Search Constraints
« Previous |
11 - 19 of 19
|
Next »
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
-
- Creator:
- Löhr, Christiane V., DeBess, Emilio E., Baker, Rocky J., Hiett, Steven L., Hoffman, Kriss A., Murdoch, Victoria J., Fischer, Kay A., Mulrooney, Donna M., Selman, Robyn L., and Hammill-Black, Wendy M.
- Abstract:
- A novel swine-origin H1N1 influenza A virus has been identified as the cause of the 2009 influenza pandemic in humans. Since then, infections with the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza virus have been documented in a number of animal species. The first known cases of lethal respiratory disease associated with pandemic...
-
- Creator:
- Löhr, Christiane V., DeBess, Emilio E., Baker, Rocky J., Hiett, Steven L., Hoffman, Kriss A., Murdoch, Victoria J., Fischer, Kay A., Mulrooney, Donna M., Selman, Robyn L., and Hammill-Black, Wendy M.
- Abstract:
- A novel swine-origin H1N1 influenza A virus has been identified as the cause of the 2009 influenza pandemic in humans. Since then, infections with the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza virus have been documented in a number of animal species. The first known cases of lethal respiratory disease associated with pandemic...
- Full Text:
- . Baker, Steven L. Hiett, Kriss A. Hoffman, Victoria J. Murdoch, Kay A. Fischer, Donna M. Mulrooney
-
- Creator:
- Lang, Aimée R., Calambokidis, John, Scordino, Jonathan, Pease, Victoria L., Klimek, Amber, Burkanov, Vladimir N., Gearin, Pat, Litovka, Dennis I., Robertson, Kelly M., Mate, Bruce R., Jacobsen, Jeff K., and Taylor, Barbara L.
- Abstract:
- Although most eastern North Pacific (ENP) gray whales feed in the Bering, Beaufort, and Chukchi Seas during summer and fall, a small number of individuals, referred to as the Pacific Coast Feeding Group (PCFG), show intra- and interseasonal fidelity to feeding areas from northern California through southeastern Alaska. We used...
- Resource Type:
- Article
-
- Creator:
- Löhr, Christiane V., DeBess, Emilio E., Baker, Rocky J., Hiett, Steven L., Hoffman, Kriss A., Murdoch, Victoria J., Fischer, Kay A., Mulrooney, Donna M., Selman, Robyn L., and Hammill-Black, Wendy M.
- Abstract:
- A novel swine-origin H1N1 influenza A virus has been identified as the cause of the 2009 influenza pandemic in humans. Since then, infections with the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza virus have been documented in a number of animal species. The first known cases of lethal respiratory disease associated with pandemic...
- Resource Type:
- Article
-
- Creator:
- Moustafa, Mohamed E., Carlson, Bradley A., Anver, Miriam R., Bobe, Gerd, Zhong, Nianxin, Ward, Jerrold M., Perella, Christine M., Hoffmann, Victoria J., Rogers, Keith, Combs, Gerald F., Jr., Schweizer, Ulrich, Merlino, Glenn, Gladyshev, Vadim N., and Hatfield, Dolph L.
- Abstract:
- Changes in dietary selenium and selenoprotein status may influence both anti- and pro-cancer pathways, making the outcome of interventions different from one study to another. To characterize such outcomes in a defined setting, we undertook a controlled hepatocarcinogenesis study involving varying levels of dietary selenium and altered selenoprotein status using...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- ., Nianxin Zhong1, Jerrold M. Ward4, Christine M. Perella5, Victoria J. Hoffmann6, Keith Rogers2¤b, Gerald F
-
- Creator:
- Adams, Paul D., Aertgeerts, Kathleen, Bauer, Cary, Bell, Jeffrey A., Berman, Helen M., Bhat, Talapady N., Blaney, Jeff M., Bolton, Evan, Bricogne, Gerard, Brown, David, Burley, Stephen K., Case, David A., Clark, Kirk L., Darden, Tom, Emsley, Paul, Feher, Victoria A., Feng, Zukang, Groom, Colin R., Harris, Seth F., Hendle, Jorg, Holder, Thomas, Joachimiak, Andrzej, Kleywegt, Gerard J., Krojer, Tobias, Marcotrigiano, Joseph, Mark, Alan E., Markley, John L., Miller, Matthew, Minor, Wladek, Montelione, Gaetano T., Murshudov, Garib, Nakagawa, Atsushi, Nakamura, Haruki, Nicholls, Anthony, Nicklaus, Marc, Nolte, Robert T., Padyana, Anil K., Peishoff, Catherine E., Pieniazek, Susan, Read, Randy J., Shao, Chenghua, Sheriff, Steven, Smart, Oliver, Soisson, Stephen, Spurlino, John, Stouch, Terry, Svobodova, Radka, Tempel, Wolfram, Terwilliger, Thomas C., Tronrud, Dale, Velankar, Sameer, Ward, Suzanna C., Warren, Gregory L., Westbrook, John D., Williams, Pamela, Yang, Huanwang, and Young, Jasmine
- Abstract:
- Crystallographic studies of ligands bound to biological macromolecules (proteins and nucleic acids) represent an important source of information concerning drug-target interactions, providing atomic level insights into the physical chemistry of complex formation between macromolecules and ligands. Of the more than 115,000 entries extant in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) archive,...
- Full Text:
- L. Clark, Tom Darden, Paul Emsley, Victoria A. Feher, Zukang Feng, Colin R. Groom, Seth F. Harris
-
- Creator:
- Adams, Paul D., Aertgeerts, Kathleen, Bauer, Cary, Bell, Jeffrey A., Berman, Helen M., Bhat, Talapady N., Blaney, Jeff M., Bolton, Evan, Bricogne, Gerard, Brown, David, Burley, Stephen K., Case, David A., Clark, Kirk L., Darden, Tom, Emsley, Paul, Feher, Victoria A., Feng, Zukang, Groom, Colin R., Harris, Seth F., Hendle, Jorg, Holder, Thomas, Joachimiak, Andrzej, Kleywegt, Gerard J., Krojer, Tobias, Marcotrigiano, Joseph, Mark, Alan E., Markley, John L., Miller, Matthew, Minor, Wladek, Montelione, Gaetano T., Murshudov, Garib, Nakagawa, Atsushi, Nakamura, Haruki, Nicholls, Anthony, Nicklaus, Marc, Nolte, Robert T., Padyana, Anil K., Peishoff, Catherine E., Pieniazek, Susan, Read, Randy J., Shao, Chenghua, Sheriff, Steven, Smart, Oliver, Soisson, Stephen, Spurlino, John, Stouch, Terry, Svobodova, Radka, Tempel, Wolfram, Terwilliger, Thomas C., Tronrud, Dale, Velankar, Sameer, Ward, Suzanna C., Warren, Gregory L., Westbrook, John D., Williams, Pamela, Yang, Huanwang, and Young, Jasmine
- Abstract:
- Crystallographic studies of ligands bound to biological macromolecules (proteins and nucleic acids) represent an important source of information concerning drug-target interactions, providing atomic level insights into the physical chemistry of complex formation between macromolecules and ligands. Of the more than 115,000 entries extant in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) archive,...
- Full Text:
- Bolton,9 Gerard Bricogne,10 David Brown,11,12 Stephen K. Burley,5,6,13,* David A. Case,6 Kirk L. Clark
-
- Creator:
- Adams, Paul D., Aertgeerts, Kathleen, Bauer, Cary, Bell, Jeffrey A., Berman, Helen M., Bhat, Talapady N., Blaney, Jeff M., Bolton, Evan, Bricogne, Gerard, Brown, David, Burley, Stephen K., Case, David A., Clark, Kirk L., Darden, Tom, Emsley, Paul, Feher, Victoria A., Feng, Zukang, Groom, Colin R., Harris, Seth F., Hendle, Jorg, Holder, Thomas, Joachimiak, Andrzej, Kleywegt, Gerard J., Krojer, Tobias, Marcotrigiano, Joseph, Mark, Alan E., Markley, John L., Miller, Matthew, Minor, Wladek, Montelione, Gaetano T., Murshudov, Garib, Nakagawa, Atsushi, Nakamura, Haruki, Nicholls, Anthony, Nicklaus, Marc, Nolte, Robert T., Padyana, Anil K., Peishoff, Catherine E., Pieniazek, Susan, Read, Randy J., Shao, Chenghua, Sheriff, Steven, Smart, Oliver, Soisson, Stephen, Spurlino, John, Stouch, Terry, Svobodova, Radka, Tempel, Wolfram, Terwilliger, Thomas C., Tronrud, Dale, Velankar, Sameer, Ward, Suzanna C., Warren, Gregory L., Westbrook, John D., Williams, Pamela, Yang, Huanwang, and Young, Jasmine
- Abstract:
- Crystallographic studies of ligands bound to biological macromolecules (proteins and nucleic acids) represent an important source of information concerning drug-target interactions, providing atomic level insights into the physical chemistry of complex formation between macromolecules and ligands. Of the more than 115,000 entries extant in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) archive,...
- Resource Type:
- Article
-
- Creator:
- Pfeifer, Marion, Lefebvre, Veronique, Gardner, Toby A., Arroyo‐Rodriguez, Victor, Baeten, Lander, Banks‐Leite, Cristina, Barlow, Jos, Betts, Matthew G., Brunet, Joerg, Cerezo, Alexis, Cisneros, Laura M., Collard, Stuart, D'Cruze, Neil, da Silva Motta, Catarina, Duguay, Stephanie, Eggermont, Hilde, Eigenbrod, Felix, Hadley, Adam S., Hanson, Thor R., Hawes, Joseph E., Heartsill Scalley, Tamara, Klingbeil, Brian T., Kolb, Annette, Kormann, Urs, Kumar, Sunil, Lachat, Thibault, Lakeman Fraser, Poppy, Lantschner, Victoria, Laurance, William F., Leal, Inara R., Lens, Luc, Marsh, Charles J., Medina‐Rangel, Guido F., Melles, Stephanie, Mezger, Dirk, Oldekop, Johan A., Overal, William L., Owen, Charlotte, Peres, Carlos A., Phalan, Ben, Pidgeon, Anna M., Pilia, Oriana, Possingham, Hugh P., Possingham, Max L., Raheem, Dinarzarde C., Ribeiro, Danilo B., Ribeiro Neto, Jose D., Robinson, W. Douglas, Robinson, Richard, Rytwinski, Trina, Scherber, Christoph, Slade, Eleanor M., Somarriba, Eduardo, Stouffer, Philip C., Struebig, Matthew J., Tylianakis, Jason M., Tscharntke, Teja, Tyre, Andrew J., Urbina Cardona, Jose N., Vasconcelos, Heraldo L., Wearn, Oliver, Wells, Konstans, Willig, Michael R., Wood, Eric, Young, Richard P., Bradley, Andrew V., and Ewers, Robert M.
- Abstract:
- Habitat fragmentation studies have produced complex results that are challenging to synthesize. Inconsistencies among studies may result from variation in the choice of landscape metrics and response variables, which is often compounded by a lack of key statistical or methodological information. Collating primary datasets on biodiversity responses to fragmentation in...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- FRAGmentation Pfeifer, M., Lefebvre, V., Gardner, T. A., Arroyo‐Rodriguez, V., Baeten, L., Banks‐ Leite, C