... , of the Eli and Edythe Broad Center for Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCSF.
Scientists are interested in reprogramming because it would offer a way to create cells that provide a ...
UCSF scientists have created a method of quickly identifying large numbers of the genetic material known as ... to make shRNA libraries available through the UCSF Sandler Lentiviral RNAi Core, which he ...
... that overturns conventional wisdom, a team of scientists from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), have shown that this sensory ...
... .
Approximately five percent of all known human genes encode, or produce, microRNAs, yet scientists are only now – nearly a decade after their discovery -- beginning to unlock the mystery of their ...
... of the journal “PLoS ONE.”
In studies with human placental cells in culture, the UCSF scientists found that atrazine increased the activity of a gene associated with abnormal human birth weight when ...
UCSF scientists have discovered that a gene controlling whether blood vessels differentiate into arteries or veins during embryonic development is linked to a vascular disorder in the brain that ...
... diagnostic practice can aid earlier detection and contribute to more accurate assessment, report the UCSF scientists who developed the diagnostic tool.
The molecular diagnosis strategy is now being ...
... PhD, D.Sci, Assistant Staff Scientist, Catherin Hounshell, a research associate, Sandra ... year ago, and this year this finding was confirmed by UCSF scientists headed by Dr. S. Fisher.
In this report ...
... or azure from blue.
In the July 2 online posting of "American Journal of Human Genetics," UCSF scientists report that they identified a particular region of genes on human chromosome eight that is ...
... in mice and in human brain tissue of medulloblastomas, coincides with a study by another team of UCSF scientists showing that the structure, known as primary cilium, also may play a role in basal ...
UCSF scientists studying nerve cells in fruit flies have uncovered a new function for a gene whose human equivalent may play a critical role in schizophrenia. Scientists have known that the mutated ...
(PhysOrg.com) -- UCSF scientists have shown for the first time that the rigidity of a tissue can induce cancer. The research team identified an enzyme that is crucial for regulating tissue stiffness ...