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72 results on '"Marla J Berry"'

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1. Sex-Specific Metabolic Impairments in a Mouse Model of Disrupted Selenium Utilization

2. Effect of Statin Treatment on Obese Mice Lacking Selenocysteine Lyase

3. Effects of selenium supplementation on diet-induced obesity in mice with a disruption of the selenocysteine lyase gene

4. SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN SELENIUM METABOLISM AND SELENOPROTEINS

5. From Selenium Absorption to Selenoprotein Degradation

6. Relationship between selenoprotein P and selenocysteine lyase: Insights into selenium metabolism

7. Sexual Dimorphism in the Selenocysteine Lyase Knockout Mouse

8. Mice Lacking Selenoprotein P and Selenocysteine Lyase Exhibit Severe Neurological Dysfunction, Neurodegeneration, and Audiogenic Seizures

9. Disruption of Selenium Handling During Puberty Causes Sex-Specific Neurological Impairments in Mice

10. Selenoprotein W expression and regulation in mouse brain and neurons

11. Selenoprotein Gene Nomenclature

12. Absence of selenoprotein P but not selenocysteine lyase results in severe neurological dysfunction

13. Deletion of selenoprotein P results in impaired function of parvalbumin interneurons and alterations in fear learning and sensorimotor gating

14. Attenuated expression of SECIS binding protein 2 causes loss of telomeric reserve without affecting telomerase

15. SBP2 Binding Affinity Is a Major Determinant in Differential Selenoprotein mRNA Translation and Sensitivity to Nonsense-Mediated Decay

16. The selenoproteome exhibits widely varying, tissue-specific dependence on selenoprotein P for selenium supply

17. Diet-Induced Obesity in the Selenocysteine Lyase Knockout Mouse

18. Supramolecular Complexes Mediate Selenocysteine Incorporation In Vivo

19. Identification and characterization of phosphoseryl-tRNA [Ser]Sec kinase

20. Selenium and selenoproteins in the brain and brain diseases

21. Selenoproteins in Nervous System Development and Function

22. Nonsense-mediated decay factors are involved in the regulation of selenoprotein mRNA levels during selenium deficiency

23. Isoform-specific binding of selenoprotein P to the β-propeller domain of apolipoprotein E receptor 2 mediates selenium supply

24. Interplay between termination and translation machinery in eukaryotic selenoprotein synthesis

25. Selective Inhibition of Selenocysteine tRNA Maturation and Selenoprotein Synthesis in Transgenic Mice Expressing Isopentenyladenosine-Deficient Selenocysteine tRNA

26. Selenocysteine codons decrease polysome association on endogenous selenoprotein mRNAs

27. Selenocysteine incorporation directed from the 3′UTR: Characterization of eukaryotic EFsec and mechanistic implications

28. Expression and characterization of nonmammalian selenoprotein P in the zebrafish,Danio rerio

29. Structure-Expression Relationships of the 15-kDa Selenoprotein Gene

30. Inhibition of Selenoprotein Synthesis by Selenocysteine tRNA[Ser]Sec Lacking Isopentenyladenosine

31. Regulation of Human Thioredoxin Reductase Expression and Activity by 3′-Untranslated Region Selenocysteine Insertion Sequence and mRNA Instability Elements

32. Ultraviolet-Induced Cell Death Blocked by a Selenoprotein from a Human Dermatotropic Poxvirus

33. Eukaryotic Selenocysteine Incorporation: Mechanistic Insights

34. Deletion of selenoprotein M leads to obesity without cognitive deficits

35. Selenium. Role of the Essential Metalloid in Health

36. Knowing when not to stop: selenocysteine incorporation in eukaryotes

37. Disruption of the selenocysteine lyase-mediated selenium recycling pathway leads to metabolic syndrome in mice

38. Selenoproteins and Brain Diseases

39. Functional characterization of the eukaryotic SECIS elements which direct selenocysteine insertion at UGA codons

40. Reprogramming the Ribosome for Selenoprotein Expression: RNA Elements and Protein Factors

41. Regulation and function of selenoproteins in human disease

42. Transcriptional regulation of mammalian selenoprotein expression

43. Recognition of UGA as a selenocysteine codon in Type I deiodinase requires sequences in the 3′ untranslated region

44. Selenocysteine confers the biochemical properties characteristic of the type I iodothyronine deiodinase

45. Podocyte specific knock out of selenoproteins does not enhance nephropathy in streptozotocin diabetic C57BL/6 mice

46. Eukaryotic selenoprotein synthesis: mechanistic insight incorporating new factors and new functions for old factors

47. SelenoDB 1.0 : a database of selenoprotein genes, proteins and SECIS elements

48. Selenophosphate synthetase 2 is essential for selenoprotein biosynthesis

49. The importance of subcellular localization of SBP2 and EFsec for selenoprotein synthesis

50. Efficient incorporation of multiple selenocysteines involves an inefficient decoding step serving as a potential translational checkpoint and ribosome bottleneck

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