首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   882篇
  免费   92篇
  国内免费   2篇
  2021年   18篇
  2020年   7篇
  2019年   12篇
  2018年   12篇
  2017年   14篇
  2016年   33篇
  2015年   63篇
  2014年   60篇
  2013年   93篇
  2012年   30篇
  2011年   20篇
  2010年   56篇
  2009年   31篇
  2008年   28篇
  2007年   7篇
  2006年   20篇
  2005年   13篇
  2004年   17篇
  2003年   22篇
  2002年   17篇
  2001年   10篇
  2000年   16篇
  1999年   15篇
  1998年   19篇
  1997年   9篇
  1996年   18篇
  1995年   16篇
  1994年   9篇
  1993年   11篇
  1992年   10篇
  1991年   12篇
  1989年   9篇
  1988年   9篇
  1987年   11篇
  1986年   12篇
  1985年   11篇
  1984年   8篇
  1981年   10篇
  1980年   7篇
  1979年   6篇
  1978年   9篇
  1977年   14篇
  1974年   9篇
  1973年   15篇
  1972年   12篇
  1971年   9篇
  1970年   11篇
  1969年   8篇
  1967年   6篇
  1965年   11篇
排序方式: 共有976条查询结果,搜索用时 187 毫秒
91.

Background

Despite the frequency of diabetes mellitus and its relationship to diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) and neuropathic pain (NeP), our understanding of underlying mechanisms leading to chronic pain in diabetes remains poor. Recent evidence has demonstated a prominent role of microglial cells in neuropathic pain states. One potential therapeutic option gaining clinical acceptance is the cannabinoids, for which cannabinoid receptors (CB) are expressed on neurons and microglia. We studied the accumulation and activation of spinal and thalamic microglia in streptozotocin (STZ)-diabetic CD1 mice and the impact of cannabinoid receptor agonism/antagonism during the development of a chronic NeP state. We provided either intranasal or intraperitoneal cannabinoid agonists/antagonists at multiple doses both at the initiation of diabetes as well as after establishment of diabetes and its related NeP state.

Results

Tactile allodynia and thermal hypersensitivity were observed over 8 months in diabetic mice without intervention. Microglial density increases were seen in the dorsal spinal cord and in thalamic nuclei and were accompanied by elevation of phosphorylated p38 MAPK, a marker of microglial activation. When initiated coincidentally with diabetes, moderate-high doses of intranasal cannabidiol (cannaboid receptor 2 agonist) and intraperitoneal cannabidiol attenuated the development of an NeP state, even after their discontinuation and without modification of the diabetic state. Cannabidiol was also associated with restriction in elevation of microglial density in the dorsal spinal cord and elevation in phosphorylated p38 MAPK. When initiated in an established DPN NeP state, both CB1 and CB2 agonists demonstrated an antinociceptive effect until their discontinuation. There were no pronociceptive effects demonstated for either CB1 or CB2 antagonists.

Conclusions

The prevention of microglial accumulation and activation in the dorsal spinal cord was associated with limited development of a neuropathic pain state. Cannabinoids demonstrated antinociceptive effects in this mouse model of DPN. These results suggest that such interventions may also benefit humans with DPN, and their early introduction may also modify the development of the NeP state.  相似文献   
92.
Oxidative modifications of protein tyrosines have been implicated in multiple human diseases. Among these modifications, elevations in levels of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA), a major product of hydroxyl radical addition to tyrosine, has been observed in a number of pathologies. Here we report the first proteome survey of endogenous site-specific modifications, i.e. DOPA and its further oxidation product dopaquinone in mouse brain and heart tissues. Results from LC-MS/MS analyses included 50 and 14 DOPA-modified tyrosine sites identified from brain and heart, respectively, whereas only a few nitrotyrosine-containing peptides, a more commonly studied marker of oxidative stress, were detectable, suggesting the much higher abundance for DOPA modification as compared with tyrosine nitration. Moreover, 20 and 12 dopaquinone-modified peptides were observed from brain and heart, respectively; nearly one-fourth of these peptides were also observed with DOPA modification on the same sites. For both tissues, these modifications are preferentially found in mitochondrial proteins with metal binding properties, consistent with metal-catalyzed hydroxyl radical formation from mitochondrial superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. These modifications also link to a number of mitochondrially associated and other signaling pathways. Furthermore, many of the modification sites were common sites of previously reported tyrosine phosphorylation, suggesting potential disruption of signaling pathways. Collectively, the results suggest that these modifications are linked with mitochondrially derived oxidative stress and may serve as sensitive markers for disease pathologies.Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS)1 and reactive nitrogen species is a normal consequence of aerobic metabolism that, in excess, results in oxidative stress that further leads to oxidative modification of proteins, lipids, and DNA, events that may lead to altered cellular function and even cell death (1, 2). Chronic oxidative stress is well recognized as having a central role in disease and is responsible for both direct alteration of biomolecular structure-function and compensatory changes in cellular processes (14). It is increasingly recognized that oxidative modifications of proteins can serve as potential biomarkers indicative of the physiological states and changes that occur during disease progression. Thus, the ability to quantitatively measure specific protein oxidation products has the potential to provide the means to monitor the physiological state of a tissue or organism, in particular any progression toward pathology. Given Parkinson disease (PD) as an example, a number of oxidative modifications on proteins pertinent to PD have been identified, further supporting the potential importance of oxidative modifications to disease pathogenesis (5).Many oxidative modifications on specific amino acid residues, such as protein carbonylation (6), cysteine S-nitrosylation (79), cysteine oxidation to sulfinic or sulfonic acid (1012), methionine oxidation (13, 14), and tyrosine nitration (1521) within complex protein mixtures, have been detected by MS-based proteomics; however, their low abundance levels within complex proteomes often hinder confident identification of these potentially significant modifications (22). For example, tyrosine nitration is a well studied post-translational modification mediated by peroxynitrite (ONOO) or nitrogen dioxide (·NO2), which commonly occur in cells during oxidative stress and inflammation; however, only a small number of nitrotyrosine proteins have been identified from a given proteome sample because of insufficient analytical sensitivity and the chance of incorrect peptide assignments (19, 23). With recent advances in high resolution MS that provide high mass measurement accuracy, the ability to confidently identify modified peptides has been significantly enhanced (24).Hydroxyl radical (HO·) is one of the most reactive and major species generated under aerobic conditions in biological systems (1, 25, 26). Among several HO·-mediated oxidative modifications, the protein tyrosine modification 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) has been reported as a major product and index of HO· attack on tyrosine residues in proteins (Fig. 1) (27, 28). DOPA is also formed on protein tyrosine residues via controlled enzymatic pathways through enzymes such as tyrosinase or tyrosine hydroxylase (28). Once formed, protein-bound DOPA has the potential to initiate further oxidative reactions through binding and reducing transition metals or through redox cycling between catechol and quinone (dopaquinone) forms (29, 30). Recent studies have suggested that protein-bound DOPA is involved in triggering antioxidant defenses (30) and mediating oxidative damage to DNA (31). Moreover, elevated levels of protein-bound DOPA have been reported in several diseases, including atherosclerosis, cataracts, and myocardial disease, and in PD patients undergoing levodopa therapy (26, 3236). However, the specific DOPA-modified proteins, which could provide mechanistic knowledge of the progression of these diseases, have not been identified (27, 28). The ability to identify site-specific protein modifications should lead to a better understanding of the role of DOPA modification in disease pathologies as well as new molecular signatures or therapeutic targets for diseases.Open in a separate windowFig. 1.DOPA and dopaquinone formation from tyrosine.Therefore, in this study, we demonstrate the ability to identify site-specific DOPA and dopaquinone (DQ) modifications on protein tyrosine residues in normal mouse brain and heart tissues and their relative stoichiometries that are present in vivo under non-stressed conditions. Such endogenous protein modifications were detected using LC-MS/MS. The results from this global proteomics survey suggests that HO· in tissues under normal conditions is generated largely from the mitochondria and metal-binding proteins where the resulting DOPA/DQ modifications have the potential to disrupt mitochondrial respiration as well as alter tyrosine phosphorylation signaling pathways such as 14-3-3-mediated signaling in brain tissue.  相似文献   
93.
Programmed cell elimination is an important pathological mediator of disease. Multiple pathways to programmed cell death have been delineated, including apoptosis, autophagy and programmed necrosis. Cross-talk between the signaling pathways mediating each process has made it difficult to define specific mechanisms of in vivo programmed cell death. For this reason, many “apoptotic” diseases may involve other death signaling pathways. Recent advances in genetic complementation using mouse knockout models are helping to dissect apoptotic and necrotic cell death in different pathological states. The current state of research in this area is reviewed, focusing upon new findings describing the role of programmed necrosis induced by the mitochondrial permeability transition in mouse models of heart failure and diabetes.Key words: apoptosis, necrosis, mitochondrial permeability transition pore  相似文献   
94.
Stellate cells (SCs) of the entorhinal cortex generate prominent subthreshold oscillations that are believed to be important contributors to the hippocampal theta rhythm. The slow inward rectifier I h is expressed prominently in SCs and has been suggested to be a dominant factor in their integrative properties. We studied the input-output relationships in stellate cells (SCs) of the entorhinal cortex, both in control conditions and in the presence of the I h antagonist ZD7288. Our results show that I h is responsible for SCs’ subthreshold resonance, and contributes to enhanced spiking reliability to theta-rich stimuli. However, SCs still exhibit other traits of rhythmicity, such as subthreshold oscillations, under I h blockade. To clarify the effects of I h on SC spiking, we used a generalized form of principal component analysis to show that SCs select particular features with relevant temporal signatures from stimuli. The spike-selected mix of those features varies with the frequency content of the stimulus, emphasizing the inherent nonlinearity of SC responses. A number of controls confirmed that this selectivity represents a stimulus-induced change in the cellular input-output relationship rather than an artifact of the analysis technique. Sensitivity to slow features remained statistically significant in ZD7288. However, with I h blocked, slow stimulus features were less predictive of spikes and spikes conveyed less information about the stimulus over long time scales. Together, these results suggest that I h is an important contributor to the input-output relationships expressed by SCs, but that other factors in SCs also contribute to subthreshold oscillations and nonlinear selectivity to slow features. Action Editor: Xiao-Jing Wang  相似文献   
95.
Biochemistry (Moscow) - Reaction of (ADP-ribosyl)ation catalyzed by DNA-dependent proteins of the poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP) family, PARP1, PARP2, and PARP3, comprises the cellular response...  相似文献   
96.
Since the function of a short contiguous peptide minimotif can be introduced or eliminated by a single point mutation, these functional elements may be a source of human variation and a target of selection. We analyzed the variability of ∼300 000 minimotifs in 1092 human genomes from the 1000 Genomes Project. Most minimotifs have been purified by selection, with a 94% invariance, which supports important functional roles for minimotifs. Minimotifs are generally under negative selection, possessing high genomic evolutionary rate profiling (GERP) and sitewise likelihood-ratio (SLR) scores. Some are subject to neutral drift or positive selection, similar to coding regions. Most SNPs in minimotif were common variants, but with minor allele frequencies generally <10%. This was supported by low substation rates and few newly derived minimotifs. Several minimotif alleles showed different intercontinental and regional geographic distributions, strongly suggesting a role for minimotifs in adaptive evolution. We also note that 4% of PTM minimotif sites in histone tails were common variants, which has the potential to differentially affect DNA packaging among individuals. In conclusion, minimotifs are a source of functional genetic variation in the human population; thus, they are likely to be an important target of selection and evolution.  相似文献   
97.
Enteric bacteria encounter a wide range of pHs throughout the human intestinal tract. We conducted experimental evolution of Escherichia coli K-12 to isolate clones with increased fitness during growth under acidic conditions (pH 4.5 to 4.8). Twenty-four independent populations of E. coli K-12 W3110 were evolved in LBK medium (10 g/liter tryptone, 5 g/liter yeast extract, 7.45 g/liter KCl) buffered with homopiperazine-N,N′-bis-2-(ethanosulfonic acid) and malate at pH 4.8. At generation 730, the pH was decreased to 4.6 with HCl. By 2,000 generations, all populations had achieved higher endpoint growth than the ancestor at pH 4.6 but not at pH 7.0. All evolving populations showed a progressive loss of activity of lysine decarboxylase (CadA), a major acid stress enzyme. This finding suggests a surprising association between acid adaptation and moderation of an acid stress response. At generation 2,000, eight clones were isolated from four populations, and their genomes were sequenced. Each clone showed between three and eight missense mutations, including one in a subunit of the RNA polymerase holoenzyme (rpoB, rpoC, or rpoD). Missense mutations were found in adiY, the activator of the acid-inducible arginine decarboxylase (adiA), and in gcvP (glycine decarboxylase), a possible acid stress component. For tests of fitness relative to that of the ancestor, lacZ::kan was transduced into each strain. All acid-evolved clones showed a high fitness advantage at pH 4.6. With the cytoplasmic pH depressed by benzoate (at external pH 6.5), acid-evolved clones showed decreased fitness; thus, there was no adaptation to cytoplasmic pH depression. At pH 9.0, acid-evolved clones showed no fitness advantage. Thus, our acid-evolved clones showed a fitness increase specific to low external pH.  相似文献   
98.
n-Butanol is generated as a natural product of metabolism by several microorganisms, but almost all grow at mesophilic temperatures. A synthetic pathway for n-butanol production from acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) that functioned at 70°C was assembled in vitro from enzymes recruited from thermophilic bacteria to inform efforts for engineering butanol production into thermophilic hosts. Recombinant versions of eight thermophilic enzymes (β-ketothiolase [Thl], 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase [Hbd], and 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratase [Crt] from Caldanaerobacter subterraneus subsp. tengcongensis; trans-2-enoyl-CoA reductase [Ter] from Spirochaeta thermophila; bifunctional acetaldehyde dehydrogenase/alcohol dehydrogenase [AdhE] from Clostridium thermocellum; and AdhE, aldehyde dehydrogenase [Bad], and butanol dehydrogenase [Bdh] from Thermoanaerobacter sp. strain X514) were utilized to examine three possible pathways for n-butanol. These pathways differed in the two steps required to convert butyryl-CoA to n-butanol: Thl-Hbd-Crt-Ter-AdhE (C. thermocellum), Thl-Hbd-Crt-Ter-AdhE (Thermoanaerobacter X514), and Thl-Hbd-Crt-Ter-Bad-Bdh. n-Butanol was produced at 70°C, but with different amounts of ethanol as a coproduct, because of the broad substrate specificities of AdhE, Bad, and Bdh. A reaction kinetics model, validated via comparison to in vitro experiments, was used to determine relative enzyme ratios needed to maximize n-butanol production. By using large relative amounts of Thl and Hbd and small amounts of Bad and Bdh, >70% conversion to n-butanol was observed in vitro, but with a 60% decrease in the predicted pathway flux. With more-selective hypothetical versions of Bad and Bdh, >70% conversion to n-butanol is predicted, with a 19% increase in pathway flux. Thus, more-selective thermophilic versions of Bad, Bdh, and AdhE are needed to fully exploit biocatalytic n-butanol production at elevated temperatures.  相似文献   
99.
The inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R) is a ubiquitously expressed endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident calcium channel. Calcium release mediated by IP3Rs influences many signaling pathways, including those regulating apoptosis. IP3R activity is regulated by protein-protein interactions, including binding to proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressors to regulate cell death. Here we show that the IP3R binds to the tumor suppressor BRCA1. BRCA1 binding directly sensitizes the IP3R to its ligand, IP3. BRCA1 is recruited to the ER during apoptosis in an IP3R-dependent manner, and, in addition, a pool of BRCA1 protein is constitutively associated with the ER under non-apoptotic conditions. This is likely mediated by a novel lipid binding activity of the first BRCA1 C terminus domain of BRCA1. These findings provide a mechanistic explanation by which BRCA1 can act as a proapoptotic protein.  相似文献   
100.
The centromere is the DNA locus that dictates kinetochore formation and is visibly apparent as heterochromatin that bridges sister kinetochores in metaphase. Sister centromeres are compacted and held together by cohesin, condensin, and topoisomerase-mediated entanglements until all sister chromosomes bi-orient along the spindle apparatus. The establishment of tension between sister chromatids is essential for quenching a checkpoint kinase signal generated from kinetochores lacking microtubule attachment or tension. How the centromere chromatin spring is organized and functions as a tensiometer is largely unexplored. We have discovered that centromere chromatin loops generate an extensional/poleward force sufficient to release nucleosomes proximal to the spindle axis. This study describes how the physical consequences of DNA looping directly underlie the biological mechanism for sister centromere separation and the spring-like properties of the centromere in mitosis.  相似文献   
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号