《临床研究杂志》.2004年.第3期
- Achieving antigen-specific immune regulation
- An inauspicious start for the US National Biospecimen Network
- Autoreactive T cell responses show proinflammatory polarization in diabetes but a regulatory phenotype in health
- Central role of mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase and reactive oxygen species in nitroglycerin tolerance and cross-tolerance
- Central role of the P2Y12 receptor in platelet activation
- Conditional disruption of IB kinase 2 fails to prevent obesity-induced insulin resistance
- Defects in nuclear structure and function promote dilated cardiomyopathy in lamin A/C–deficient mice
- Defects in secretion, aggregation, and thrombus formation in platelets from mice lacking Akt2
- ENU mutagenesis identifies mice with mitochondrial branched-chain aminotransferase deficiency resembling human maple syrup urine disease
- Extensive tissue-regenerative capacity of neonatal human keratinocyte stem cells and their progeny
- Nitrate tolerance oxidative stress and mitochondrial function: another worrisome chapter on the effects of organic nitrates
- Salicylate induces an antibiotic efflux pump in Burkholderia cepacia complex genomovar III(B. cenocepacia)
- Site and mechanism of leptin action in a rodent form of congenital lipodystrophy
- Tandem mass spectrometry in discovery of disorders of the metabolome
- Tandem mass spectrometry in discovery of disorders of the metabolome
- The human societal and scientific legacy of cholera
- TNF- is a critical negative regulator of type 1 immune activation during intracellular bacterial infection
- Glycoprotein 130 regulates bone turnover and bone size by distinct downstream signaling pathways
- Helicobacter pylori persistence: biology and disease
- High vaccination efficiency of low-affinity epitopes in antitumor immunotherapy
- How do mutations in lamins A and C cause disease?
- Lamin A/C deficiency causes defective nuclear mechanics and mechanotransduction