|
|
|
|
|
26.
264 Accesses
|
Conservation of core gene expression in vertebrate tissues
Esther T Chan, Gerald T Quon, Gordon Chua, Tomas Babak, Miles Trochesset, Ralph A Zirngibl, Jane Aubin, Michael JH Ratcliffe, Andrew Wilde, Michael Brudno, Quaid D Morris, Timothy R Hughes Journal of Biology 2009, 8:33 (16 April 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
High conservation of tissue-specific expression is found across vertebrates yet there is a lack of conservation in common regulatory sequences/signatures.
|
|
|
27.
260 Accesses
|
The mathematics of sexual attraction
José A Feijó Journal of Biology 2010, 9:18 (29 March 2010)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
|
|
28.
257 Accesses
|
Evolution underground: shedding light on the diversification of subterranean insects
Carlos Juan, Brent C Emerson Journal of Biology 2010, 9:17 (11 March 2010)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
Editor’s summary
Juan and Emerson discuss the reconstruction of the molecular phylogeny of a large Mediterranean cave-dwelling beetle clade recently presented in BMC Evolutionary Biology, and the implications for the evolutionary origin of the beetle ancestor.
|
|
|
29.
257 Accesses
|
Hyperactive Wnt signaling changes the developmental potential of embryonic lung endoderm
Tadashi Okubo, Brigid LM Hogan Journal of Biology 2004, 3:11 (8 June 2004)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
Abnormal activation of the Wnt signaling pathway can alter the fate of progenitor cells that normally generate the lung, causing them to create gut cells instead.
|
|
|
30.
250 Accesses
|
Why didn't Darwin discover Mendel's laws?
Jonathan C Howard Journal of Biology 2009, 8:15 (24 February 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
In an opinion piece, Jonathan Howard suggests that Darwin failed to discover the laws of inheritance (Mendel’s laws) due to his focus on small quantitative variations as the raw material of evolution.
|
|
|
31.
248 Accesses
|
CNS progenitor cells and oligodendrocytes are targets of chemotherapeutic agents in vitro and in vivo
Joerg Dietrich, Ruolan Han, Yin Yang, Margot Mayer-Pröschel, Mark Noble Journal of Biology 2006, 5:22 (30 November 2006)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |
|
Editor’s summary
Chemotherapeutic agents are more toxic to cells of the central nervous system than to cancer cells when administered to mice and cultured cells, providing an explanation for adverse neurological effects of systemic chemotherapy.
|
|
|
32.
247 Accesses
|
The hydrodynamics of dolphin drafting
Daniel Weihs Journal of Biology 2004, 3:8 (4 May 2004)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
Models of the hydrodynamic forces between two swimming dolphins show that baby dolphins keep up with their more powerful mothers by getting an almost energetically "free ride" in their slipstream.
|
|
|
33.
244 Accesses
|
Scale-eating cichlids: from hand(ed) to mouth
A Richard Palmer Journal of Biology 2010, 9:11 (24 February 2010)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
Editor’s summary
Palmer discusses recent studies, including one in BMC Biology, suggesting that mouth bending in scale-eating cichlids cannot be explained by frequency dependent selection alone, but that the behavior of the fish may amplify mouth asymmetry during growth.
|
|
|
34.
242 Accesses
|
Q&A: Epistasis
Frederick P Roth, Howard D Lipshitz, Brenda J Andrews Journal of Biology 2009, 8:35 (22 May 2009)
Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
The term epistasis has at least three meanings in biology. Brenda Andrews and colleagues explain in Q&A format how in its classical sense, epistasis allows biological pathways to be defined.
|
|
|
35.
240 Accesses
|
Genome of a songbird unveiled
Raphael Pinaud Journal of Biology 2010, 9:19 (1 April 2010)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
Editor’s summary
Pinaud heralds the publication of the zebra finch genome, reviewing some of the most exciting findings of this pioneering effort and explaining how this songbird model offers unique insights into auditory learning, singing behaviour and other biological phenomena.
|
|
|
36.
238 Accesses
|
Timing the first human migration into eastern Asia
Roscoe Stanyon, Marco Sazzini, Donata Luiselli Journal of Biology 2009, 8:18 (6 February 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |
|
|
|
37.
237 Accesses
|
Apes, lice and prehistory
Robin A Weiss Journal of Biology 2009, 8:20 (10 February 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |
|
Editor’s summary
In a special issue to celebrate the bicentennial of Darwin's birth, Robin Weiss reviews recent speculations on human prehistory based on louse phylogeny, and adds his own on the origins of pubic hair.
|
|
|
38.
236 Accesses
|
The functional landscape of mouse gene expression
Wen Zhang, Quaid D Morris, Richard Chang, Ofer Shai, Malina A Bakowski, Nicholas Mitsakakis, Naveed Mohammad, Mark D Robinson, Ralph Zirngibl, Eszter Somogyi, Nancy Laurin, Eftekhar Eftekharpour, Eric Sat, Jörg Grigull, Qun Pan, Wen-Tao Peng, Nevan Krogan, Jack Greenblatt, Michael Fehlings, Derek van der Kooy, Jane Aubin, Benoit G Bruneau, Janet Rossant, Benjamin J Blencowe, Brendan J Frey, Timothy R Hughes Journal of Biology 2004, 3:21 (6 December 2004)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
| F1000 Biology
|
Editor’s summary
Gene function in mammals can be quickly and reliably predicted using a quantitative analysis of tissue-specific patterns of RNA expression.
|
|
|
39.
233 Accesses
|
Differences in the way a mammalian cell and yeast cells coordinate cell growth and cell-cycle progression
Ian Conlon, Martin Raff Journal of Biology 2003, 2:7 (24 April 2003)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |
| F1000 Biology
|
|
|
40.
233 Accesses
|
Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
Pere Puigbò, Yuri I Wolf, Eugene V Koonin Journal of Biology 2009, 8:59 (13 July 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
Koonin and colleagues, comparing a forest of 7000 phylogenetic trees, discern vertical inheritance even at the earliest stages of prokaryotic evolution, despite horizontal gene transfer, but the branching order of the earliest radiations may never be resolved.
|
|
|
41.
232 Accesses
|
Astrocytes derived from glial-restricted precursors promote spinal cord repair
Jeannette E Davies, Carol Huang, Christoph Proschel, Mark Noble, Margot Mayer-Proschel, Stephen JA Davies Journal of Biology 2006, 5:7 (27 April 2006)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
Significantly better spinal cord repair in rats results from transplanting specific pre-differentiated cells, cultured to become immature neural-support cells, than from transplanting undifferentiated embryonic stem cells.
|
|
|
42.
227 Accesses
|
A functional genomic analysis of cell morphology using RNA interference
AA Kiger, B Baum, S Jones, MR Jones, A Coulson, C Echeverri, N Perrimon Journal of Biology 2003, 2:27 (1 October 2003)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
| F1000 Biology
|
|
|
43.
225 Accesses
|
A circuit supporting concentration-invariant odor perception in Drosophila
Kenta Asahina, Matthieu Louis, Silvia Piccinotti, Leslie B Vosshall Journal of Biology 2009, 8:9 (26 January 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
| F1000 Biology
|
Editor’s summary
In Drosophila, inhibitory interneurons are progressively recruited as olfactory sensory neurons are activated at increasing odor concentrations, allowing the flies to identify distinct odors at different intensities.
|
|
|
44.
221 Accesses
|
Targeting TNF-α for cancer therapy
Elizabeth R Burton, Steven K Libutti Journal of Biology 2009, 8:85 (23 October 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
|
|
45.
218 Accesses
|
No better time to FRET: shedding light on host pathogen interactions
Richard D Hayward, Jon D Goguen, John M Leong Journal of Biology 2010, 9:12 (18 February 2010)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
Editor’s summary
Hayward and colleagues discuss the promise of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based techniques to study the spatio-temporal subversion of host cell signaling by pathogens, reviewing the few existing examples of this, which include a recent paper in BMC Biology, to illustrate the power of an approach that has been surprisingly under-exploited to date.
|
|
|
46.
219 Accesses
|
Compound developmental eye disorders following inactivation of TGFβ signaling in neural-crest stem cells
Lars M Ittner, Heiko Wurdak, Kerstin Schwerdtfeger, Thomas Kunz, Fabian Ille, Per Leveen, Tord A Hjalt, Ueli Suter, Stefan Karlsson, Farhad Hafezi, Walter Born, Lukas Sommer Journal of Biology 2005, 4:11 (14 December 2005)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
Important structures in developing mouse eyes originate from neural crest cells controlled by TGFbeta signals from the lens, providing insight into human conditions that results in glaucoma and blindness.
|
|
|
47.
217 Accesses
|
Robust and specific inhibition of microRNAs in Caenorhabditis elegans
Samrat T Kundu, Frank J Slack Journal of Biology 2010, 9:20 (1 April 2010)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
Editor’s summary
Frank Slack and Samrat Kundu highlight a refinement of the antisense strategy used to inhibit miRNAs in C.elegans, published in Silence, with an adaptation that supports transmission through the germline, and combinatorial use to target several different miRNAs in developing tissues.
|
|
|
48.
215 Accesses
|
Oxidative stress, thermogenesis and evolution of uncoupling proteins
Eduardo Rial, Rafael Zardoya Journal of Biology 2009, 8:58 (16 June 2009)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
|
|
49.
215 Accesses
|
Q&A: What are pharmacological chaperones and why are they interesting?
Dagmar Ringe, Gregory A Petsko Journal of Biology 2009, 8:80 (13 October 2009)
Full text | PDF
| PubMed
|
Editor’s summary
Small molecules that stabilize mutant proteins with high specificity can be used to treat protein misfolding and metabolic diseases: in a Q&A highlighting recent successes, Dagmar Ringe and Gregory Petsko explain how.
|
|
|
50.
213 Accesses
|
A quantitative analysis of the mechanism that controls body size in Manduca sexta
HF Nijhout, G Davidowitz, DA Roff Journal of Biology 2006, 5:16 (2 August 2006)
Abstract | Full text | PDF
| PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central
|
Editor’s summary
Final body size in the moth Manduca sexta can be predicted from the juvenile caterpillar by modeling three key growth measurements to reveal how growth rate, nutrition and temperature determine eventual body size.
|