jbiol.com/article
Bottom,Top,Right1
  • Log on
  •   BioMed Central
  • Journals
Journal of Biology
Search for
Advanced search
  • Home
  • Articles

Advertisement

Articles

  • All articles
  • Most viewed RSS
      • Last 30 days
      • Last year
      • All time
  • Archive
  • Article collections

Page 3 of 4

 Previous 1 2 3 4  Next

 Display/download options Articles per page: 25 | 50 | 100

Display options
Download optionsHelp icon

51.

222
Accesses

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

A global analysis of genetic interactions in Caenorhabditis elegans

Alexandra B Byrne, Matthew T Weirauch, Victoria Wong, Martina Koeva, Scott J Dixon, Joshua M Stuart, Peter J Roy Journal of Biology 2007, 6:8 (26 September 2007)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

A C. elegans genetic-interaction network built by combining gene mutants and knockdowns is the largest animal network to date, revealing redundancy among functional modules and surprisingly little conservation of network connections compared to yeast.

52.

219
Accesses

Question & Answer   Free Highly Accessed

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.

53.

220
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

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

54.

217
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

SnoPatrol: how many snoRNA genes are there?

Paul P Gardner, Alex Bateman, Anthony M Poole Journal of Biology 2010, 9:4 (25 January 2010)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Gardner, Bateman and Poole review the current knowledge of small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) and discuss two BMC Genomic papers reporting the identification of novel snoRNAs and the likelihood that there are many more out there.

55.

217
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

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.

56.

213
Accesses

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

Suppression of adaptive immunity to heterologous antigens during Plasmodium infection through hemozoin-induced failure of dendritic cell function

Owain R Millington, Caterina Di Lorenzo, R Phillips, Paul Garside, James M Brewer Journal of Biology 2006, 5:5 (12 April 2006)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Hemozoin pigment, released during malarial infection, is now known to cause dendritic cell failure and subsequent host immunosupression, explaining why people with malaria become prone to infection and respond poorly to vaccines.

57.

212
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

Regulation of metabolism in Caenorhabditis elegans longevity

Marco Gallo, Donald L Riddle Journal of Biology 2010, 9:7 (10 February 2010)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed |  Editor’s summary

A metabolomic quest for universals in the control of lifespan recently reported in BMC Biology implicates branched-chain amino acid pools. Gallo and Riddle review the lessons from C.elegans in research on longevity, and discuss the implications of the metabolomic research.

58.

208
Accesses

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

Generalized immune activation as a direct result of activated CD4+ T cell killing

Rute Marques, Adam Williams, Urszula Eksmond, Andy Wullaert, Nigel Killeen, Manolis Pasparakis, Dimitris Kioussis, George Kassiotis Journal of Biology 2009, 8:93 (27 November 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

HIV causes immunodeficiency by deleting activated CD4 T lymphocytes, but paradoxically also causes general immune activation. Kassiotis and colleagues have mimicked this effect by using genetic engineering to delete activated T cells in mice, and show that in the mice it is due to loss of regulatory T cells.

59.

205
Accesses

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

ERK1 and ERK2 mitogen-activated protein kinases affect Ras-dependent cell signaling differentially

Chiara Vantaggiato, Ivan Formentini, Attilio Bondanza, Chiara Bonini, Luigi Naldini, Riccardo Brambilla Journal of Biology 2006, 5:14 (28 June 2006)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

The mitogen-activated protein kinases ERK1 and ERK2 have unexpectedly independent roles in normal and malignant Ras-dependent cell proliferation; ERK2 controls normal cell proliferation whereas ERK1 antagonizes ERK2 activity.

60.

202
Accesses

Review   Free

Notch signaling, the segmentation clock, and the patterning of vertebrate somites

Julian Lewis, Anja Hanisch, Maxine Holder Journal of Biology 2009, 8:44 (22 May 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Julian Lewis and colleagues review the part played by the Notch signaling pathway in the emergence of somites from the embryonic mesoderm and their later differentiation.

61.

196
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

Apical polarity in three-dimensional culture systems: where to now?

Jamie L Inman, Mina J Bissell Journal of Biology 2010, 9:2 (21 January 2010)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed

62.

196
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

Cryptic biodiversity in a changing world

Luciano B Beheregaray, Adalgisa Caccone Journal of Biology 2007, 6:9 (21 December 2007)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central

63.

194
Accesses

Minireview   Free

Dishevelled and Wnt signaling: is the nucleus the final frontier?

Raymond Habas, Igor B Dawid Journal of Biology 2005, 4:2 (17 February 2005)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central

64.

193
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

Complementary pathways in mammalian female sex determination

Serge Nef, Jean-Dominique Vassalli Journal of Biology 2009, 8:74 (2 September 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Nef and Vassalli discuss the molecular basis of female sex determination in the light of a recent BMC Developmental Biology paper identifying two independent and complementary signaling pathways that promote ovarian fate and repress testicular development.

65.

195
Accesses

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

Dosage compensation is less effective in birds than in mammals

Yuichiro Itoh, Esther Melamed, Xia Yang, Kathy Kampf, Susanna Wang, Nadir Yehya, Atila Van Nas, Kirstin Replogle, Mark R Band, David F Clayton, Eric E Schadt, Aldons J Lusis, Arthur P Arnold Journal of Biology 2007, 6:2 (22 March 2007)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central | 1 comment |  Editor’s summary

Male:female ratios of gene expression in zebra finch and chicken reveal that birds, unlike mammals, have surprisingly ineffective sex-chromosome dosage compensation mechanisms resulting in an imbalance between autosomal and sex-linked genes.

66.

189
Accesses

Opinion   Free Highly Accessed

Promoter architecture and the evolvability of gene expression

Itay Tirosh, Naama Barkai, Kevin J Verstrepen Journal of Biology 2009, 8:95 (14 December 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Major evolutionary change depends on changes in gene expression. Itay Tirosh and colleagues review recent research on the influence of promoter architecture and mutations in regulatory proteins on divergent expression patterns and suggest what is required for evolvability.

67.

187
Accesses

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

Evidence for large domains of similarly expressed genes in the Drosophila genome

Paul T Spellman, Gerald M Rubin Journal of Biology 2002, 1:5 (18 June 2002)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central | F1000 Biology

68.

184
Accesses

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

Transplanted astrocytes derived from BMP- or CNTF-treated glial-restricted precursors have opposite effects on recovery and allodynia after spinal cord injury

Jeannette E Davies, Christoph Pröschel, Ningzhe Zhang, Mark Noble, Margot Mayer-Pröschel, Stephen JA Davies Journal of Biology 2008, 7:24 (19 September 2008)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Glial cells can promote the repair of damaged spinal cord, but experiments in rats show that while some promote functional recovery others cause abnormal growth and pain, depending on the growth factor used to cultivate them in culture.

69.

183
Accesses

Minireview   Free

Exploiting the promiscuity of imatinib

Shun J Lee, Jean YJ Wang Journal of Biology 2009, 8:30 (15 April 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Lee and Wang discuss how the structural flexibility of the cancer drug imatinib (Gleevec) accounts for the drug's off-target promiscuity, illustrated by a structural study published in BMC Structural Biology.

70.

183
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

An expanded evolutionary role for flower symmetry genes

Lena C Hileman, Pilar Cubas Journal of Biology 2009, 8:90 (6 November 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

Cubas and Hileman discuss studies, including one in BMC Evolutionary Biology, showing that the CYC-like genes that control floral symmetry have profound effects on other features and have been recruited to diverse roles in floral evolution.

71.

182
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

Limb regeneration revisited

Jessica L Whited, Clifford J Tabin Journal of Biology 2009, 8:5 (13 January 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central

72.

182
Accesses

Minireview   Free Highly Accessed

How chemotherapy damages the central nervous system

Christina A Meyers Journal of Biology 2008, 7:11 (22 April 2008)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central | 1 comment

73.

181
Accesses

Minireview   Free

The cattle genome reveals its secrets

David W Burt Journal of Biology 2009, 8:36 (24 April 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed |  Editor’s summary

Burt discusses the impact of the recently sequenced Bovine genome on our understanding of bovine phylogeny and the genomics of domestication.

74.

179
Accesses

Opinion   Free Highly Accessed

Mayr, mathematics and the study of evolution

James F Crow Journal of Biology 2009, 8:13 (23 February 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central |  Editor’s summary

James Crow picks up the gauntlet thrown down by Mayr at the feet of JBS Haldane, and describes the essential contribution of mathematics to the understanding of evolution from genetic drift to molecular clocks.

75.

179
Accesses

Opinion   Free Highly Accessed

The 'stem cell' concept: is it holding us back?

Arthur D Lander Journal of Biology 2009, 8:70 (21 September 2009)

Abstract | Full text | PDF | PubMed | Cited on BioMed Central | 2 comments |  Editor’s summary

Arthur Lander argues that the molecular definition of a stem cell is a mirage and 'stemness' is an emergent property of cells in their physiological context, so that the current concept is arguably an obstacle to research.

Page 3 of 4

 Previous 1 2 3 4  Next


  • Terms and Conditions

© 2013 BioMed Central Ltd unless otherwise stated. Part of Springer Science+Business Media.