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   2809篇
  免费   241篇
  国内免费   3篇
  3053篇
  2022年   13篇
  2021年   23篇
  2020年   26篇
  2018年   37篇
  2017年   32篇
  2016年   59篇
  2015年   83篇
  2014年   111篇
  2013年   161篇
  2012年   158篇
  2011年   173篇
  2010年   132篇
  2009年   103篇
  2008年   149篇
  2007年   168篇
  2006年   155篇
  2005年   134篇
  2004年   133篇
  2003年   128篇
  2002年   145篇
  2001年   51篇
  2000年   43篇
  1999年   60篇
  1998年   39篇
  1997年   28篇
  1996年   33篇
  1995年   30篇
  1994年   31篇
  1993年   29篇
  1992年   32篇
  1991年   30篇
  1990年   44篇
  1989年   29篇
  1988年   33篇
  1987年   33篇
  1986年   21篇
  1985年   30篇
  1984年   26篇
  1983年   23篇
  1982年   27篇
  1981年   17篇
  1980年   20篇
  1979年   15篇
  1978年   20篇
  1977年   16篇
  1976年   22篇
  1974年   14篇
  1973年   20篇
  1972年   14篇
  1971年   12篇
排序方式: 共有3053条查询结果,搜索用时 0 毫秒
51.
52.
Three distinct DNA ligases in mammalian cells   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
The major DNA ligase of proliferating mammalian cells, DNA ligase I, catalyzes the joining of single strand breaks in double stranded DNA and is active on a synthetic substrate of oligo(dT) hybridized to poly(dA). DNA ligase I does not catalyze the joining of an oligo(dT).poly(rA) substrate. Two additional DNA ligases, II and III, which can act on the latter substrate have been purified from calf thymus. DNA ligase II, which has been described previously, is a 72-kDa protein. DNA ligase III migrates as a 100-kDa protein in denaturing gel electrophoresis. Structural, immunochemical, and catalytic studies on the three DNA ligase activities strongly indicate that they are the products of three different genes.  相似文献   
53.
SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells can be induced to differentiate into a neuronal phenotype by treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). In other cell systems, TPA treatment frequently leads to down-regulation of protein kinase C (PKC). However, we now report that TPA-treated and non-treated SH-SY5Y cells express PKC-alpha, but not PKC-beta and PKC-gamma, mRNA. Furthermore, only a slight down-regulation of the PKC-alpha protein could be seen during prolonged treatment with 16 nM TPA, the concentration giving optimal differentiation. In contrast, a higher concentration of TPA (1.6 microM) results in a poor neuronal differentiation and a complete down-regulation of PKC-alpha. PKC-alpha was rapidly translocated to the particulate fraction and remained membrane bound for at least 4 days during treatment with 16 nM TPA. In such cells a sustained increased level of the phosphorylated form of a 80,000 Dalton PKC-substrate was found. In addition to this sustained augmented phosphorylation, administration of fresh TPA at day 4 caused a small but reproducible further increased level of phosphorylated substrate. When the PKC activity was measured by the histone phosphorylation assay a substantial fraction of the initial enzyme activity could still be detected after 4 days of TPA treatment. Taken together, the data demonstrate that PKC remains functionally active during TPA induced differentiation of SH-SY5Y cells, which may suggest a continuous role for the enzyme during the differentiation process.  相似文献   
54.
55.
Previous studies on rabbit thrombomodulin (TM) revealed that certain anticoagulant activities expressed by TM depend on the presence of an acidic domain tentatively identified as a sulfated galactosaminoglycan (Bourin, M.-C., Ohlin, A.-K., Lane, D., Stenflo, J., and Lindahl, U. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8044-8052). The glycan was released by alkaline beta-elimination, isolated by ion-exchange chromatography, and radiolabeled by partial N-deacetylation (hydrazinolysis) followed by re-N-[3H]acetylation. The labeled product behaved like standard chondroitin sulfate on ion-exchange chromatography, exhibited a Mr of 10-12 x 10(3) on gel chromatography, and was susceptible to degradation by chondroitinase and testicular hyaluronidase. The major labeled degradation products following digestion of the glycosaminoglycan with chondroitinase were identified, depending on the incubation conditions, either as 4/6-mono-O-sulfated, 4,5-unsaturated disaccharides (delta HexA-GalNAc(S] and N-acetylgalactosamine 4,6-di-O-sulfate (GalcNAc (diS], the latter component accounting for approximately 25% of the total label, or as a major fraction of labeled trisaccharide, with the predominant structure GalNAc(diS)-GlcA-GalNAc(diS). The terminal GalNAc(diS) unit (not substituted at C3) was shown to be more susceptible to N-deacetylation during hydrazinolysis than were the internal GalNAc units (substituted at C3), and thus was more extensively labeled, resulting in over-representation of this unit. It is concluded that rabbit TM is a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, which carries a single glycan side chain characterized by an unusual accumulation of sulfate groups at the nonreducing terminus. Metabolically 35S-labeled TM was isolated from cultured rabbit heart endothelial cells and characterized as a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan which accounted for 1-2% of the total 35S-labeled cell-associated macromolecules. The isolated chondroitin sulfate showed weaker antithrombin-dependent anticoagulant activity, on a molar basis, than the intact TM proteoglycan. The anticoagulant action of TM thus depends on a unique form of functional collaboration between the different constituents of a glycoconjugate.  相似文献   
56.
Mechanism of the anticoagulant action of heparin   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Summary The anticoagulant effect of heparin, a sulfated glycosaminoglycan produced by mast cells, requires the participation of the plasma protease inhibitor antithrombin, also called heparin cofactor. Antithrombin inhibits coagulation proteases by forming equimolar, stable complexes with the enzymes. The formation of these complexes involves the attack by the enzyme of a specific Arg-Ser bond in the carboxy-terminal region of the inhibitor. The complexes so formed are not dissociated by denaturing solvents, which indicates that a covalent bond may contribute to their stability. This bond may be an acyl bond between the active-site serine of the enzyme and the arginine of the cleaved reactive bond of the inhibitor. However, the native complexes dissociate slowly at near-neutral pH into free enzyme and a modified inhibitor, cleaved at the reactive bond. So, antithrombin apparently functions as a pseudo-substrate that traps the enzyme in a kinetically stable complex.The reactions between antithrombin and coagulation proteases are slow in the absence of heparin. However, optimal amounts of heparin accelerate these reactions up to 2 000-fold, thereby efficiently preventing the formation of fibrin in blood. The accelerating effect, and thus the anticoagulant activity, is shown by only about one-third of the molecules in all heparin preparations, while the remaining molecules are almost inactive. The highly active molecules bind tightly to antithrombin, i.e. with a binding constant of slightly below 108 M–1 at physiological ionic strength, while the relatively inactive molecules bind about a thousand-fold more weakly. The binding of the high-affinity heparin to antithrombin is accompanied by a conformational change in the inhibitor that is detectable by spectroscopic and kinetic methods. This conformational change follows an initial, weak binding of heparin to antithrombin and causes the tight interaction between polysaccharide and inhibitor that is prerequisite to heparin anticoagulant activity. It has also been postulated that the conformational change leads to a more favourable exposure of the reactive site of antithrombin, thereby allowing the rapid interaction with the proteases.Heparin also binds to the coagulation proteases. Recent studies indicate that this binding is weaker and less specific that the binding to antithrombin. Nevertheless, for some enzymes, thrombin, Factor IXa and Factor XIa, an interaction between heparin and the protease, in addition to that between the polysaccharide and antithrombin; apparently is involved in the accelerated inhibition of the enzymes. The effect of this interaction may be to approximate enzyme with inhibitor in an appropriate manner. However, the bulk of the evidence available indicates that binding of heparin to the protease alone cannot be responsible for the accelerating effect of the polysaccharide on the antithrombin-protease reaction.Heparin acts as a catalyst in the antithrombin-protease reaction, i.e. it accelerates the reaction in non-stoichiometric amounts and is not consumed during the reaction. This ability can be explained by heparin being released from the antithrombin-protease complex for renewed binding to antithrombin, once the complex has been formed. Such a decresed affinity of heparin for the antithrombin complex, compared to the affinity for antithrombin alone, has been demonstrated.The structure of the antithrombin-binding region in heparin has been investigated following the isolation of oligosaccharides with high affinity for antithrombin. The smallest such oligosaccharide, an octasaccharide, obtained after partial random depolymerization of heparin with nitrous acid, was found to contain a unique glucosamine-3-O-sulfate group, which could not be detected in other portions of the high affinity heparin molecule and which was absent in heparin with low affinity for antithrombin. The actual antithrombin-binding region within this octasaccharide molecule has been identified as a pentasaccharide sequence with he predominant structure: N-acetyl-D-glucosamine(6-O-SO3)D-glucoronic acidD-glucosamine(N-SO3;3,6-di-O-SO3)L-iduronic acid(2-O-SO3)D-glucosamine(N-SO3;6-O-SO3). In addition to the 3-O-sulfate group, both N-sulfate groups as well as the 6-O-sulfate group of the N-acetylated glucosamine unit appear to be essential for the interaction with antithrombin. The remarkably constant structure of this sequence, as compared to other regions of the heparin molecule, suggests a strictly regulated mechanism of biosynthesis.The ability of heparin to potentiate the inhibition of blood coagulation by antithrombin generally decreases with decreasing molecular weight of the polysaccharide. However, individual coagulation enzymes differ markedly with regard to this molecular-weight dependence. Oligosaccharides in the extreme low-molecular weight range, i.e. octa- to dodecasaccharides, with high affinity for antithrombin have high anti-Factor Xa-activity but are virtually unable to potentiate the inhibition of thrombin. Furthermore, such oligosaccharides are ineffective in preventing experimentally induced venous thrombosis in rabbits. Slightly larger oligosaccharides, containing 16 to 18 monosaccharide residues, show significant anti-thrombin as well as antithrombotic activities, yet have little effect on overall blood coagulation. These findings indicate that the affinity of a heparin fragment for antithrombin is not in itself a measure of the ability to prevent venous thrombo-genesis, and that the anti-Factor Xa activity of heparin is only a partial expression of its therapeutic potential as an antithrombotic agent.The biological role of the interaction between heparin and antithrombin is unclear. In addition to a possible function in the regulation of hemostasis, endogenous heparin may serve as a regulator of extravascular serine proteinases. Mouse peritoneal macrophages have been found to synthesize all the enzymes that constitute the extrinsic pathway of coagulation. Moreover, tissue thromboplastin is produced by these cells in response to a functional interaction with activated T-lymphocytes. The inhibition of this extravascular coagulation system by heparin, released from mast cells, may be potentially important in modulating inflammatory reactions.  相似文献   
57.
The thyrotropin (TSH) producing cells are distributed in the rostral and proximal pars distalis. This cell type is the smallest and most infrequent cell of the adenohypophysis. Its cytology is similar to the smallest gonadotropic (GTH) cells although the two cell types can be separated by the size of the small secretory granules (diameter less than 200 nm) in the TSH cells. In presmolts and smolts the cells are more numerous than in parr and adult salmon and have cytological features indicating an increased activity. This was also the case after intraperitoneal injections of synthetic TRH. Antisera to carp GTH and salmon GTH cross-reacted with both the GTH and the TSH cells. Anti-human TSH cross-reacted only with the TSH cells which confirms the assumption of antigenic similarity between human and fish TSH.  相似文献   
58.
A vitamin B1 (thiamin)-sensitive electrode has been devised by combining an oxygen electrode with a yeast-containing membrane. The assembly was used for assaying thiamin at concentrations down to 10?11 gl?1. The analytical procedure developed should allow the measurement of 10–20 samples per hour. The performance of the yeast electrode was improved when alginate membranes reinforced with a nylon network were used. An apparatus for preparing such membranes is described together with a magnetic membrane holder facilitating handling of membranes in combination with electrodes.  相似文献   
59.
60.
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