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   4840篇
  免费   382篇
  国内免费   1篇
  5223篇
  2023年   25篇
  2022年   64篇
  2021年   119篇
  2020年   51篇
  2019年   73篇
  2018年   97篇
  2017年   88篇
  2016年   150篇
  2015年   260篇
  2014年   249篇
  2013年   333篇
  2012年   420篇
  2011年   400篇
  2010年   251篇
  2009年   196篇
  2008年   311篇
  2007年   303篇
  2006年   268篇
  2005年   259篇
  2004年   243篇
  2003年   221篇
  2002年   240篇
  2001年   43篇
  2000年   35篇
  1999年   50篇
  1998年   52篇
  1997年   45篇
  1996年   19篇
  1995年   35篇
  1994年   31篇
  1993年   37篇
  1992年   27篇
  1991年   14篇
  1990年   16篇
  1989年   18篇
  1988年   11篇
  1987年   8篇
  1986年   9篇
  1985年   19篇
  1984年   11篇
  1983年   9篇
  1982年   18篇
  1981年   10篇
  1980年   7篇
  1979年   8篇
  1978年   7篇
  1976年   10篇
  1975年   6篇
  1972年   5篇
  1969年   6篇
排序方式: 共有5223条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
91.

Background

Influenza A viruses are characterised by their rapid evolution, and the appearance of point mutations in the viral hemagglutinin (HA) domain causes seasonal epidemics. The A(H3N2) virus has higher mutation rate than the A(H1N1) virus. The aim of this study was to reconstruct the evolutionary dynamics of the A(H3N2) viruses circulating in Italy between 2004 and 2012 in the light of the forces driving viral evolution.

Methods

Phylodinamic analyses were made using a Bayesian method, and codon-specific positive selection acting on the HA coding sequence was evaluated.

Results

Global and local phylogenetic analyses showed that the Italian strains collected between 2004 and 2012 grouped into five significant Italian clades that included viral sequences circulating in different epidemic seasons. The time of the most recent common ancestor (tMRCA) of the tree root was between May and December 2003. The tMRCA estimates of the major clades suggest that the origin of a new viral strain precedes the effective circulation of the strain in the Italian population by 6–31 months, thus supporting a central role of global migration in seeding the epidemics in Italy. The study of selection pressure showed that four codons were under positive selection, three of which were located in antigenic sites. Analysis of population dynamics showed the alternation of periods of exponential growth followed by a decrease in the effective number of infections corresponding to epidemic and inter-epidemic seasons.

Conclusions

Our analyses suggest that a complex interaction between the immune status of the population, migrations, and a few selective sweeps drive the influenza A(H3N2) virus evolution. Our findings suggest the possibility of the year-round survival of local strains even in temperate zones, a hypothesis that warrants further investigation.  相似文献   
92.
93.
Endothelial cell junctional adhesion molecule (JAM)-C has been proposed to regulate neutrophil migration. In the current study, we used function-blocking mAbs against human JAM-C to determine its role in human leukocyte adhesion and transendothelial cell migration under flow conditions. JAM-C surface expression in HUVEC was uniformly low, and treatment with inflammatory cytokines TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, or LPS did not increase its surface expression as assessed by FACS analysis. By immunofluorescence microscopy, JAM-C staining showed sparse localization to cell-cell junctions on resting or cytokine-activated HUVEC. Surprisingly, staining of detergent-permeabilized HUVEC revealed a large intracellular pool of JAM-C that showed little colocalization with von Willebrand factor. Adhesion studies in an in vitro flow model showed that functional blocking JAM-C mAb alone had no inhibitory effect on polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) adhesion or transmigration, whereas mAb to ICAM-1 significantly reduced transmigration. Interestingly, JAM-C-blocking mAbs synergized with a combination of PECAM-1, ICAM-1, and CD99-blocking mAbs to inhibit PMN transmigration. Overexpression of JAM-C by infection with a lentivirus JAM-C GFP fusion protein did not increase adhesion or extent of transmigration of PMN or evoke a role for JAM-C in transendothelial migration. These data suggest that JAM-C has a minimal role, if any, in PMN transmigration in this model and that ICAM-1 is the preferred endothelial-expressed ligand for PMN beta(2) integrins during transendothelial migration.  相似文献   
94.
95.
Due to the inherent immune evasion properties of the HIV envelope, broadly neutralizing HIV-specific antibodies capable of suppressing HIV infection are rarely produced by infected individuals. We examined the feasibility of utilizing genetic engineering to circumvent the restricted capacity of individuals to endogenously produce broadly neutralizing HIV-specific antibodies. We constructed a single lentiviral vector that encoded the heavy and light chains of 2G12, a broadly neutralizing anti-HIV human antibody, and that efficiently transduced and directed primary human B cells to secrete 2G12. To evaluate the capacity of this approach to provide protection from in vivo HIV infection, we used the humanized NOD/SCID/γcnull mouse model, which becomes populated with human B cells, T cells, and macrophages after transplantation with human hematopoietic stem cells (hu-HSC) and develops in vivo infection after inoculation with HIV. The plasma of the irradiated NOD/SCID/γcnull mice transplanted with hu-HSC transduced with the 2G12-encoding lentivirus contained 2G12 antibody, likely secreted by progeny human lymphoid and/or myeloid cells. After intraperitoneal inoculation with high-titer HIV-1JR-CSF, mice engrafted with 2G12-transduced hu-HSC displayed marked inhibition of in vivo HIV infection as manifested by a profound 70-fold reduction in plasma HIV RNA levels and an almost 200-fold reduction in HIV-infected human cell numbers in mouse spleens, compared to control hu-HSC-transplanted NOD/SCID/γcnull mice inoculated with equivalent high-titer HIV-1JR-CSF. These results support the potential efficacy of this new gene therapy approach of using lentiviral vectors encoding a mixture of broadly neutralizing HIV antibodies for the treatment of HIV infection, particularly infection with multiple-drug-resistant isolates.While broadly neutralizing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific antibodies have the capacity to prevent or suppress HIV infection, they are rarely produced by infected individuals, thereby markedly compromising the ability of the humoral response to control HIV infection (reviewed in reference 28). The high degree of sequence variability in the gp120 structure limits the number of highly conserved epitopes available for targeting by neutralizing antibodies (40). In addition, HIV utilizes several mechanisms to shield the limited number of conserved neutralizing epitopes from the potentially potent antiviral effects of HIV envelope-specific antibodies (14). First, the envelope protein is heavily glycosylated, and the linkage of the most immunoreactive envelope peptide structures to poorly immunogenic glycans shields them from antibody binding (37). Second, exposure of neutralizing epitopes not protected from antibody binding by glycosylation is greatly reduced by trimerization of the gp120-gp41 structure (5). Third, susceptibility of other neutralizing epitopes to antibodies is greatly reduced by limiting their accessibility to antibody binding to the brief transient phase of conformational changes that occur only during binding of the envelope protein to its cellular receptors, CD4 and CCR5 or CXCR4 (41). These intrinsic structural features of gp120 greatly reduce the capacity of natural HIV infection or vaccination to generate broadly neutralizing antibodies able to prevent or control infection. Despite these constraints, rare human antibodies with broad anti-HIV neutralizing activity, i.e., 2G12, b12, 2F5, and 4E10, have been isolated (2).The capacity of passive immunization with neutralizing antibodies to prevent infection was suggested by challenge studies demonstrating that transferred neutralizing antibodies protected monkeys from infection by simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) and simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) (15). These studies were extended to humans, including several studies that examined the effect of passive immunotherapy using 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 on inhibition of HIV replication in infected individuals (20). Passive immunotherapy with a triple combination of 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 delayed viral rebound after the cessation of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), and activity of 2G12 was critical for inhibitory activity by this antibody combination (18). The key role of 2G12 in suppressing HIV replication was supported by the development of viral rebound in parallel with the emergence of HIV isolates resistant to neutralization by 2G12 (19).While HIV infection may be controlled by the lifelong treatment of HIV-infected individuals with periodic infusions of neutralizing-antibody cocktails every few weeks, this is not a practical or cost-effective therapeutic approach. Eliciting these antibodies by vaccination has not been successful. Therefore, we investigated whether we could circumvent the mechanisms that limit the endogenous production of broadly neutralizing HIV-specific antibodies using a molecular genetic approach to generate B cells that secrete these protective antibodies. In a proof-of-concept study, we examined the capacity of a single lentiviral vector to express the heavy and light chains of the 2G12 antibody, a well-studied anti-HIV human antibody that has broad neutralizing activity both against T cell line-adapted and primary HIV isolates (31). The 2G12 antibody was generated by applying murine/human xenohybridoma technology to establish human hybridoma cell lines from B cells isolated from HIV-infected individuals (16), and it targets the high-mannose and/or hybrid glycans of residues 295, 332, and 392 and peripheral glycans from residues 386 and 448 on gp120. In the current study we demonstrated that a lentiviral vector encoding the heavy and light chains of the 2G12 antibody reprogrammed B cells in vitro to secrete 2G12 with functional neutralizing activity. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the 2G12 lentiviral vector genetically modified human hematopoietic stem cells (hu-HSC), enabling them to differentiate in vivo into progeny cells that secreted 2G12 antibody that inhibited the development of in vivo HIV infection in humanized mice.  相似文献   
96.
The aim of the study was to examine the effects of exercise on soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (sVCAM-1) and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (sICAM-1) in sickle cell trait (SCT) athletes with or without alpha-thalassemia. Six athletes with SCT, seven athletes with both SCT and alpha-thalassemia (SCTAT), and seven control athletes (Cont) performed an incremental and maximal test on cycloergometer. Levels of sICAM-1 and sVCAM-1 were assessed at rest, immediately after the end of exercise, and 1, 2, and 24 h after exercise. Although Cont and SCTAT groups exhibited similar basal plasma levels of inflammatory and adhesion molecules, the SCT group had higher sVCAM-1 basal concentrations. Incremental exercise resulted in a significant increase of sVCAM-1 in all subjects, which remained elevated only in the SCT group during the recovery period. In conclusion, as sVCAM-1 increased with exercise and during the recovery period, our findings support the concept that SCT athletes might be at risk for microcirculatory disturbances and adhesive phenomena developing at rest and several hours after exercise. alpha-Thalassemia might be considered protective among exercising SCT subjects.  相似文献   
97.
Svalbard reindeer (Rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus) live under austere nutritional conditions on the high-arctic archipelago of Svalbard, while semi-domesticated Norwegian reindeer (R. tarandus tarandus) migrate between lush coastal summer pastures and inland winter pastures with lichens on mainland Norway. Svalbard reindeer are known to have high rumen concentrations of cellulolytic bacteria, ranging from 15% of the viable population in summer to 35% in winter, compared to only 2.5% in Norwegian reindeer. Their rumen bacterial diversity was investigated through comparative analyses of 16S rRNA gene sequences (∼1.5 kb in length) generated from clone libraries (n = 121) and bacterial isolates (n = 51). LIBSHUFF comparisons of the composition of the two 16S rRNA libraries from Norwegian reindeer showed a significant effect of artificial feeding compared to natural pasture, but failed to yield significant differences between libraries from Norwegian reindeer and Svalbard reindeer. The combined sequences from reindeer were not significantly different from those reported in wild Thompson’s gazelle in Kenya but did differ from those reported in domestic cattle in Japan. A total of 90 distinct operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were identified by employing a criterion of 97% similarity, while the Chao1 index estimated the reindeer bacterial rumen population richness at 698 OTUs. The majority of the clone library sequences (92.5%) represented novel strains with <97% identity to any known sequence in the public database, most of them affiliated with the bacterial phylum Firmicutes (low G+C Gram-positives) related to the order Clostridiales (76.7%), while Gram-negative bacteria in the Bacteriodales (Prevotella–Bacteroides group) contributed to 22.5%. Also, six of the isolates were putatively novel strains, possibly representing new species in the Clostridium subphylum (cluster XIVa), Actinomyces and Butyrivibrio.  相似文献   
98.
Central obesity shows impaired platelet responses to the antiaggregating effects of nitric oxide (NO), prostacyclin, and their effectors—guanosine 3′,5′‐cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) and adenosine 3′,5′‐cyclic monophosphate (cAMP). The influence of weight loss on these alterations is not known. To evaluate whether a diet‐induced body‐weight reduction restores platelet sensitivity to the physiological antiaggregating agents and reduces platelet activation in subjects affected by central obesity, we studied 20 centrally obese subjects before and after a 6‐month diet intervention aiming at reducing body weight by 10%, by measuring (i) insulin sensitivity (homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMAIR)); (ii) plasma lipids; (iii) circulating markers of inflammation of adipose tissue and endothelial dysfunction, and of platelet activation (i.e., soluble CD‐40 ligand (sCD‐40L) and soluble P‐selectin (sP‐selectin)); (iv) ability of the NO donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP), the prostacyclin analog Iloprost and the cyclic nucleotide analogs 8‐bromoguanosine 3′,5′‐cyclic monophosphate (8‐Br‐cGMP) and 8‐bromoadenosine 3′,5′‐cyclic monophosphate (8‐Br‐cAMP) to reduce platelet aggregation in response to adenosine‐5‐diphosphate (ADP); and (v) ability of SNP and Iloprost to increase cGMP and cAMP. The 10 subjects who reached the body‐weight target showed significant reductions of insulin resistance, adipose tissue, endothelial dysfunction, and platelet activation, and a significant increase of the ability of SNP, Iloprost, 8‐Br‐cGMP, and 8‐Br‐cAMP to reduce ADP‐induced platelet aggregation and of the ability of SNP and Iloprost to increase cyclic nucleotide concentrations. No change was observed in the 10 subjects who did not reach the body‐weight target. Changes of platelet function correlated with changes of HOMAIR. Thus, in central obesity, diet‐induced weight loss reduces platelet activation and restores the sensitivity to the physiological antiaggregating agents, with a correlation with improvements in insulin sensitivity.  相似文献   
99.
Aim Climate warming and increased wildfire activity are hypothesized to catalyse biogeographical shifts, reducing the resilience of fire‐prone forests world‐wide. Two key mechanisms underpinning hypotheses are: (1) reduced seed availability in large stand‐replacing burn patches, and (2) reduced seedling establishment/survival after post‐fire drought. We tested for regional evidence consistent with these mechanisms in an extensive fire‐prone forest biome by assessing post‐fire tree seedling establishment, a key indicator of forest resilience. Location Subalpine forests, US Rocky Mountains. Methods We analysed post‐fire tree seedling establishment from 184 field plots where stand‐replacing forest fires were followed by varying post‐fire climate conditions. Generalized linear mixed models tested how establishment rates varied with post‐fire drought severity and distance to seed source (among other relevant factors) for tree species with contrasting post‐fire regeneration adaptations. Results Total post‐fire tree seedling establishment (all species combined) declined sharply with greater post‐fire drought severity and with greater distance to seed sources (i.e. the interior of burn patches). Effects varied among key species groups. For conifers that dominate present‐day subalpine forests (Picea engelmannii, Abies lasiocarpa), post‐fire seedling establishment declined sharply with both factors. One exception was serotinous Pinus contorta, which did not vary with either factor. For montane species expected to move upslope under future climate change (Larix occidentalis, Pseudotsuga menziesii, Populus tremuloides) and upper treeline species (Pinus albicaulis), establishment was unrelated to either factor. Greater post‐fire tree seedling establishment on cooler/wetter aspects suggested local topographic refugia during post‐fire droughts. Main conclusions If future drought and wildfire patterns manifest as expected, post‐fire tree seedling establishment of species that currently characterize subalpine forests could be substantially reduced. Compensatory increases from lower montane and upper treeline species may partially offset these reductions, but our data suggest important near‐ to mid‐term shifts in the composition and structure of high‐elevation forests under continued climate warming and increased wildfire activity.  相似文献   
100.
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