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   5017篇
  免费   430篇
  国内免费   1篇
  5448篇
  2023年   33篇
  2022年   70篇
  2021年   117篇
  2020年   80篇
  2019年   139篇
  2018年   153篇
  2017年   127篇
  2016年   190篇
  2015年   254篇
  2014年   285篇
  2013年   341篇
  2012年   376篇
  2011年   378篇
  2010年   236篇
  2009年   227篇
  2008年   292篇
  2007年   248篇
  2006年   225篇
  2005年   185篇
  2004年   186篇
  2003年   175篇
  2002年   150篇
  2001年   81篇
  2000年   86篇
  1999年   67篇
  1998年   50篇
  1997年   27篇
  1996年   40篇
  1995年   32篇
  1994年   20篇
  1993年   29篇
  1992年   55篇
  1991年   31篇
  1990年   32篇
  1989年   45篇
  1988年   42篇
  1987年   25篇
  1986年   37篇
  1985年   28篇
  1984年   16篇
  1983年   18篇
  1982年   27篇
  1981年   18篇
  1980年   11篇
  1979年   22篇
  1978年   18篇
  1977年   18篇
  1976年   10篇
  1974年   18篇
  1973年   13篇
排序方式: 共有5448条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
991.

Background

Nanoparticles in contact with biological fluids interact with proteins and other biomolecules, thus forming a dynamic corona whose composition varies over time due to continuous protein association and dissociation events. Eventually equilibrium is reached, at which point the continued exchange will not affect the composition of the corona.

Results

We developed a simple and effective dynamic model of the nanoparticle protein corona in a body fluid, namely human plasma. The model predicts the time evolution and equilibrium composition of the corona based on affinities, stoichiometries and rate constants. An application to the interaction of human serum albumin, high density lipoprotein (HDL) and fibrinogen with 70 nm N-iso-propylacrylamide/N-tert-butylacrylamide copolymer nanoparticles is presented, including novel experimental data for HDL.

Conclusions

The simple model presented here can easily be modified to mimic the interaction of the nanoparticle protein corona with a novel biological fluid or compartment once new data will be available, thus opening novel applications in nanotoxicity and nanomedicine.  相似文献   
992.

Background

Celiac disease (CD) is an autoimmune gastrointestinal disorder characterized by the presence of anti-transglutaminase 2 (TG2) and anti-gliadin antibodies. Amongst the neurological dysfunctions associated with CD, ataxia represents the most common one.

Methods

We analyzed by immunohistochemistry, the anti-neural reactivity of the serum from 20 CD patients. To determine the role of anti-TG2 antibodies in ataxia, two anti-TG2 single chain variable fragments (scFv), isolated from a phage-display IgA antibody library, were characterized by immunohistochemistry and ELISA, and injected in mice to study their effects on motor coordination. We found that 75% of the CD patient population without evidence of neurological involvement, has circulating anti-neural IgA and/or IgG antibodies. Two anti-TG2 scFvs, cloned from one CD patient, stained blood vessels but only one reacted with neurons. This anti-TG2 antibody showed cross reactivity with the transglutaminase isozymes TG3 and TG6. Intraventricular injection of the anti-TG2 or the anti-TG2/3/6 cross-reactive scFv provoked transient, equally intensive ataxia in mice.

Conclusion

The serum from CD patients contains anti-TG2, TG3 and TG6 antibodies that may potentially cause ataxia.  相似文献   
993.
994.
995.
996.
According to the Brazilian Association of Organ Transplants, in 2015, 19,408 bone transplants were performed in Brazil, over 90% by Dental Surgeons. The surgical technique itself has a respectable number of reports regarding its clinical efficacy, as measured by long-term survival of dental implants in grafted areas. Uncertainty remains, however, as to whether fresh frozen grafts from human bone donors remain immunologically innocuous in the body of the host. Six male with no previous medical history of note, including systemic diseases, surgery or blood transfusion were selected. These patients underwent reconstructive procedures (sinus lifting) using fresh frozen human bone from a tissue bank. All patients had venous blood samples collected prior to surgery and 6 months after the procedure. Anti-HLA analysis for the detection of HLA (human leukocyte antigen) antibodies was performed using methods such as the LABScreen PRA Class I and Class II, LABScreen Single Antigen Class I and Class II, Luminex Platform. Reactive individuals to the screening tests (LABScreen PRA) were further investigated to determine the specificity of the antibodies detected (LABScreen Single Antigen) with a cutoff value of median fluorescence intensity ≥500. As a result, it was observed that two patients (33%) were positive in screening tests, one presenting with anti-HLA Class I and II sensitization and the other with anti-HLA class II. The specificity analysis showed that the patients sensitized to HLA class II presented 4 specificities, 3 of which immunologically relevant. In the second individual, 23 specificities were identified, 6 of which immunologically important for HLA class I and 4 specificities for HLA class II, 3 of these were immunologically important. All specificities detected had average fluorescence. These findings are suggestive that sinus-lifting procedures with allogeneic bone can induce immunological sensitization.  相似文献   
997.
998.
Epithelial‐mesenchymal transition (EMT) is an evolutionarily conserved cellular program, which is a prerequisite for the metastatic cascade in carcinoma progression. Here, we evaluate the EMT process using the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus embryo. In sea urchin embryos, the earliest EMT event is related to the acquisition of a mesenchymal phenotype by the spiculogenetic primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs) and their migration into the blastocoel. We investigated the effect of inhibiting the epidermal growth factor (EGF) signaling pathway on this process, and we observed that mesenchyme cell differentiation was blocked. In order to extend and validate our studies, we investigated the migratory capability and the level of potential epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFr) targets in a breast cancer cell line after EGF modulation. Altogether, our data highlight the sensitivity of the sea urchin embryo to anti‐EMT drugs and pinpoint the sea urchin embryo as a valuable in vivo model system for studying EMT and the screening of anti‐EMT candidates.  相似文献   
999.
Deep-sea hypersaline anoxic basins are polyextreme environments in the ocean’s interior characterized by the high density of brines that prevents mixing with the overlaying seawater, generating sharp chemoclines and redoxclines up to tens of meters thick that host a high concentration of microbial communities. Yet, a fundamental understanding of how such pycnoclines shape microbial life and the associated biogeochemical processes at a fine scale, remains elusive. Here, we applied high-precision sampling of the brine–seawater transition interface in the Suakin Deep, located at 2770 m in the central Red Sea, to reveal previously undocumented fine-scale community structuring and succession of metabolic groups along a salinity gradient only 1 m thick. Metagenomic profiling at a 10-cm-scale resolution highlighted spatial organization of key metabolic pathways and corresponding microbial functional units, emphasizing the prominent role and significance of salinity and oxygen in shaping their ecology. Nitrogen cycling processes are especially affected by the redoxcline with ammonia oxidation processes being taxa and layers specific, highlighting also the presence of novel microorganisms, such as novel Thaumarchaeota and anammox, adapted to the changing conditions of the chemocline. The findings render the transition zone as a critical niche for nitrogen cycling, with complementary metabolic networks, in turn underscoring the biogeochemical complexity of deep-sea brines.Subject terms: Microbial ecology, Metagenomics  相似文献   
1000.
CASPARIAN STRIP MEMBRANE DOMAIN PROTEINS (CASPs) are four-membrane-span proteins that mediate the deposition of Casparian strips in the endodermis by recruiting the lignin polymerization machinery. CASPs show high stability in their membrane domain, which presents all the hallmarks of a membrane scaffold. Here, we characterized the large family of CASP-like (CASPL) proteins. CASPLs were found in all major divisions of land plants as well as in green algae; homologs outside of the plant kingdom were identified as members of the MARVEL protein family. When ectopically expressed in the endodermis, most CASPLs were able to integrate the CASP membrane domain, which suggests that CASPLs share with CASPs the propensity to form transmembrane scaffolds. Extracellular loops are not necessary for generating the scaffold, since CASP1 was still able to localize correctly when either one of the extracellular loops was deleted. The CASP first extracellular loop was found conserved in euphyllophytes but absent in plants lacking Casparian strips, an observation that may contribute to the study of Casparian strip and root evolution. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), CASPL showed specific expression in a variety of cell types, such as trichomes, abscission zone cells, peripheral root cap cells, and xylem pole pericycle cells.Biological membranes are conceptually simple structures that may be generated in vitro according to simple physicochemical principles. In vivo, however, membranes are highly complex and host a plethora of proteins that mediate the transfer of molecules and communication across the membrane. Proteins may be trapped in membrane by their transmembrane domains, anchored by lipid tails, or attach to membrane-integral proteins. A further level of complexity is seen when membrane proteins are not equally distributed but occupy only a limited fraction of the available surface (i.e. when they are polarly localized or when they form small membrane subdomains in the micrometer range). The question of how membrane proteins are retained locally and prevented from diffusing freely is of high importance to cell biology. Polarly localized proteins may be retained in their respective domains by membrane fences; in such a situation, polarly localized proteins are mobile in their domains but cannot diffuse through tightly packed scaffold proteins forming a molecular fence within the membrane. Membrane fences delimiting polar domains have been described in different organisms. For example, diffusion between membrane compartments is prevented in budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) at the level of the bud neck (Barral et al., 2000; Takizawa et al., 2000); in ciliated vertebrate cells, between ciliary and periciliary membranes (Hu et al., 2010); in epithelial cells, between apical and basolateral membranes (van Meer and Simons, 1986); in neurons, between axon and soma (Kobayashi et al., 1992; Winckler et al., 1999; Nakada et al., 2003); and in spermatozoa, at the level of the annulus (Myles et al., 1984; Nehme et al., 1993). The existence of membrane scaffolds that prevent free protein diffusion has also been described in bacteria (Baldi and Barral, 2012; Schlimpert et al., 2012). In plants, we have shown the existence of a strict membrane fence in the root endodermis, where a median domain splits the cell in two lateral halves occupied by different sets of proteins (Alassimone et al., 2010). The situation in the plant endodermis is analogous to the separation of animal epithelia into apical and basolateral domains; indeed, a parallel between epithelia and endodermal cells has been drawn, despite the different origin of multicellularity in plants and animals (Grebe, 2011).The protein complexes responsible for the formation of membrane fences have been identified. Septins are a family of proteins able to oligomerize and form filaments (Saarikangas and Barral, 2011); their role in the formation of membrane fences has been demonstrated in several organisms and cellular situations, including the yeast bud neck (Barral et al., 2000; Takizawa et al., 2000), animal cilia (Hu et al., 2010), and mammalian spermatozoa (Ihara et al., 2005; Kissel et al., 2005; Kwitny et al., 2010). At the axonal initial segment of neurons, AnkyrinG is necessary to establish and maintain a membrane scaffold where different membrane proteins are immobilized and stabilized (Hedstrom et al., 2008; Sobotzik et al., 2009). In Caulobacter crescentus, the stalk protein Stp forms a complex that prevents diffusion between the cell body and stalk and between stalk compartments. Claudins and occludin are the main components of epithelial tight junctions (Furuse et al., 1993, 1998). Occludins are four-membrane-span proteins and belong to the MARVEL protein family (Sánchez-Pulido et al., 2002), as do Tricellulin and MARVELD3, which are also tight junction-associated proteins (Furuse et al., 1993; Ikenouchi et al., 2005; Steed et al., 2009).In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), our group identified a family of proteins that form a membrane fence in the endodermis (Roppolo et al., 2011). These CASPARIAN STRIP MEMBRANE DOMAIN PROTEINS (CASP1 to CASP5) are four-transmembrane proteins that form a median domain referred to as the Casparian strip membrane domain (CSD). CASPs are initially targeted to the whole plasma membrane, then they are quickly removed from lateral plasma membranes and remain localized exclusively at the CSD; there, they show an extremely low turnover, although they are eventually removed (Roppolo et al., 2011). The membrane proteins NOD26-LIKE INTRINSIC PROTEIN5;1 and BORON TRANSPORTER1 are restricted from diffusing through the CSD and remain polarly localized in the outer and inner lateral membranes, respectively; a fluorescent lipophilic molecule, when integrated in the outer endodermal membrane, was blocked at the level of the CSD and could not diffuse into the inner membrane (Roppolo et al., 2011). Besides making a plasma membrane diffusion barrier, CASPs have an important role in directing the modification of the cell wall juxtaposing their membrane domain: by interacting with secreted peroxidases, they mediate the deposition of lignin and the building up of the Casparian strips (Roppolo et al., 2011; Naseer et al., 2012; Lee et al., 2013). The two CASP activities, making membrane scaffolds and directing a modification of the cell wall, can be uncoupled: indeed, (1) formation of the CASP domain is independent from the deposition of lignin, and (2) interaction between CASPs and peroxidases can take place outside the CSD when CASPs are ectopically expressed (Lee et al., 2013).As CASPs are currently the only known proteins forming membrane fences in plants and because of their essential role in directing a local cell wall modification, we were interested in characterizing the repertoire of a large number of CASP-like (CASPL) proteins in the plant kingdom. Our aim was to provide the molecular basis for the discovery of additional membrane domains in plants and for the identification of proteins involved in local cell wall modifications. We extended our phylogenetic analysis outside of the plant kingdom and found conservation between CASPLs and the MARVEL protein family. Conserved residues are located in transmembrane domains, and we provide evidence suggesting that these domains are involved in CASP localization. We explored the potential use of the CASPL module in plants by investigating CASPL expression patterns and their ability to form membrane domains in the endodermis. Moreover, we related the appearance of the Casparian strips in the plant kingdom to the emergence of a CASP-specific signature that was not found in the genomes of plants lacking Casparian strips.  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