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   5185篇
  免费   623篇
  国内免费   1篇
  2021年   51篇
  2018年   62篇
  2017年   51篇
  2016年   92篇
  2015年   156篇
  2014年   157篇
  2013年   202篇
  2012年   223篇
  2011年   237篇
  2010年   149篇
  2009年   129篇
  2008年   185篇
  2007年   163篇
  2006年   183篇
  2005年   155篇
  2004年   151篇
  2003年   124篇
  2002年   184篇
  2001年   170篇
  2000年   159篇
  1999年   148篇
  1998年   68篇
  1997年   45篇
  1996年   62篇
  1995年   82篇
  1994年   59篇
  1993年   72篇
  1992年   134篇
  1991年   117篇
  1990年   137篇
  1989年   98篇
  1988年   119篇
  1987年   109篇
  1986年   91篇
  1985年   100篇
  1984年   81篇
  1983年   74篇
  1982年   76篇
  1981年   73篇
  1980年   67篇
  1979年   95篇
  1978年   91篇
  1977年   67篇
  1976年   64篇
  1975年   56篇
  1973年   49篇
  1972年   58篇
  1971年   50篇
  1968年   40篇
  1967年   43篇
排序方式: 共有5809条查询结果,搜索用时 718 毫秒
991.
Mutations in the gene encoding leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) are the most common cause of autosomal-dominant familial and late-onset sporadic Parkinson's disease (PD). LRRK2 is a large multi-domain protein featuring a GTP-binding C-terminal of Ras of complex proteins (ROC) (ROCO) domain combination unique for the ROCO protein family, directly followed by a kinase domain. Dimerization is a well-established phenomenon among protein kinases. Here, we confirm LRRK2 self-interaction, and provide evidence for general homo- and heterodimerization potential among the ROCO kinase family (LRRK2, LRRK1, and death-associated protein kinase 1). The ROCO domain was critically, though not exclusively involved in dimerization, as a LRRK2 deletion mutant lacking the ROCO domain retained dimeric properties. GTP binding did not appear to influence ROCOLRRK2 self-interaction. Interestingly, ROCOLRRK2 fragments exerted an inhibitory effect on both wild-type and the elevated G2019S LRRK2 autophosphorylation activity. Insertion of PD mutations into ROCOLRRK2 reduced self-interaction and led to a reduction of LRRK2 kinase inhibition. Collectively, these results suggest a functional link between ROCO interactions and kinase activity of wild-type and mutant LRRK2. Importantly, our finding of ROCOLRRK2 fragment-mediated LRRK2 kinase inhibition offers a novel lead for drug design and thus might have important implications for new therapeutic avenues in PD.  相似文献   
992.
The xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) has recently been detected in prostate cancer tissues and may play a role in tumorigenesis. It is currently unclear how this virus is transmitted and which factors promote its spread in the prostate. We show that amyloidogenic fragments known as semen-derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI) originating from prostatic acid phosphatase greatly increase XMRV infections of primary prostatic epithelial and stromal cells. Hybrid simian/human immunodeficiency chimeric virus particles pseudotyped with XMRV envelope protein were used to demonstrate that the enhancing effect of SEVI, or of human semen itself, was at the level of viral attachment and entry. SEVI enhanced XMRV infectivity but did not bypass the requirement for the xenotropic and polytropic retrovirus receptor 1. Furthermore, XMRV RNA was detected in prostatic secretions of some men with prostate cancer. The fact that the precursor of SEVI is produced in abundance by the prostate indicates that XMRV replication occurs in an environment that provides a natural enhancer of viral infection, and this may play a role in the spread of this virus in the human population.Viruses are etiologic agents of various human cancers, including cervical carcinoma (caused by human papillomavirus), Kaposi''s sarcoma (caused by human herpesvirus 8), hepatocellular carcinoma (caused by hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus), and adult T-cell leukemia (caused by human T-cell leukemia virus type 1) (6). Genetic and epidemiologic evidence suggests that prostate cancer may also have an infectious etiology, although a causative agent has not been identified (4, 12). The gammaretrovirus xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) is a candidate human tumor virus based on its association in human prostate tumors with a reduced-activity variant of the antiviral gene, RNASEL (also known as the hereditary prostate cancer 1 gene or HPC1) (17) and because it is a member of a viral family known to cause leukemias and lymphomas in different mammalian species (8). Interferon, through its effector RNase L, potently inhibits XMRV replication (5). XMRV integration sites in human prostate cancer tissues were mapped to cancer breakpoints, common fragile sites, micro-RNA genes, and cancer-related genes (11). Many of these genes are implicated directly or indirectly in prostate cancer and metabolic pathways that affect prostate cancer, including androgen signaling. XMRV has also been observed in prostate tissue from a nonfamilial prostate cancer patient and in an individual without prostate cancer (7). The possible role of XMRV in prostatic cancer raises questions about its ability to infect the prostate and the route of viral transmission.Recently, it has been shown that fragments of prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP), an abundant nonspecific protein phosphatase produced by the prostate (18) and secreted in semen in large quantities (about 2 mg/ml) (16), form amyloid fibrils that drastically enhance human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection (14). The fibrils of PAP248-286, termed semen-derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI), enhanced the infectious virus titer by several orders of magnitude by capturing HIV-1 virions and promoting their attachment to target cells. The ability of SEVI to promote the interaction between virions and the cell surface is independent of the viral glycoprotein and hence is not restricted to HIV-1, although subsequent fusion between the viral and cellular membranes still required gp120, CD4, and an appropriate coreceptor (14). A recent study indicates that the positive charges on SEVI (pI = 10.21) promote infectivity by neutralizing negative-charge repulsion between HIV particles and the cell surface (15).Because SEVI originates from the prostate (the organ from which XMRV infection was discovered [17]) and promotes viral attachment in a relatively nonspecific manner, we sought to determine its effect on XMRV infection. Here we demonstrate that XMRV infectivity is greatly enhanced by SEVI or human semen and that XMRV RNA is detectable in expressed prostatic secretions (EPS) from human tumor-bearing prostates.  相似文献   
993.
Accumulation of amyloid β (Aβ) oligomers in the brain is toxic to synapses and may play an important role in memory loss in Alzheimer disease. However, how these toxins are built up in the brain is not understood. In this study we investigate whether impairments of insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) receptors play a role in aggregation of Aβ. Using primary neuronal culture and immortal cell line models, we show that expression of normal insulin or IGF-1 receptors confers cells with abilities to reduce exogenously applied Aβ oligomers (also known as ADDLs) to monomers. In contrast, transfection of malfunctioning human insulin receptor mutants, identified originally from patient with insulin resistance syndrome, or inhibition of insulin and IGF-1 receptors via pharmacological reagents increases ADDL levels by exacerbating their aggregation. In healthy cells, activation of insulin and IGF-1 receptor reduces the extracellular ADDLs applied to cells via seemingly the insulin-degrading enzyme activity. Although insulin triggers ADDL internalization, IGF-1 appears to keep ADDLs on the cell surface. Nevertheless, both insulin and IGF-1 reduce ADDL binding, protect synapses from ADDL synaptotoxic effects, and prevent the ADDL-induced surface insulin receptor loss. Our results suggest that dysfunctions of brain insulin and IGF-1 receptors contribute to Aβ aggregation and subsequent synaptic loss.Abnormal protein misfolding and aggregation are common features in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer (AD),2 Parkinson, Huntington, and prion diseases (13). In the AD brain, intracellular accumulation of hyperphosphorylated Tau aggregates and extracellular amyloid deposits comprise the two major pathological hallmarks of the disease (1, 4). Aβ aggregation has been shown to initiate from Aβ1–42, a peptide normally cleaved from the amyloid precursor protein (APP) via activities of α- and γ-secretases (5, 6). A large body of evidence in the past decade has indicated that accumulated soluble oligomers of Aβ1–42, likely the earliest or intermediate forms of Aβ deposition, are potently toxic to neurons. The toxic effects of Aβ oligomers include synaptic structural deterioration (7, 8) and functional deficits such as inhibition of synaptic transmission (9) and synaptic plasticity (1013), as well as memory loss (11, 14, 15). Accumulation of high levels of these oligomers may also trigger inflammatory processes and oxidative stress in the brain probably due to activation of astrocytes and microglia (16, 17). Thus, to understand how a physiologically produced peptide becomes a misfolded toxin has been one of the key issues in uncovering the molecular pathogenesis of the disease.Aβ accumulation and aggregation could derive from overproduction or impaired clearance. Mutations of APP or presenilins 1 and 2, for example, are shown to cause overproduction of Aβ1–42 and amyloid deposits in the brain of early onset AD (18, 19). Because early onset AD accounts for less than 5% of entire AD population, APP and presenilin mutations cannot represent a universal mechanism for accumulation/aggregation of Aβ in the majority of AD cases. With respect to clearance, Aβ is normally removed by both global and local mechanisms, with the former requiring vascular transport across the blood-brain barrier (20, 21) and the latter via local enzymatic digestions by several metalloproteases, including neprilysin, insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), and endothelin converting enzymes 1 and 2 (2224).The fact that insulin is a common substrate for most of the identified Aβ-degrading enzymes has drawn attention of investigators to roles of insulin signaling in Aβ clearance. Increases in insulin levels frequently seen in insulin resistance may compete for these enzymes and thus contribute to Aβ accumulation. Indeed, insulin signaling has been shown to regulate expression of metalloproteases such as IDE (25, 26), and influence aspects of Aβ metabolism and catabolism (27). In the endothelium of the brain-blood barrier and glial cells, insulin signaling is reported to regulate protein-protein interactions in an uptake cascade involving low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein and its ligands ApoE and α2-macroglobulin, a system known to bind and clear Aβ via endocytosis and/or vascular transport (28, 29). Similarly, circulating IGF-1 has been reported to play a role in Aβ clearance probably via facilitating brain-blood barrier transportation (30, 31).In the brain, insulin signaling plays a role in learning and memory (3234), potentially linking insulin resistance to AD dementia. Recently we and others have shown that Aβ oligomers interact with neuronal insulin receptors to cause impairments of the receptor expression and function (3537). These impairments mimic the Aβ oligomer-induced synaptic long term potentiation inhibition and can be overcome by insulin treatment (35, 38). Consistently, impairments of both IR and IGF-1R have been reported in the AD brain (3941).Based on these results, we ask whether impairment of insulin and IGF-1 signaling contribute to Aβ oligomer build-up in brain cells. To address this question, we set out to test roles of IR and IGF-1R in cellular clearance and transport of Aβ oligomers (ADDLs) applied to primary neuronal cultures and cell lines overexpressing IR and IGF-1R. Our results show that insulin and IGF-1 receptors function to reduce Aβ oligomers to monomers, and prevent Aβ oligomer-induced synaptic toxicity both at the level of synapse composition and structure. By contrast, receptor impairments resulting from “kinase-dead” insulin receptor mutations, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor of the insulin and IGF-1 receptor, or an inhibitory IGF-1 receptor antibody increase ADDL aggregation in the extracellular medium. Our results provide cellular evidence linking insulin and IGF-1 signaling to amyloidogenesis.  相似文献   
994.
Alpha-dystroglycanopathies such as Walker Warburg syndrome represent an important subgroup of the muscular dystrophies that have been related to defective O-mannosylation of alpha-dystroglycan. In many patients, the underlying genetic etiology remains unsolved. Isolated muscular dystrophy has not been described in the congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) caused by N-linked protein glycosylation defects. Here, we present a genetic N-glycosylation disorder with muscular dystrophy in the group of CDG type I. Extensive biochemical investigations revealed a strongly reduced dolichol-phosphate-mannose (Dol-P-Man) synthase activity. Sequencing of the three DPM subunits and complementation of DPM3-deficient CHO2.38 cells showed a pathogenic p.L85S missense mutation in the strongly conserved coiled-coil domain of DPM3 that tethers catalytic DPM1 to the ER membrane. Cotransfection experiments in CHO cells showed a reduced binding capacity of DPM3(L85S) for DPM1. Investigation of the four Dol-P-Man-dependent glycosylation pathways in the ER revealed strongly reduced O-mannosylation of alpha-dystroglycan in a muscle biopsy, thereby explaining the clinical phenotype of muscular dystrophy. This mild Dol-P-Man biosynthesis defect due to DPM3 mutations is a cause for alpha-dystroglycanopathy, thereby bridging the congenital disorders of glycosylation with the dystroglycanopathies.  相似文献   
995.
A survey to determine the geographical distribution and relative abundance of potential vectors of scrub typhus was conducted from October to November 2006 at 13 localities throughout the Republic of Korea. Apodemus agrarius accounted for 97.6% (80/82) of all rodents, while only 2 Myodes regulus (2/82) were collected. A total of 10,860 chiggers were collected from A. agrarius belonging to 4 genera and 8 species, while only Walchia fragilis (40) was collected from Myodes regulus. Leptotrombidium pallidum (8,137; 74.9%), a vector of scrub typhus, was the predominant species collected from A. agrarius followed by Leptotrombidium scutellare (2,057, 18.9%), Leptotrombidium palpale (279; 2.7%), Leptotrombidium orientale (232; 2.1%), and Leptotrombidium zetum (79; 0.7%), Neotrombicula tamiyai (58; 0.5%), Euschoengastica koreaensis (16; 0.1%), and Cheladonta ikaoensis (2; < 0.1%). L. pallidum was the predominant chigger collected at collection sites in Gangwon (100%), Gyeonggi (87.2%), Chungnam (100%), Chungbuk (100%), Jeonbuk (73.9%), Jeonnam (77.0%), and Gyeongbuk (66.1%) provinces, whereas L. scutellare was the predominant chigger collected in Gyeongnam province (77.9%) and Jeju Island (62.3%). Data suggest a correlation between chigger population abundance and human cases of scrub typhus in Korea.  相似文献   
996.
Propofol is the most widely used injectable general anesthetic. Its targets include ligand-gated ion channels such as the GABAA receptor, but such receptor-channel complexes remain challenging to study at atomic resolution. Until structural biology methods advance to the point of being able to deal with systems such as the GABAA receptor, it will be necessary to use more tractable surrogates to probe the molecular details of anesthetic recognition. We have previously shown that recognition of inhalational general anesthetics by the model protein apoferritin closely mirrors recognition by more complex and clinically relevant protein targets; here we show that apoferritin also binds propofol and related GABAergic anesthetics, and that the same binding site mediates recognition of both inhalational and injectable anesthetics. Apoferritin binding affinities for a series of propofol analogs were found to be strongly correlated with the ability to potentiate GABA responses at GABAA receptors, validating this model system for injectable anesthetics. High resolution x-ray crystal structures reveal that, despite the presence of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors, anesthetic recognition is mediated largely by van der Waals forces and the hydrophobic effect. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that the ligands undergo considerable fluctuations about their equilibrium positions. Finally, apoferritin displays both structural and dynamic responses to anesthetic binding, which may mimic changes elicited by anesthetics in physiologic targets like ion channels.Most general anesthetics alter the activity of ligand-gated ion channels, and electrophysiology, photolabeling, and transgenic animal experiments imply that this effect contributes to the mechanism of anesthesia (19). Although the molecular mechanism for this effect is not yet clear, photolabeling studies indicate that anesthetics bind within the transmembrane regions of Cys-loop ligand-gated ion channels such as the nicotinic acetylcholine and the γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)2 type A receptors (2, 911). Practical difficulties associated with overexpression, purification, and crystallization of ion channels have thus far stymied investigation of the structural and energetic bases underlying anesthetic recognition. However, general anesthetics also bind specifically to sites in soluble proteins, including firefly luciferase, human serum albumin (HSA), and horse spleen apoferritin (HSAF) (1214), and x-ray crystal structures have been determined for complexes of these proteins with several general anesthetics (1416). In particular, HSAF is an attractive model for studying anesthetic-protein interactions because it has the highest affinity for anesthetics of any protein studied to date, has a unique anesthetic binding site, and is a multimer of 4-helix bundles, much like the putative anesthetic binding regions in ligand-gated channels. In addition, apoferritin is commercially available and crystallizes readily. Most importantly, however, the affinity of HSAF for a broad range of general anesthetics is highly correlated with anesthetic potency, confirming the utility and relevance of this model system (17).Ferritin is a 24-mer iron-binding protein. It sequesters free iron ions, thereby helping to maintain non-toxic levels of iron in the cell and functioning as a cellular iron reservoir (18, 19). Each subunit has a molecular mass of ∼20 kDa and adopts a 4-helix bundle fold. The 24-mer forms a hollow, roughly spherical particle with 432 symmetry. Two ferritin isoforms are found in mammals, heavy (H) and light (L), and 24-mers can contain all H chains, all L chains, or mixtures of varying stoichiometry; the biological significance of the H/L ratio is not yet clear (20).In addition to the large central cavity, the apoferritin 24-mer contains additional, smaller cavities at the dimer interfaces; these smaller cavities are of an appropriate size to accommodate anesthetics. X-ray crystallography has confirmed that this interfacial cavity is the binding site for the inhalational anesthetics halothane and isoflurane, and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) measurements have shown that this interfacial site has a relatively high affinity for these anesthetics (Ka values ∼105 m−1) (14).General anesthetics fall into at least two broad classes, inhalational and injectable. Whereas both classes of drugs can induce the amnesia, immobility, and hypnosis associated with anesthesia, molecules in the two classes differ substantially in their chemical and physical properties. Prior to this work, only one crystal structure has been available for an injectable general anesthetic complexed with a protein-propofol, bound to HSA (16). This structure revealed that the propofol binding sites on this protein do not, by and large, overlap with the binding sites for inhalational anesthetics. This raises the question of whether the two types of drug invariably bind to separate sets of targets, or whether they could possibly transduce their effects by binding to a single protein site. To address this question we assessed whether propofol binds to the apoferritin site that had been previously identified as the binding site for inhalational anesthetics. Using x-ray crystallography, calorimetry, and molecular modeling, we show that the two types of anesthetics do indeed share a common binding site. We also investigated structure-binding relationships for a homologous series of propofol-like compounds and found that, remarkably, the energetics of binding to apoferritin precisely match the compound''s abilities to potentiate GABA effects at GABAA receptors, suggesting that similar structural and physicochemical factors mediate anesthetic recognition by both apoferritin and ligand-gated ion channels. This argues for the possibility that anesthetic binding might trigger structural and dynamic alterations in GABAA receptors similar to those observed in apoferritin, and that these changes underlie anesthetic effects.  相似文献   
997.
Human NADPH : cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (POR) is encoded by a single gene on chromosome 7q11.2. This flavoprotein donates electrons derived from NADPH to a variety of acceptor proteins, including squalene monooxygenase, heme oxygenase, cytochrome b5, and many microsomal cytochromes P450 (CYPs), which are involved in oxidative drug metabolism, steroidogenesis, and other functions. Numerous aspects related to cellular POR expression have not been systematically investigated. Interestingly, POR expression is lower compared to CYPs and may thus be limiting for monooxygenase activities, but conversely, POR knock‐out in mice resulted in compensatory upregulation of CYPs. POR may also influence intracellular cholesterol and lipid homeostasis. To systematically investigate such effects, we developed specific POR gene silencing in cell lines and primary human hepatocytes by RNA interference using small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). In HepG2 cells, POR mRNA could be reduced by 95% over 4 days accompanied by reduced protein content and activity. In primary human hepatocytes, POR mRNA knock‐down was less effective and more variable. Analysis of CYPs indicated induction of CYP3A4 but not CYP1A2 or CYP2D6. These results demonstrate that POR can be efficiently and almost completely silenced in HepG2 cells and, at least partially, in primary human hepatocytes. This will allow systematic studies of various consequences of POR variability in human cells.  相似文献   
998.
Quantitative proteomics based on isotopic labeling has become the method of choice to accurately determine changes in protein abundance in highly complex mixtures. Isotope‐coded protein labeling (ICPL), which is based on the nicotinoylation of proteins at lysine residues and free N‐termini was used as a simple, reliable and fast method for the comparative analysis of three different cellular states of the halophilic archaeon Halobacterium salinarum through pairwise comparison. The labeled proteins were subjected to SDS‐PAGE, in‐gel digested and the proteolytic peptides were separated by LC and analyzed by MALDI‐TOF/TOF MS. Automated quantitation was performed by comparing the MS peptide signals of 12C and 13C nicotinoylated isotopic peptide pairs. The transitions between (i) aerobic growth in complex versus synthetic medium and (ii) aerobic versus anaerobic/phototrophic growth, both in complex medium, provide a wide span in nutrient and energy supply for the cell and thus allowed optimal studies of proteome changes. In these two studies, 559 and 643 proteins, respectively, could be quantified allowing a detailed analysis of the adaptation of H. salinarum to changes of its living conditions. The subtle cellular response to a wide variation of nutrient and energy supply demonstrates a fine tuning of the cellular protein inventory.  相似文献   
999.
1000.
Both obesity and aging increase intrahepatic fat (IHF) content, which leads to nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and metabolic abnormalities such as insulin resistance. We evaluated the effects of diet and diet in conjunction with exercise on IHF content and associated metabolic abnormalities in obese older adults. Eighteen obese (BMI ≥30 kg/m2) older (≥65 years old) adults completed a 6‐month clinical trial. Participants were randomized to diet (D group; n = 9) or diet + exercise (D+E group; n = 9). Primary outcome was IHF quantified by magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Secondary outcomes included insulin sensitivity (assessed by oral glucose tolerance), body composition (assessed by dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry), physical function (VO2peak and strength), glucose, lipids, and blood pressure (BP). Body weight (D: ?9 ± 1%, D+E: ?10 ± 2%, both P < 0.05) and fat mass (D: ?13 ± 3%, D+E ?16 ± 3%, both P < 0.05) decreased in both groups but there was no difference between groups. IHF decreased to a similar extent in both groups (D: ?46 ± 11%, D+E: ?45 ± 8%, both P < 0.05), which was accompanied by comparable improvements in insulin sensitivity (D: 66 ± 25%, D+E: 68 ± 28%, both P < 0.05). The relative decreases in IHF correlated directly with relative increases in insulin sensitivity index (ISI) (r = ?0.52; P < 0.05). Improvements in VO2peak, strength, plasma triglyceride (TG), and low‐density lipoprotein–cholesterol concentration, and diastolic BP occurred in the D+E group (all P < 0.05) but not in the D group. Diet with or without exercise results in significant decreases in IHF content accompanied by considerable improvements in insulin sensitivity in obese older adults. The addition of exercise to diet therapy improves physical function and other obesity‐ and aging‐related metabolic abnormalities.  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