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1. Hypoxia adaptation in termites: hypoxic conditions enhance survival and reproductive activity in royals

2. Higher levels of the lipophilic antioxidants coenzyme Q 10 and vitamin E in long-lived termite queens than in short-lived workers.

3. Cell type specific polyploidization in the royal fat body of termite queens.

4. Plastic brain structure changes associated with the division of labor and aging in termites.

5. A method for estimating colony size using queen fecundity in termites under field conditions.

6. The royal food of termites shows king and queen specificity.

7. Discovery of an underground chamber to protect kings and queens during winter in temperate termites.

8. Heritable effects on caste determination and colony-level sex allocation in termites under field conditions.

9. King- and queen-specific degradation of uric acid contributes to reproduction in termites.

10. Why and how do termite kings and queens live so long?

11. Transcriptomic analysis of epigenetic modification genes in the termite Reticulitermes speratus.

12. Reproduction deep inside wood: a low O 2 and high CO 2 environment promotes egg production by termite queens.

13. Hypoxia adaptation in termites: hypoxic conditions enhance survival and reproductive activity in royals.

14. High expression of the breast cancer susceptibility gene BRCA1 in long-lived termite kings.

15. Long-Lived Termite Queens Exhibit High Cu/Zn-Superoxide Dismutase Activity.

16. Uric acid, an important antioxidant contributing to survival in termites.

17. Protective role of testis-specific peroxiredoxin 4 against cellular oxidative stress.

18. An Efficient Antioxidant System in a Long-Lived Termite Queen.

19. Suppressive effect of membrane-permeable peptides derived from autophosphorylation sites of the IGF-1 receptor on breast cancer cells.

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