Search

Your search keyword '"Hoyle NP"' showing total 17 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Hoyle NP" Remove constraint Author: "Hoyle NP"
17 results on '"Hoyle NP"'

Search Results

1. Mammalian Circadian Period, But Not Phase and Amplitude, Is Robust Against Redox and Metabolic Perturbations

3. CRYPTOCHROMES confer robustness, not rhythmicity, to circadian timekeeping.

4. Eukaryotic cell biology is temporally coordinated to support the energetic demands of protein homeostasis.

5. Insulin/IGF-1 Drives PERIOD Synthesis to Entrain Circadian Rhythms with Feeding Time.

6. Mammalian Circadian Period, But Not Phase and Amplitude, Is Robust Against Redox and Metabolic Perturbations.

7. Flexible Measurement of Bioluminescent Reporters Using an Automated Longitudinal Luciferase Imaging Gas- and Temperature-optimized Recorder (ALLIGATOR).

8. Circadian actin dynamics drive rhythmic fibroblast mobilization during wound healing.

9. Daily magnesium fluxes regulate cellular timekeeping and energy balance.

10. Oxidation-reduction cycles of peroxiredoxin proteins and nontranscriptional aspects of timekeeping.

11. Granules harboring translationally active mRNAs provide a platform for P-body formation following stress.

12. Circadian rhythms: hijacking the cyanobacterial clock.

13. Transcript processing and export kinetics are rate-limiting steps in expressing vertebrate segmentation clock genes.

14. Glucose depletion inhibits translation initiation via eIF4A loss and subsequent 48S preinitiation complex accumulation, while the pentose phosphate pathway is coordinately up-regulated.

15. Subcellular localization of mRNA and factors involved in translation initiation.

16. Stress-dependent relocalization of translationally primed mRNPs to cytoplasmic granules that are kinetically and spatially distinct from P-bodies.

17. Dynamic cycling of eIF2 through a large eIF2B-containing cytoplasmic body: implications for translation control.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources