18 results on '"Moureau, J."'
Search Results
2. CONTRIBUTION A L'ÉTUDE DE LA FLORE MYCOLOGIQUE DU PLATEAU DE LA BARAQUE MICHEL
- Author
-
Damblon, J. and Moureau, J.
- Published
- 1937
3. RHIZOGENÈSE CHEZ COLEUS, SOUS L'INFLUENCE DE L'HÉTÉROAUXINE. HISTOLOGIE ET PHYSIOLOGIE DU PHÉNOMÈNE
- Author
-
MOUREAU, J. and Bouillenne, R.
- Published
- 1940
4. THEORY AND APPLICATION ON SPRAY COOLING OF HOT SURFACES
- Author
-
Bolle, Leon, primary and Moureau, J. C., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Photoreactivity of indirubin derivatives
- Author
-
Olivier, D. Poincelot, M.-A. Douillard, S. Lefevre, C. Moureau, J. Ferandin, Y. Bettayeb, K. Xiao, Z. Magiatis, P. Skaltsounis, L. Meijer, L. Patrice, T.
- Abstract
Twenty-nine analogs of indirubin, an isomer of indigo, have been synthesized to optimize its promising kinase inhibitory scaffold. These compounds being also pigmented, have been tested for their photoreactivity. Absorption maxima were between 485 nm and 560 nm. Addition of fetal calf serum induced fluorescence and time dependent absorption modifications. Appropriate illumination induced Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) production for nineteen compounds out of twenty-nine. The relationship between fluorescence and ROS production is discussed. Six compounds showed an important toxicity on F98 cells, a murine glioma cell line. Three of these were found to be also phototoxic, as four other non-toxic compounds. All but onze phototoxic compounds were detected as ROS producers by in vitro tests. Photoreactivity assessment is important to anticipate adverse reactions for compounds that might be clinically developed. The experimental assay was found to be the only way to evaluate the photoreactivity of this family of compounds since no predictive criteria on structures could be found. Combining the vascular tumor growth inhibition induced by kinase inhibitors with the massive local blood flow arrest following photodynamic treatment may be an efficient anti-cancer strategy. These data could orientate further syntheses of either non-photoreactive compounds or compounds displaying both kinase inhibitory activity and strong phototoxicity. © The Royal Society of Chemistry and Owner Societies.
- Published
- 2008
6. Attractive approach to analyse trace and ultra-trace elements on transmutation targets by direct separation of isobaric interferences using collision reaction cell implanted on MC-ICPMS
- Author
-
Isnard, H., primary, Moureau, J., additional, Quidelleur, S., additional, Guegen, F., additional, Granet, M., additional, Favre, G., additional, Nonell, A., additional, and Chartier, F., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Application of collision reaction-cell based MC-ICPMS to in-situ interferences resolution for elemental and isotopic ratios measurements of nuclear fuel samples
- Author
-
Nonell, A., primary, Isnard, H., additional, Granet, M., additional, Moureau, J., additional, Favre, G., additional, and Chartier, F., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Cs–Ba separation using N2O as a reactant gas in a Multiple Collector-Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer collision-reaction cell: Application to the measurements of Cs isotopes in spent nuclear fuel samples
- Author
-
Granet, M., primary, Nonell, A., additional, Favre, G., additional, Chartier, F., additional, Isnard, H., additional, Moureau, J., additional, Caussignac, C., additional, and Tran, B., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. High accuracy measurements of Mo isotopes by MC-ICPMS with in situ Mo/Zr separation using N2O in a collision reaction cell
- Author
-
Moureau, J., primary, Granet, M., additional, Chartier, F., additional, Favre, G., additional, Isnard, H., additional, and Nonell, A., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Le Palmier à huile (Elæis) et sa culture au Congo
- Author
-
Vanderweyen, R., Moureau, J., Buyckx, E. J. E., Geortay, G., and Chevalier, Auguste
- Abstract
Vanderweyen R., Moureau J., Buyckx E. J. E., Geortay G., Chevalier Auguste. Le Palmier à huile (Elæis) et sa culture au Congo. In: Revue internationale de botanique appliquée et d'agriculture tropicale, 33ᵉ année, bulletin n°363-364, Janvier-février 1953. pp. 1-19.
- Published
- 1953
11. Correspondance et papiers de Louis Veuillot (1re série). I -- CORRESPONDANCE. XVI Correspondance des rédacteurs de L'Univers.
- Author
-
Aubineau, Léon. Destinataire de lettres, Lavedan, Comte Léon. Destinataire de lettres, Barrier, Jean. Destinataire de lettres, Desquers, Louis. Destinataire de lettres, Loth, Arthur. Destinataire de lettres, Maguelonne, Henri de. Destinataire de lettres, Morel, Abbé Jules. Destinataire de lettres, Roussel, Auguste. Destinataire de lettres, Chaulnes, Vicomte Gabriel de. Destinataire de lettres, Roux-Lavergne. Destinataire de lettres, Rupert. Destinataire de lettres, Schnaiter. Destinataire de lettres, Gilbert, Abbé Jean-A. Auteur de lettres, Loverdo, Vicomte Louis de. Auteur de lettres, Regnault, Monseigneur Louis-Eugène. Auteur de lettres, Cognat, Abbé Joseph. Auteur de lettres, Desquers, S. Auteur de lettres, Thomas, Abbé D. Auteur de lettres, Dubreuil, administrateur du Courrier d'Eure-et-Loir. Auteur de lettres, Truillet, Le Père François-Louis D. Auteur de lettres, Dreneau, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Clausel de Montais, Monseigneur Claude-Hippolyte. Auteur de lettres, Ladoue, Monseigneur Thomas-Casimir-François de. Auteur de lettres, Morel, Abbé Jules. Auteur de lettres, Alzon, Le Père Emmanuel d'. Auteur de lettres, Aubineau, Léon. Auteur de lettres, Cazalès, Abbé Edmond de. Auteur de lettres, Meirieu, Monseigneur Marie-Julien. Auteur de lettres, Roux-Lavergne, Abbé Pierre-Célestin. Auteur de lettres, Dedoue, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Cornu. Auteur de lettres, Esgrigny, Comte d'. Auteur de lettres, Salinis, Monseigneur Louis-Antoine de. Auteur de lettres, Pujos, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Du Lac, Melchior. Auteur de lettres, Veuillot, Louise d'Aquin. Auteur de lettres, Gardereau, Le Père Eugène. Auteur de lettres, Lansade, A. de. Auteur de lettres, Philp, John. Auteur de lettres, Moureau, J. Auteur de lettres, Bastide, Monseigneur G. Auteur de lettres, Pie, Louis-François-Désiré-Édouard. Auteur de lettres, Cousseau, Monseigneur Antoine-Charles. Auteur de lettres, Corcelle, Fr. de. Auteur de lettres, Roussel, Auguste. Auteur de lettres, Ségur, Monseigneur Louis-Gaston de. Auteur de lettres, Fichaux, Abbé L. Auteur de lettres, Loth, Arthur. Auteur de lettres, Puymourier. Auteur de lettres, Serret, Philippe. Auteur de lettres, Vasseur, Abbé E. Auteur de lettres, Boudoncour. Auteur de lettres, Van Elewick, Chevalier. Auteur de lettres, Lacombe, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Marquigny, Le Père Eugène. Auteur de lettres, Freppel, Monseigneur Charles-Émile. Auteur de lettres, Siberville, G. de. Auteur de lettres, Logerot, Dom Athanase. Auteur de lettres, Pillens, Abbé Alphonse. Auteur de lettres, Planque, A. Auteur de lettres, Emmanuel, F. Auteur de lettres, Brossais-Saint-Marc, Godefroy. Auteur de lettres, Rosaye, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Dupanloup, Monseigneur Félix-Antoine-Philibert. Auteur de lettres, Parisis, Monseigneur Pierre-Louis. Auteur de lettres, Guet, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Douniol, Charles. Auteur de lettres, Maury, Le Père A. Auteur de lettres, Sauvé, Chanoine Henri. Auteur de lettres, Alguacil, Monseigneur Didacus Mariano. Auteur de lettres, Doney, Monseigneur Jean-Marie. Auteur de lettres, Delor, Abbé Hippolyte. Auteur de lettres, Overbeck, Frédérico. Auteur de lettres, Aubineau, Léon. Destinataire de lettres, Lavedan, Comte Léon. Destinataire de lettres, Barrier, Jean. Destinataire de lettres, Desquers, Louis. Destinataire de lettres, Loth, Arthur. Destinataire de lettres, Maguelonne, Henri de. Destinataire de lettres, Morel, Abbé Jules. Destinataire de lettres, Roussel, Auguste. Destinataire de lettres, Chaulnes, Vicomte Gabriel de. Destinataire de lettres, Roux-Lavergne. Destinataire de lettres, Rupert. Destinataire de lettres, Schnaiter. Destinataire de lettres, Gilbert, Abbé Jean-A. Auteur de lettres, Loverdo, Vicomte Louis de. Auteur de lettres, Regnault, Monseigneur Louis-Eugène. Auteur de lettres, Cognat, Abbé Joseph. Auteur de lettres, Desquers, S. Auteur de lettres, Thomas, Abbé D. Auteur de lettres, Dubreuil, administrateur du Courrier d'Eure-et-Loir. Auteur de lettres, Truillet, Le Père François-Louis D. Auteur de lettres, Dreneau, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Clausel de Montais, Monseigneur Claude-Hippolyte. Auteur de lettres, Ladoue, Monseigneur Thomas-Casimir-François de. Auteur de lettres, Morel, Abbé Jules. Auteur de lettres, Alzon, Le Père Emmanuel d'. Auteur de lettres, Aubineau, Léon. Auteur de lettres, Cazalès, Abbé Edmond de. Auteur de lettres, Meirieu, Monseigneur Marie-Julien. Auteur de lettres, Roux-Lavergne, Abbé Pierre-Célestin. Auteur de lettres, Dedoue, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Cornu. Auteur de lettres, Esgrigny, Comte d'. Auteur de lettres, Salinis, Monseigneur Louis-Antoine de. Auteur de lettres, Pujos, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Du Lac, Melchior. Auteur de lettres, Veuillot, Louise d'Aquin. Auteur de lettres, Gardereau, Le Père Eugène. Auteur de lettres, Lansade, A. de. Auteur de lettres, Philp, John. Auteur de lettres, Moureau, J. Auteur de lettres, Bastide, Monseigneur G. Auteur de lettres, Pie, Louis-François-Désiré-Édouard. Auteur de lettres, Cousseau, Monseigneur Antoine-Charles. Auteur de lettres, Corcelle, Fr. de. Auteur de lettres, Roussel, Auguste. Auteur de lettres, Ségur, Monseigneur Louis-Gaston de. Auteur de lettres, Fichaux, Abbé L. Auteur de lettres, Loth, Arthur. Auteur de lettres, Puymourier. Auteur de lettres, Serret, Philippe. Auteur de lettres, Vasseur, Abbé E. Auteur de lettres, Boudoncour. Auteur de lettres, Van Elewick, Chevalier. Auteur de lettres, Lacombe, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Marquigny, Le Père Eugène. Auteur de lettres, Freppel, Monseigneur Charles-Émile. Auteur de lettres, Siberville, G. de. Auteur de lettres, Logerot, Dom Athanase. Auteur de lettres, Pillens, Abbé Alphonse. Auteur de lettres, Planque, A. Auteur de lettres, Emmanuel, F. Auteur de lettres, Brossais-Saint-Marc, Godefroy. Auteur de lettres, Rosaye, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Dupanloup, Monseigneur Félix-Antoine-Philibert. Auteur de lettres, Parisis, Monseigneur Pierre-Louis. Auteur de lettres, Guet, Abbé. Auteur de lettres, Douniol, Charles. Auteur de lettres, Maury, Le Père A. Auteur de lettres, Sauvé, Chanoine Henri. Auteur de lettres, Alguacil, Monseigneur Didacus Mariano. Auteur de lettres, Doney, Monseigneur Jean-Marie. Auteur de lettres, Delor, Abbé Hippolyte. Auteur de lettres, and Overbeck, Frédérico. Auteur de lettres
- Abstract
Contient : Aubineau, Léon. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Gilbert, Abbé Jean-A., vicaire général de Moulins. Lettre(s) ; Lavedan, Comte Léon, journaliste. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Loverdo, Vicomte Louis de. Lettre(s) ; Barrier, Jean, directeur de l'Univers. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Regnault, Monseigneur Louis-Eugène. Lettre(s) ; Cognat, Abbé Joseph, curé de Notre-Dame-des-Champs. Lettre(s) ; Desquers, Louis. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Desquers, S.. Lettre(s) ; Thomas, Abbé D.. Lettre(s) ; Dubreuil, administrateur du Courrier d'Eure-et-Loir . Lettre(s) ; Truillet, Le Père François-Louis D., O.P. Lettre(s) ; Dreneau, Abbé, professeur de séminaire. Lettre(s) ; Clausel de Montais, Monseigneur Claude-Hippolyte. Lettre(s) ; Ladoue, Monseigneur Thomas-Casimir-François de. Lettre(s) ; Morel, Abbé Jules. Lettre(s) ; Alzon, Le Père Emmanuel d', assomptionniste. Lettre(s) ; Aubineau, Léon. Lettre(s) ; Cazalès, Abbé Edmond de. Lettre(s) ; Meirieu, Monseigneur Marie-Julien. Lettre(s) ; Roux-Lavergne, Abbé Pierre-Célestin. Lettre(s) ; Dedoue, Abbé. Lettre(s) ; Cornu. Lettre(s) ; Esgrigny, Comte d'. Lettre(s) ; Salinis, Monseigneur Louis-Antoine de, archevêque d'Auch. Lettre(s) ; Pujos, Abbé. Lettre(s) ; Du Lac, Melchior, journaliste. Lettre(s) ; Veuillot, Louise d'Aquin, Mme Eugène. Lettre(s) ; Gardereau, Le Père Eugène, O.S.B. Lettre(s) ; Lansade, A. de. Lettre(s) ; Philp, John. Lettre(s) ; Loth, Arthur, archiviste-paléographe. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Moureau, J.. Lettre(s) ; Bastide, Monseigneur G.. Lettre(s) ; Maguelonne, Henri de, diplomate. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Pie, Louis-François-Désiré-Édouard, cardinal. Lettre(s) ; Morel, Abbé Jules. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Cousseau, Monseigneur Antoine-Charles. Lettre(s) ; Corcelle, Fr. de, ambassadeur. Lettre(s) ; Roussel, Auguste, rédacteur de L'Univers. Lettre(s) ; Roussel, Auguste, rédacteur de L'Univers. Lettre(s) reçue(s) ; Ségur, Monseigneur Louis-Gaston de. Lettre(s) ; Fichaux, Abbé L., professeur. Lettre(s) ; Loth, Arthur, archiviste-paléographe. Lettre(s), Numérisation effectuée à partir d'un document de substitution : R 53153.
12. SPRAY COOLING OF HOT SURFACES
- Author
-
Moureau, J. C., primary and Bolle, Leon, additional
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Le Palmier à huile (Elæis) et sa culture au Congo
- Author
-
Vanderweyen, R., primary, Moureau, J., additional, Buyckx, E. J. E., additional, Geortay, G., additional, and Chevalier, Auguste, additional
- Published
- 1953
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Cs–Ba separation using N2O as a reactant gas in a Multiple Collector-Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer collision-reaction cell: Application to the measurements of Cs isotopes in spent nuclear fuel samples
- Author
-
Granet, M., Nonell, A., Favre, G., Chartier, F., Isnard, H., Moureau, J., Caussignac, C., and Tran, B.
- Subjects
- *
NUCLEAR fuel elements , *MASS spectrometry , *INDUCTIVELY coupled plasma mass spectrometry , *ISOTOPES - Abstract
Abstract: In the general frameworks of the nuclear fuel cycle and environmental research field, the Cs isotopic composition must be known with high precision and accuracy. The direct determination of Cs isotopes by mass spectrometry techniques is generally hampered by the presence of Ba isobaric interferences however. Here we present a new method which takes advantage of the collision-reaction cell based Multiple Collector Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (MC-ICPMS) and allows to analyse Cs isotopes in the presence of Ba without prior separation step. The addition of N2O gas in the cell leads to an antagonistic behavior of Cs+ and Ba+ as the latter reacts with the gas to form BaO+ and BaOH+ products whereas Cs+ remains unreactive. The efficiency of the method was demonstrated for an UOx sample by comparing the results obtained (1) from the measurements of pure Cs fractions and (2) from Fission Products fractions containing more than 30 ionisable elements in addition to Cs, Ba, and where U and Pu were previously removed by using ion exchange resin. An excellent agreement is achieved between each set of experiments with an external reproducibility always better than 0.5% (RSD, k =2). This study confirms the strong potential of collision–reaction cell to measure Cs isotopes in presence of interfering Ba, precluding therefore former systematic chemical separations. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Baseline distribution of stable copper isotope compositions of the brain and other organs in mice.
- Author
-
Moynier F, Merland A, Rigoussen D, Moureau J, Paquet M, Mahan B, and Le Borgne M
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain metabolism, Female, Isotopes metabolism, Male, Mice, Alzheimer Disease, Copper metabolism
- Abstract
Copper (Cu) stable isotopes are useful for understanding pathways and tracing changes in Cu homeostasis, such as those induced by various diseases (e.g. liver cirrhosis, numerous forms of cancer, and neurodegenerative diseases). However, this utility relies on a baseline understanding of the natural distribution of Cu isotopes between organs of healthy organisms, which is not well-known at present. Here, the distribution of natural Cu isotopes in the brain, liver, red blood cells, plasma, kidneys, and muscle of 14 mice (7 males and 7 females) from three different genetic backgrounds is assessed. We show that the Cu isotopic composition of most mouse organs is isotopically distinct from one another. The most striking feature is the heavy isotope enrichment of the kidney (δ65Cu = 1.65 ± 0.06‰, 2SE), brain (δ65Cu = 0.87 ± 0.03‰, 2SE) and liver (δ65Cu = 0.71 ± 0.24‰, 2SE) compared to blood components, i.e. red blood cells (RBCs) (δ65Cu = 0.30 ± 0.06‰, 2SE), and plasma (δ65Cu = -0.61 ± 0.08‰, 2SE), with δ65Cu being the per mil deviation of the 65Cu/63Cu ratio from the NIST SRM 976 standard. Differences in genetic background do not appear to affect the isotopic distribution of Cu. Interestingly, male and female mice appear to have different Cu concentrations and isotopic compositions in their brain, plasma, muscle, and RBC. By demonstrating that organs have distinct isotopic compositions, our study reinforces the notion that Cu stable isotopes can be used to trace changes in homeostasis in diseases affecting Cu distribution, such as Alzheimer's disease, liver cancer, and possible chronic kidney failure., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Zn Isotope Fractionation during Sorption onto Kaolinite.
- Author
-
Guinoiseau D, Gélabert A, Moureau J, Louvat P, and Benedetti MF
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Chemical Fractionation, Zinc Isotopes chemistry, Kaolin chemistry, Soil Pollutants chemistry, Zinc chemistry
- Abstract
In this study, we quantify zinc isotope fractionation during its sorption onto kaolinite, by performing experiments under various pH, ionic strength, and total Zn concentrations. A systematic enrichment in heavy Zn isotopes on the surface of kaolinite was measured, with Δ(66)Znadsorbed-solution ranging from 0.11‰ at low pH and low ionic strength to 0.49‰ at high pH and high ionic strength. Both the measured Zn concentration and its isotopic ratio are correctly described using a thermodynamic sorption model that considers two binding sites: external basal surfaces and edge sites. Based on this modeling approach, two distinct Zn isotopic fractionation factors were calculated: Δ(66)Znadsorbed-solution = 0.18 ± 0.06‰ for ion exchange onto basal sites, and Δ(66)Znadsorbed-solution = 0.49 ± 0.06‰ for specific complexation onto edge sites. These two distinct factors indicate that Zn isotope fractionation is dominantly controlled by the chemical composition of the solution (pH, ionic strength).
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Transient signal isotope analysis: validation of the method for isotope signal synchronization with the determination of amplifier first-order time constants.
- Author
-
Gourgiotis A, Manhès G, Louvat P, Moureau J, and Gaillardet J
- Abstract
Rationale: During transient signal acquisition by Multi-Collection Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (MC-ICPMS), an isotope ratio increase or decrease (isotopic drift hereafter) is often observed which is related to the different time responses of the amplifiers involved in multi-collection. This isotopic drift affects the quality of the isotopic data and, in a recent study, a method of internal amplifier signal synchronization for isotope drift correction was proposed. In this work the determination of the amplifier time constants was investigated in order to validate the method of internal amplifier signal synchronization for isotope ratio drift correction., Methods: Two different MC-ICPMS instruments, the Neptune and the Neptune Plus, were used, and both the lead transient signals and the signal decay curves of the amplifiers were investigated., Results: Our results show that the first part of the amplifier signal decay curve is characterized by a pure exponential decay. This part of the signal decay was used for the effective calculation of the amplifier first-order time constants. The small differences between these time constants were compared with time lag values obtained from the method of isotope signal synchronization and were found to be in good agreement., Conclusions: This work proposes a way of determining amplifier first-order time constants. We show that isotopic drift is directly related to the amplifier first-order time constants and the method of internal amplifier signal synchronization for isotope ratio drift correction is validated., (Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Photoreactivity of indirubin derivatives.
- Author
-
Olivier D, Poincelot MA, Douillard S, Lefevre C, Moureau J, Ferandin Y, Bettayeb K, Xiao Z, Magiatis P, Skaltsounis L, Meijer L, and Patrice T
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Death drug effects, Cell Survival drug effects, Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor, Fluorescence, Humans, Indoles chemistry, Indoles pharmacology, Indoles radiation effects, Molecular Structure, Photochemistry, Protein Kinase Inhibitors pharmacology, Rats, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Reactive Oxygen Species radiation effects, Sensitivity and Specificity, Spectrometry, Fluorescence methods, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet methods, Stereoisomerism, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Light, Protein Kinase Inhibitors chemistry, Protein Kinase Inhibitors radiation effects, Protein Kinases drug effects
- Abstract
Twenty-nine analogs of indirubin, an isomer of indigo, have been synthesized to optimize its promising kinase inhibitory scaffold. These compounds being also pigmented, have been tested for their photoreactivity. Absorption maxima were between 485 nm and 560 nm. Addition of fetal calf serum induced fluorescence and time dependent absorption modifications. Appropriate illumination induced Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) production for nineteen compounds out of twenty-nine. The relationship between fluorescence and ROS production is discussed. Six compounds showed an important toxicity on F98 cells, a murine glioma cell line. Three of these were found to be also phototoxic, as four other non-toxic compounds. All but one phototoxic compounds were detected as ROS producers by in vitro tests. Photoreactivity assessment is important to anticipate adverse reactions for compounds that might be clinically developed. The experimental assay was found to be the only way to evaluate the photoreactivity of this family of compounds since no predictive criteria on structures could be found. Combining the vascular tumor growth inhibition induced by kinase inhibitors with the massive local blood flow arrest following photodynamic treatment may be an efficient anti-cancer strategy. These data could orientate further syntheses of either non-photoreactive compounds or compounds displaying both kinase inhibitory activity and strong phototoxicity.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.