todarodes sagittatus and the octopus Haliphron atlanticus. Although these results are consistent with other recent studies in the area based on single stranded whales, they differ from results of work on whales caught during commercial whaling operations in Icelandic waters (1960s to 1980s) in that little evidence of predation on fish was found in the present study. Remains of single individuals of the veined squid Loligo forbesi, the northern octopus Eledone cirrhosa and the saithe Pollachius virens provided the only possible evidence of feeding in the North Sea. We infer that sperm whales do not enter the North Sea to feed. The timing, and large and uniform sizes of the Gonatus species eaten (most had mantle lengths in the range 195 to 245 mm), as estimated from measurements of the lower beaks, and the seasonality of the strandings is consistent with the whales having fed on mature squid, possibly spawning concentrations--as has recently been reported for bottlenose whales. Assuming that the diet recorded in this study was representative of sperm whales during the feeding season, as much as 500000 t of Gonatus could be removed by sperm whales in Norwegian waters each year and up to 3 times that figure from the eastern North Atlantic as a whole. Evidence from other studies indicates that Gonatus is an important food resource for a wide range of marine predators in Arctic waters.
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  • 23
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 185 . pp. 293-296.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Interpretation of diving profiles of aquatic animals would be considerably enhanced by additional behavioural information. A new sensor is presented here which records animal movements. This sensor was tested on a captive loggerhead turtle Caretta caretta which showed similar activity patterns to free-living green turtles Chelonia mydas. A computer program with user-selectable options was developed to analyse the data consistently and rapidly. Using our sensor we calculated the total resting time, which differed by less than 5% from the real resting time when the sampling interval was 2 s. The method was additionally tested for different sampling intervals to find out its applicability for field studies.
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  • 24
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    In:  Nature, 397 (6718). pp. 389-391.
    Publication Date: 2015-07-16
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2015-08-27
    Description: Nematodes of the family Stilbonematinae are known for their highly specific association with ectosymbiotic bacteria. These worms are members of the meiofauna in marine, sulfide-rich sediments, where they migrate around the redox boundary layer. In this study, bacterial ectosymbionts of 2 species of marine nematodes, Stilbonema sp. and Laxus oneistus, were shown to be capable of the respiratory reduction of nitrate and nitrite (denitrification). The use of these alternative electron acceptors to oxygen by the bacteria allows the animals to migrate into the deeper, anoxic sediments, where they can exploit the sulfide-rich patches of the deeper sediment layers. The accumulation of thiols (sulfide, thiosulfate, sulfate and glutathione) in body tissues of the worms was determined following incubation in the presence of various electron donors (sulfide, thiosulfate) and acceptors (nitrate). In their chemoautotrophic metabolic potential, the ectosymbionts of the 2 nematode species were found to resemble the phylogenetically related, intracellular symbionts of macrofaunal hosts of deep-sea hydrothermal vents and other sulfide-rich habitats.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2016-05-26
    Description: The role of tetrathionate in the sulfur cycle of Baltic Sea sediments was investigated in different habitats and under a variety of environmental conditions. Sediment profiles were recorded with regard to numbers of thiosulfate oxidizing bacteria, concentrations of sulfur compounds, and potential rates of thiosulfate oxidation. Products of thiosulfate oxidation were quantified in incubated sediment samples and in pure cultures. Evidence was found that tetrathionate is formed within these sediments, that sulfur oxidizing bacteria are present in considerable numbers, that these bacteria are of major importance in the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds in their habitat, and that tetrathionate is an important oxidation product of these bacteria. Thiosulfate is oxidized by bacteria isolated from these sediments to varying proportions of tetrathionate, sulfate, and also elemental sulfur. In highly sulfidic sediments and in the presence of large amounts of organic matter, tetrathionate was present in sediment horizons in which thiosulfate and elemental sulfur also accumulated. A tetrathionate cycle is proposed to be active in natural marine and brackish water sediments in which, due to combined bacterial action and chemical reactions, a net oxidation of sulfide to elemental sulfur occurs in the presence of catalytic amounts of thiosulfate and tetrathionate.
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  • 27
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 188 . pp. 305-309.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Seabirds, like all marine endotherms, have to compensate for the extensive cooling effect of water when diving. Alone among them, cormorants (Phalacrocoracidae) have a wettable plumage and are predicted to require disproportionately large amounts of food to balance heat losses. These piscivorous birds are thus thought to have a detrimental impact on fish stocks. However, we show here that even in great cormorants from Greenland, which dive in water at 3 to 7°C, daily food intake is lower than for well-insulated European seabirds. Despite their wettable plumage, cormorants thus appear to manage their energy budgets in a remarkably efficient way. Nevertheless, the specific foraging strategies which enable this performance make cormorants dependent on high prey density areas, a feature that should be taken into account by future management plans.
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  • 28
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 178 . pp. 169-177.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: In Eckernförde Bay (western Baltic Sea) pockmark structures are induced by groundwater seeping out of the sediment. On 3 occasions in winter and spring 1993-94 we investigated the influence of groundwater on the reduction of salinity, on porewater chemistry, and on bacterial activities (methane oxidation and sulphate reduction). In 2 out of 3 sampling campaigns groundwater discharge could be detected. The concentration gradients of Cl- and SO4= are moved towards the sediment surface by the vertical advection of groundwater during seep times. Without groundwater discharge the porewater chemistry resembled the control site. Compared to the control site, the methane oxidation and sulphate reduction rates were elevated at the pockmark site, reaching maximum values of 49 and 269 µmol l-1 d-1 respectively. The groundwater venting from the pockmark had an end member composition of 80 mM Na+, 1.0 mM Ca++ and was depleted in Mg++. Due to mixing of these major cations along the groundwater/seawater interface, no CaCO3 precipitation was found around the pockmark site.
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  • 29
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 182 . pp. 69-76.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Sinking velocities of more than 300 Nitzschia closterium aggregates were determined during roller table incubation using digital image analysis. To examine the influence of transparent exopolymer particles (TEP) on aggregate settling speed, 3 experiments with different ratios of TEP to cell volume concentration were conducted. The results showed that, for N. closterium aggregates without TEP, sinking velocity (U) was significantly related to the equivalent spherical diameter (ESD) of the aggregates, yielding U (cm s-1) = 1.89 (ESD, cm)0.55. The higher was the specific TEP content of an aggregate, the lower was the sinking velocity and the less pronounced was the size versus velocity relationship. Excess densities (Δρ) of aggregates were derived from velocity measurements and 3-dimensional fractal dimensions (D3) of aggregates were calculated from scaling properties of Δρ. Values for D3 never exceeded 2 and fit well to values of the 2-dimensional fractal dimension (D2) attained from image analysis.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Stable carbon isotope fractionation (ε p) of 7 marine phytoplankton species grown in different irradiance cycles was measured under nutrient-replete conditions at a high light intensity in batch cultures. Compared to experiments under continuous light, all species exhibited a significantly higher instantaneous growth rate (μi), defined as the rate of carbon fixation during the photoperiod, when cultivated at 12:12 h, 16:8 h, or 18:6 h light:dark (L/D) cycles. Isotopic fractionation by the diatoms Skeletonema costatum, Asterionella glacialis, Thalassiosira punctigera, and Coscinodiscus wailesii (Group I) was 4 to 6o/oo lower in a 16:8 h L/D cycle than under continuous light, which we attribute to differences in μi. In contrast, ε p in Phaeodactylum tricornutum, Thalassiosira weissflogii, and in the dinoflagellate Scrippsiella trochoidea (Group II) was largely insensitive to daylength-related differences in instantaneous growth rate. Since other studies have reported growth-rate dependent fractionation under N-limited conditions in P. tricornutum, μi-related effects on fractionation apparently depend on the factor controlling growth rate. We suggest that a general relationship between εi and μi/[CO2,aq] may not exist. For 1 species of each group we tested the effect of variable CO2 concentration, [CO2,aq], on isotopic fractionation. A decrease in [CO2,aq] from ca 26 to 3 µmol kg-1 caused a decrease in ε p by less than 3o/oo. This indicates that variation in μi in response to changes in daylength has a similar or even greater effect on isotopic fractionation than [CO2,aq] in some of the species tested. In both groups ε p tended to be higher in smaller species at comparable growth rates. In 24 and 48 h time series the algal cells became progressively enriched in 13C during the day and the first hours of the dark period, followed by 13C depletion in the 2 h before beginning of the following light period. The daily amplitude of the algal isotopic composition (δ13C), however, was 〈=1.5o/oo, which demonstrates that diurnal variation in δ13C is relatively small.
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  • 31
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    In:  Aquatic Microbial Ecology, 17 (2). pp. 207-209.
    Publication Date: 2016-05-26
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2021-02-25
    Description: The El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon is the strongest natural interannual climate fluctuation1. ENSO originates in the tropical Pacific Ocean and has large effects on the ecology of the region, but it also influences the entire global climate system and affects the societies and economies of manycountries2. ENSO can be understood as an irregular low-frequency oscillation between a warm (El Niño) and a cold (La Niña) state. The strong El Niños of 1982/1983 and 1997/1998, along with the more frequent occurrences of El Niños during the past few decades, raise the question of whether human-induced 'greenhouse' warming affects, or will affect, ENSO3. Several global climate models have been applied to transient greenhouse-gas-induced warming simulations to address this question4, 6, but the results have been debated owing to the inability of the models to fully simulate ENSO (because of their coarse equatorial resolution)7. Here we present results from a global climate model with sufficient resolution in the tropics to adequately represent the narrow equatorial upwelling and low-frequency waves. When the model is forced by a realistic future scenario of increasing greenhouse-gas concentrations, more frequent El-Niño-like conditions and stronger cold events in the tropical Pacific Ocean result
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Diverse coastal seaweed communities dominated by perennial fucoids become replaced by species-poor turfs of annual algae throughout the Baltic Sea. A large-scale field survey and factorial field experiments indicated that grazers maintain the fucoid community through selective consumption of annual algae. Interactive effects between grazers and dormant propagules of annual algae, stored in a 'marine seed bank', determine the response of this system to anthropogenic nutrient loading. Nutrients override grazer control and accelerate the loss of algal diversity in the presence but not in the absence of a propagule bank. This implies a novel role of propagule banks for community regulation and ecosystem response to marine eutrophication.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: An experimental laboratory set-up was used to study the influence of different grain size compositions and temperatures on the growth of benthic cyanobacteria and diatoms, and on the competition between these 2 groups. Monospecific cultures of 3 species of cyanobacteria (Merismopedia punctata, Microcoleus chthonoplastes, Oscillatoria limosa), and of 2 species of benthic diatoms (Phaeodactylum tricornutum and Nitzschia sp.) were used. The organisms were cultured in 100 ml flasks filled with medium and 3 different kinds of sediment: (1) Sand (fine sand, 63 to 200 µm), (2) Mud-I (mixed fine sand and mud 〈63 µm in the ratio 80:20 wt %), (3) Mud-II (mixed fine sand and mud in the ratio 50:50 wt %). Experimental temperatures were 10, 15 and 25°C. At 10°C and 15°C, both diatom species achieved the highest biomass on the sediments of the finest grain size (50 wt % 〈 63 µm) while cyanobacteria achieved low biomass levels. Coarsening of sediments at the same temperature levels revealed a gradually lower biomass of the diatoms. Particularly on sand, the diatoms never reached the same concentrations of chlorophyll a as on mud. The cyanobacteria, on the other hand, had the highest biomass on sand at 15°C. In the competition experiments the benthic diatom species Nitzschia sp. dominated all types of sediments at 10°C and 15°C. The experiments at 25°C were dominated by the filamentous cyanobacterium M. chthonoplastes. This indicates the importance of abiotic conditions for the distribution and abundance of benthic phototrophic micro-organisms.
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  • 35
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 190 . pp. 125-132.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: The multivariate patterns resulting from analyses of macrobenthic abundance data at different taxonomic levels are compared to the pattern derived from various measurements obtained through sediment profiling imagery (SPI). A time-series data set from 1 station in Kiel Bay (Western Baltic) at 22 m depth including macrobenthic and SPI replicates covering 8 yr (1989 to 1996) was analyzed by means of multidimensional scaling (MDS) ordination. The macrobenthos data showed similar patterns, and there was little information loss, with decreasing taxonomic resolution from species to phylum level. The multivariate pattern in the SPI data was not significantly correlated to any of the macrofaunal patterns. However, macrofaunal and SPI patterns seemed to be complementary since they emphasized different aspects of the long-term succession in the Southern Baltic Sea. While macrofaunal patterns were sensitive to anoxia events, changes of SPI-recorded seabed characteristics were primarily related to physical disturbances possibly due to variations in fishing intensity.
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  • 36
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 402 . pp. 366-367.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-28
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  • 37
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 183 . pp. 263-273.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Diving seabirds should evolve a variety of foraging characteristics which enable them to minimize energy expenditure and to maximize net energy gain while searching for prey underwater. In order to assess the related ecological adaptations in a marine predator, we studied the at-sea distribution and the diving behaviour of 23 cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo (Linnaeus) breeding at the Chausey Islands (France) using VHF-telemetry and data loggers recording hydrostatic pressure. Birds foraged within an area of approximately 1131 km2 situated north-east of the breeding colony. This zone represents only 25% of the maximal potentially available area that the birds may utilize considering their maximum foraging range of 35 km. Individual birds remained within restricted individual foraging areas (on average 18 and 10% of the total utilized area in 1994 and 1995, respectively) throughout the study period. Moreover, the cormorants studied conducted an average of 42 dives per foraging trip, lasting for an average of 40 s (maximum 152 s), and reached an average maximum dive depth of 6.1 m (maximum 32 m) with median descent and ascent angles calculated to be 18.7° and 20.3°, respectively. Overall, 64% of all dives were U-shaped dives and 36% V-shaped dives. We use these results to demonstrate how both specialization and opportunism may support the remarkably high foraging efficiency of this marine predator.
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  • 38
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    Balkema
    In:  In: Mineral Deposits: processes to processing, proceedings in the Fifth Biennial SGA Meeting and the 10th IAGOD. Balkema , Rotterdam, Netherlands, pp. 563-566.
    Publication Date: 2014-05-09
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  • 39
    facet.materialart.
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    Balkema
    In:  In: Mineral Deposits: processes to processing, proceedings of the Fifths Biennial SGA Meeting and the 10th IAGOD. Balkema, Leiden, The Netherlands, pp. 527-530.
    Publication Date: 2014-05-09
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  • 40
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 188 . pp. 93-104.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-17
    Description: Cephalopods play an important role in the trophic web of the Southern Ocean, but little information is available on their biology. The 2 largest sub-Antarctic seabirds, the king penguin Aptenodytes patagonicus and the wandering albatross Diomedea exulans, feed primarily on squids during the austral winter at the Crozet Islands. We examined a large number of accumulated cephalopod beaks in the stomach of these birds together with some undigested items; first, to understand how these 2 predators share the squid resource during winter, a period of supposed low food availability, and, second, to use a diving and a flying seabird as biological samplers of Southern Ocean cephalopods. Individuals of the family Onychoteuthidae formed the bulk of the squid diet, accounting for 72.6 and 57.0% of the number of lower beaks in samples from king penguins and wandering albatrosses, respectively. Seven different species were identified, the 3 main squids being Kondakovia longimana (38.8 and 28.0% by number for penguins and albatrosses, respectively), Moroteuthis ingens (13.5 and 26.2%) and M. knipovitchi (20.1 and 2.3%). Both seabirds preyed upon the same cephalopod species, but penguins primarily took small- to medium-sized juveniles (99.0% of the onychoteuthids) and albatrosses preyed on larger adult specimens (96.0%). Fresh remains indicated that adult K. longimana and M. ingens were mature individuals which, as shown by satellite tracking of albatrosses, were taken over the slope and nearby oceanic waters surrounding the archipelago. The present study indicates that mating/spawning of K. longimana and M. ingens occurs in Crozet waters during the winter months. It also extends the biogeography of K. longimana to north of the Antarctic Polar Front, in the Polar Frontal Zone, where it has not previously been recorded.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2021-06-17
    Description: The marine habitat exploited by black-browed Diomedea melanophrys and grey-headed albatrosses D. chrysostoma breeding at Campbell Island, New Zealand, was studied using satellite telemetry. Data were analysed in relation to the bathymetry and sea-surface temperature of the foraging zones. Black-browed albatrosses spent 55% of their time on the Campbell Plateau but also carried out long foraging trips to the Polar Front and Antarctic Zone at a distance of over 2000 km. They relied heavily on juvenile Micromesistius australis, a schooling fish, during foraging trips to the shelf but over oceanic waters the squid Martialia hyadesi was the main prey taken. Grey-headed albatrosses spent 71% of their time foraging over the deep waters of the Polar Frontal Zone where M. hyadesi comprised over 90% of the mass of prey taken. No satellite-tracked birds fed over the shelf, but data from the duration of foraging trips and dietary analysis suggests that shelf-feeding is important for this species. Significant inter-species differences in the time spent in neritic and oceanic zones show that black-browed albatrosses are reliant primarily on shelf resources while grey-headed albatrosses are primarily oceanic feeders. In addition, the 2 species overlapped little in the zones used over oceanic waters, with black-browed albatrosses feeding in more southerly waters than grey-headed albatrosses. However, both species feed on M. hyadesi when foraging in association with the Polar Front.
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2021-06-23
    Description: The fishery for Illex argentinus in the Southwest Atlantic is subject to large inter-annual variability in recruitment strength. In this paper we attempt to build a predictive model using sea surface temperature (SST) to examine links between recruitment to the Falkland Islands fishery and environmental variability during the juvenile and adult life history stages. SST data from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) were found to be comparable with near-surface data derived from in situ expendable bathy-thermograph (XBT) profiles in the southern Patagonian shelf. Variation in SST during the early life stages appears to be important in determining recruitment of I. argentinus. SST in the hatching grounds of the northern Patagonian shelf during the period of hatching (particularly June and July) was negatively correlated with catches in the fishery in the following season. SST anomaly data from positions in the Pacific and Southwest Atlantic were used to examine teleconnections between these areas. Links were seen at a lag of 2 yr between the Pacific and southern Patagonian shelf, and at about 5 yr between the Pacific and northern Patagonian shelf. This is consistent with SST anomalies associated with El Niño in the Pacific propagating around the globe via the Antarctic Circumpolar Wave (ACW). Predicting cold events via teleconnections between SST anomalies in the Pacific and Atlantic would appear to have the potential to predict the recruitment strength of I. argentinus in the Southwest Atlantic.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2021-06-24
    Description: Levels of genetic diversity and population differentiation were examined in temporally (1990 to 1997) and geographically separated samples of the argentine short-finned squid Illex argentinus using 7 microsatellite loci. Number of alleles (mean number of alleles per locus over all samples = 24.1) and heterozygosity (mean observed heterozygosity per sample = 0.84) were high for all samples, indicating that these loci have a greater potential utility for investigating population genetic structure than allozyme markers used in previous studies. Genetic diversity did not differ significantly between samples taken 5 yr after commencement of the fishery (1990) and those collected during a period of progressively intense fishing pressure (1994 and 1997). Several small but significant differences in between-sample genetic variation (FST) were observed, but these could not confirm the previous suggestion of cryptic species or several well-defined stocks within the fished population.
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  • 44
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    In:  Nature, 397 . pp. 243-246.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-28
    Description: The overflow and descent of cold dense water from the Denmark Strait sill-a submarine passage between Greenland and Iceland-is a principal means by which the deep ocean is ventilated, and is an important element in the global thermohaline circulation. Previous investigations of its variability-in particular, direct current measurements(1,2) in the overflow core since 1986-have shown surprisingly little evidence of long-term changes in now speed. Here we report significant changes in the overflow characteristics during the winter of 1996-97, measured using two current-meter moorings and an inverted echo sounder located at different depths in the fastest part of the now. The overflow warmed to the highest monthly value yet recorded (2.4 degrees C), and showed a pronounced slowing and thinning at its lower margin. We believe that the extreme warmth of the overflow caused it to run higher on the continental slope off east Greenland, so that the lower current meters and the echo sounder were temporarily outside and deeper than the fast-flowing core; model simulations appear to confirm this interpretation, We suggest that the extreme warmth of the overflow is a lagged response to a warming upstream in the Fram Strait three years earlier (caused by an exceptional amplification of the winter North Atlantic Oscillation). If this is so, over-now characteristics may be predictable.
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  • 45
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 187 . pp. 59-66.
    Publication Date: 2019-08-29
    Description: Epibiosis is a spatially close association between 2 or more organisms belonging to the same or different species. Through direct and indirect interactions, this association has major effects on the species involved and on community dynamics. When the effects are predominantly beneficial for epibiont and basibiont, coevolution can be expected to lead to associational specificity. Circumstantial evidence, however, suggests that many epibionts are non-specific substratum-generalists. In this arti-cle, we investigate the commonness of specificity in epibiotic associations. In a first approach, we inves-tigated the in situ recruitment preferences of potential epibionts when choosing between artificial and living substrata. After exposure for 3 wk in early summer, an early successional community had estab-lished, comprising cyanobacteria, diatoms, sesslle colonial ciliates and red algae. All species recruited on almost all substrata available. However, artificial substrata were usually preferred over living sur-faces. Consequently, the species studied are class~fied as facultative epibionts. An analysis of a list of over 2000 epibiotic associations corroborated these results, the majority of described 'epibionts' are not basibiont-specific and generally occur on non-living substrata as well. Also, basibiont species usually bear more than 1 epibiont species. Relative to each other, epibionts and basibionts are characterised by a typical set of life history traits. We conclude that specific and obligate epibionts are rare. Their scarcity is discussed in view of multilevel antifouling defences and presumptive evolutionary transi-tions from epibiosis towards endoparasitism or endosymbiosis.
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  • 46
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 185 . pp. 101-112.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Diving reptiles, unlike most diving birds and mammals, return infrequently to the surface to breathe. Spending the bulk of their lives underwater, they are likely to have developed a large variety of specific behavioural patterns different from those of their warm-blooded counterparts. However, for technical reasons, underwater behaviour of these aquatic reptiles remains poorly understood. In this study green turtles Chelonia mydas nesting on Cyprus (Eastern Mediterranean) were equipped with multi-channel data loggers monitoring diving behaviour and activity (via a logger-integrated 3-D compass which served as an activity sensor) during the inter-nesting interval. Data from 2 turtles for 2 consecutive inter-nesting intervals were available for detailed dive analysis. Both turtles showed highly variable dive patterns ranging from travelling subsurface dives to specific dive types such as U- (mainly resting and foraging dives), S- (a form of energy saving swimming) and V-dives. The green turtles stayed near the coast throughout the study, dived no deeper than ca 25 m, but remained underwater for up to ca 40 min. The recordings of the activity sensor revealed high activity levels (less than 20% resting d-1) during the whole inter-nesting period which was attributed to extensive foraging. The combination of both the activity data and the dive data showed that the turtles were engaged in travelling movements for 46% of the inter-nesting time spent underwater, foraged for 34% and rested for 12% of the time. We discuss the physiological, ecological and conservation implications of these results.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
    Description: Serial dilution experiments were conducted on JGOFS-North Atlantic cruise of RV 'Meteor' M36/2 at a 20° W transect in June and July 1996 to assess the role of microzooplankton grazing and nitrogen supply in controlling phytoplankton stocks in the subtropical and temperate northeast Atlantic. Rates of microzooplankton grazing ranged from 0.08 d-1 at 54° N to 0.53 d-1 at 40° N and mean growth rates of phytoplankton ranged from 0.19 d-1 at 54° N to 0.75 d-1 at 40° N. Both rates were positively related to seawater temperature, whereas the apparent growth yield of phytoplankton declined with increasing temperature from 0.19 µg chl a dm-3 d-1 at 54° N to 0.01 µg chl a dm-3 d-1 at 33° N. Complete nitrogen saturation of phytoplankton growth indicated light or non-nitrogenous limitation at the nitracline at 47° N and in the deep chlorophyll maximum at 33° N, whereas in the mixed layer at 47° N and 54° N the ambient nitrogen supply was sub-saturated and yielded 63 and 39% of nitrogen- saturated growth. Nitrogen supply of phytoplankton growth was dominated by external and cellular sources in nitrate-rich waters of the mixed layer at 54° N and at the nitracline at 47° N, whereas nitrogen regeneration dominated at the nitrate-depleted surface waters at 47° N. However, in the deep chlorophyll maxima at 33° N and 40° N phytoplankton growth was primarily maintained by nitrogen regeneration, although external nitrogen was sufficiently available. The recycling efficiency of the microbial community was defined as the ratio of regenerated growth yield to herbivorous grazing loss. Efficiencies of ~100% under post-bloom situations indicated tight coupling of predation, nitrogen supply and phytoplankton growth. We suggest that microzooplankton grazing has a high potential for nitrogen supply and biomass control of phytoplankton communities during summer in the temperate and subtropical northeast Atlantic.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2018-05-08
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  • 49
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Acquisition of invasive/metastatic potential through protease expression is an essential event in tumor progression. High levels of components of the plasminogen activation system, including urokinase, but paradoxically also its inhibitor, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI1), have been ...
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  • 50
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] B-cell activation depends on the intensity of B-cell receptor cross-linking. Studies of haptenated antigens1 and vesicular stomatitis virus2 (VSV) have demonstrated a correlation between antigen repetitiveness and the degree to which B-cell activation is independent of T cells. Here, we compare ...
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  • 51
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 973-973 
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    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] From the bench to the clinic (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 836) Edited by David M. Stoff & J. John Mann The New York Academy of Sciences, $80, 365 pp. ISBN1-57331 095-6, 1998 Reviewed By Angelo S. Halaris Department of Psychiatry, University of Mississippi, ...
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  • 52
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Ribozymes, catalytic RNA molecules that cleave a complementary mRNA sequence, have potential as therapeutics for dominantly inherited disease. Twelve percent of American patients with the blinding disease autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (ADRP) carry a substitution of histidine for proline ...
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  • 53
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 974-974 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Genes associated with cancer Invasion, Metastasis and cell proliferation G.V. Sherbet & M.S. Lakshmi Academic Press, $85, 352 pp. ISBN: 0-126-39875-5, 1997 Reviewed By Daniel A. Haber Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center and Harvard Medical School,Charlestown, MA 02129 The ...
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  • 54
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 974-974 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Tissue transglutaminase selectively modifies gliadin peptides that are recognized by gut-derived T cells in celiac disease Øyvind Molberc, Stephen N. Mcadam, Roman Korner, Hanne Quarsten, Christel Kristiansen, Lars Madsen, Lars Fuccer, Helce Scott, Ove Noren, Peter Roepstorff, Knut E.A. ...
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  • 55
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 745-745 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Over the last decade or so, the number of papers listed by the US National Library of Medicine with the word Alzheimer in their title has grown steadily—in all, some twelve thousand are listed. Yet despite this level of activity and the fact that this disease, thought to represent the most ...
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  • 56
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 746-746 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] To the editor—Burton and Moore claim that “The experience of the biopharmaceutical companies in the HIV vaccine area has not been a happy one …. Interpretive loophole are ruthlessly exploited to beathe life into a corpse….” This is an opinion that we do not agree ...
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  • 57
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 869-869 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] To the editor—In his thoughtful review of Donald Kennedy's book Academic Duty (Nature Med. 4, 241–2, 1998), Michael Zigmond expresses the wish that “Kennedy had devoted more space to a discussion of why there is a relative lack of attention to duty on the part of the ...
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  • 58
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 869-869 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Zigmond replies—I found much to praise in my review of Kennedy's book, including the central premise—that faculty should devote more attention to the academic duty that accompanies their academic freedom. However, I also noted that Kennedy ignored many of the bases of the conditions he ...
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  • 59
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 870-870 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] To the editor—In an excellent News & Views article in the June issue1, Constantin Bona comments on two papers2,3 reporting promising results of idiotype vaccine experiments in mice. Bona suggests that anti-idiotype antibodies have not been adopted as cancer vaccines in humans and ...
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  • 60
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 872-872 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] After almost ten months of study, a 19-member panel has concluded that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) should seek more participation from patient advocacy groups and the general public to help set research priorities (Nature Med. 4; 375, 1998). The panel, chaired by Leon Rosenberg of the ...
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  • 61
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 873-873 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] The World Health Organization (WHO) announced last month that it will ask national authorities in its 191 member states to take an inventory of laboratories which are storing wMd'type or genetically engineered polioviruses by January 1999. Laboratories housing samples will be asked to establish a ...
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  • 62
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 876-876 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has announced that it will publish new guidelines on xenotransplantation this fall in the Federal Register. They will advocate long-term monitoring of organ recipients and may prohibit the use of non-human primates as organ donors. The FDA will also ...
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  • 63
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 877-877 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Based on an evaluation of 215,000 scientific papers published between 1988–95, the UK is maintaining its share of the world's biomedical research publications at ten percent. This data comes from a report produced by the Wellcome Trust—Mapping the Landscape—which also shows that ...
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  • 64
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 887-888 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] DELVE INTO ANY textbook of immunology and marvel at the intricacies of the immune response. Then pay a visit to your friendly neighborhood transplant clinic and despair at the crude drugs used to suppress this complex system. The truth is that when it comes to designing ways to manipulate the ...
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  • 65
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 861-865 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Neoplasias are most responsive to medical intervention at early stages, prior to undergoing metastasis. When these disorders arise from known premalignant states, and if a detection method exists, the high-risk population can be screened to reduce patient morbidity and mortality. Organs where these ...
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  • 66
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 643-643 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] McInnes etal. reply—Shah etal. suggest that measurement of interleukin-15 (IL-15) levels in synovial fluid may be complicated by the presence of rheumatoid factor (RF) (although we note that the level of IL-15 recovered from ‘spiked’ SF in their assay was reduced in the presence ...
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  • 67
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] More than 40,000 people die annually from rabies worldwide1. Most of these fatalities occur in developing countries, where rabies is endemic, public health resources are inadequate and there is limited access to preventive treatment2. Because of the high cost of vaccines derived from cell culture, ...
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  • 68
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] Substitutive therapy using fetal striatal grafts in animal models of Huntington disease (HD) have already demonstrated obvious beneficial effects on motor indices1. Using a new phenotypic model of HD recently designed in primates2,3, we demonstrate here complete and persistent recovery in a ...
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  • 69
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 978-980 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] NEUROCHEMICALS Four new opioid receptor agonists have been added to RBI's line of opioid products for neuroscience research. For example, BW373U86 hydrochloride is a novel potent, nonpeptide δ-opioid receptor agonist. Endomorphin-1 and endomorphin-2, on the other hand, are potent and ...
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  • 70
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 746-746 
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] To the editor—In your recent Vaccine Supplement, Burton and Moore discuss HIV vaccine development1. It is unfortunate that when discussing how best to proceed toward a vaccine, the debate is too often couched in the oversimplified terminology of empiric vaccine testing versus further basic ...
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  • 71
    ISSN: 1546-170X
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] The transfer of apoptosis genes to tumors is one of the most promising strategies for cancer gene therapy. We have shown that massive apoptosis occurs when wild-type p53 expression is induced in glioma cells carrying a p53 gene mutation. However, adenovirus-mediated p53 gene transfer is ineffective ...
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  • 72
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    Notes: [Auszug] The activity of fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2) is stringently controlled. Inactive in undisturbed tissues, it is activated during injury and is critical for tissue repair. We find that this control can be imposed by the soluble syndecan-1 ectodomain, a heparan sulfate proteoglycan shed from ...
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  • 73
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    Notes: [Auszug] The p53 molecule might serve as a common tumor-associated antigen, as the tumor suppressor gene p53 is mutated and the p53 protein is often over-expressed in tumor cells. We report that effective immunity to p53 can be induced through an idiotypic network by immunization of mice with a monoclonal ...
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  • 74
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    Notes: [Auszug] Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a 36-amino-acid neurotransmitter which is widely distributed throughout the central and peripheral nervous system1. NPY involvement has been suggested in various physiological responses including cardiovascular homeostasis2 and the hypothalamic control of food intake3. At ...
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  • 75
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 735-735 
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    Notes: [Auszug] AMUSING ANECDOTES FROM HIPPOCRATES TO HEART TRANSPLANTS By Richard Cordon St. Martin's Griffin, $12.95, 256 pp. ISBN 0-312-16763-6, 1997 REVIEWED BY PAUL R. MCHUGH Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Baltimore, Maryland 21287 Richard ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 507-514 
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    Notes: [Auszug] Historical beginnings The sciences of vaccines and immunology1 were created by Jenner in 17962 in his demonstration of the scientific principles and realities for preventing smallpox by prior infection with the related but less virulent cowpox virus2. Jenner's findings lay fallow for more than a ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 525-531 
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    Notes: [Auszug] Drew Pardoll (Johns Hopkins Oncology Center) examines prospects for therapeutic cancer vaccines. Considering how it is that the immune system fails to recognize and destroy cancer cells, Pardoll discusses contemporary vaccine approaches aimed at exposing cancer antigens to the cellular arm of the ...
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  • 78
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 536-536 
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    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
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    Notes: [Auszug] The controversy surrounding the effect of specific chemokine receptor polymorphisms on HIV disease progression1,2 highlights the need for synthesis of the pertinent evidence. It also suggests that large-scale international collaborations3,4 are indispensable when it comes to addressing important ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 538-538 
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    Notes: [Auszug] Soldan et al. reply—We agree with Fillet et al. that serological studies in MS are difficult to interpret due to defects in immunoregulation which often result in increased antibody titers in MS patients. However we demonstrated that the IgG and IgM antibody responses of MS patients to two ...
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  • 80
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 540-540 
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: [Auszug] The Australian government has voted to continue funding the Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) program, which is dedicated to encouraging industries and academic research organizations to work together. The decision has been awaited since a review of the program in the second half of 1997, led by ...
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  • 81
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 542-542 
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    Notes: [Auszug] 1,500 crickets, some still in the egg stage, have joined the mice, rats, snails and fish aboard Neurolab—the Columbia space shuttle flight dedicated to neuroscience research, which blasted off from Cape Canaveral on April 17th. Crickets are used as a model of central nervous system (CNS) ...
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  • 82
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 645-645 
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    Notes: [Auszug] To the editor—Recently Schwartz1 reviewed the importance of two new hypo-thalamic peptides, orexin A, 33 amino acids, and orexin B, 28 amino acids, in energy homeostasis. Molecular genetic studies in rodents have provided convincing evidence supporting relevant roles for several hypothalamic ...
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  • 83
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 648-649 
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    Notes: [Auszug] Within weeks of accusations by the dean of Public Health at Allegheny University, Jonathan Mann, that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is violating human rights through its failure to test current HIV vaccine candidates in Phase III trials (Nature, 392; 527 1998), 75 of America's leading ...
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  • 84
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 650-650 
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    Notes: [Auszug] It seemed too good to be true. And, ultimately, it was. For a few chaotic days, a story prominently displayed on the front page of the normally restrained New York Times prompted a public frenzy among cancer patients, researchers and the media. The piece, written by Gina Kolata, one of the paper's ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 652-652 
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    Notes: [Auszug] In an effort to ‘stimulate and capture the public's imagination,’ the world's largest medical research charity, the Wellcome Trust, is spending £80,000 ($125,000) on an initiative that brings artists and scientists together. Now in its second year, the program funds ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 655-657 
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    Notes: [Auszug] For any therapy to be successful, it must satisfy two requirements: it must be effective in the in vivo microenvironment and it must reach target cells in vivo in optimal quantities1. Extraordinary advances in molecular biology and biotechnology have helped to identify novel targets and develop a ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 661-662 
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    Notes: [Auszug] NOT TOO LONG ago, a renowned cardiologist asked a colleague, a respected immunologist, whether there was any link between the heart and lymphocytes. The best answer they could come up with was that the heart pumps lymphocytes around the body. To the same question, a heart surgeon said that ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 668-669 
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    Notes: [Auszug] IDIOTYPES ARE ANTIGENIC determinants and phenotypic markers of V-region genes that encode the specificity of antibodies (and T-cell receptors)1. The diversity of antigen receptors on lymphocytes is reflected in the diversity of idiotypes. This means that statistically the antigen dictionary of both ...
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  • 89
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    Notes: [Auszug] A novel strategy for anti-viral intervention of hepatitis B virus (HBV) through the disruption of the proper folding1 and transport2 of the hepadnavirus glycoproteins is described. Laboratory reared woodchucks chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) were treated with ...
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  • 90
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    Notes: [Auszug] Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels, is a requirement for malignant tumor growth and metastasis1–3. In the absence of angiogenesis, local tumor expansion is suppressed at a few millimeters and cells lack routes for distant hematogenous spread. Clinical studies have demonstrated ...
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  • 91
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    Notes: [Auszug] Huntington's disease is an autosomal dominant, inherited disorder that results in progressive degeneration of the basal ganglia (especially the neostriatal caudate nucleus and putamen) and other forebrain structures and is associated with a clinical profile of movement, cognitive and psychiatric ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 742-744 
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    Notes: [Auszug] ES CELL STUDIES Day 12 hematopoietic embryoid bodies. StemCell Technologies has recently launched a line of products under the ES-Cult name for the in vitro maintenance and hematopoietic differentiation of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. Two-step in vitro differentiation of ES cells in ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 475-476 
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    Notes: [Auszug] At millennium's end, vaccinology presents some startling contrasts. On the one hand, the expanded program on immunization represents one of the great public health triumphs of all time. Poliomyelitis is on the pathway to eradication, measles transmission has ceased in many countries, BCG and ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 478-478 
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    Notes: [Auszug] There is perhaps no better single illustration of the commerical importance of vaccines as medicines for the next century than thedeal signed between the two British companies, Powderject Pharmaceuticals and Glaxo Wellcome (GW). With a potential total value of around $300 million, the ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 480-484 
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    Notes: [Auszug] Shortly after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1984, Jim Grant, Administrator of UNICEF and Hafdan Mahler, Director-General of World Health Organization (WHO), flew to New Delhi on an extraordinary mission. They proposed to her surviving son, Rajiv, that instead of building a ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 499-500 
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    Notes: [Auszug] DIARRHEAL DISEASES ACCOUNT for three million deaths annually, mostly among children1. Overcrowded suburbs in expanding Third World cities, poor rural dwellings and refugee camps are sites where the lack of hygiene makes diarrhea an overwhelming public health problem. Furthermore, the ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 500-501 
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    Notes: [Auszug] ASTHMA is A modern plague, affecting more than ten percent of children in many westernized societies. The prevalence of asthma and other allergic diseases has doubled in the last twenty years. Although much is known about the ubiquitous environmental antigens (known as allergens) that precipitate ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 506-506 
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    Notes: [Auszug] The fall of the Soviet Union brought independence, democracy, and the promise of a new and brighter future to the Russian people. But it also heralded a renewed threat from infectious diseases. In the decade since the fall, Russia has experienced a dramatic increase in diphtheria, measles and ...
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  • 99
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    Notes: [Auszug] The Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen 1 contains a glycine-alanine repeat that inhibits in cis MHC class l-restricted presentation. We report here that insertion of a minimal glycine-alanine repeat motif in different positions of IκBα protects this NF-κB inhibitor from ...
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    Nature medicine 4 (1998), S. 535-535 
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    Notes: [Auszug] Two papers in this issue demand the attention of all those interested in developing plant-based Pharmaceuticals and vaccines and other therapies to fight infectious diseases. The first demonstrates the successful use of a plant-derived secretory antibody to prevent bacterial infection and the ...
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