All Stories

  1. Elastin in healthy and diseased lung
  2. Emerging concepts in bone repair and the premise of soft materials
  3. Changes in elastin structure and extensibility induced by hypercalcemia and hyperglycemia
  4. Tailoring the biofunctionality of collagen biomaterials via tropoelastin incorporation and EDC-crosslinking
  5. Tropoelastin Promotes the Formation of Dense, Interconnected Endothelial Networks
  6. Autosomal Recessive Cutis Laxa 1C Mutations Disrupt the Structure and Interactions of Latent TGFβ Binding Protein-4
  7. Fuzzy binding model of molecular interactions between tropoelastin and integrin alphaVbeta3
  8. Clinical Relevance of Elastin in the Structure and Function of Skin
  9. Fabricating Organized Elastin in Vascular Grafts
  10. Applications of Engineering Techniques in Microvasculature Design
  11. Tropoelastin and Elastin Assembly
  12. Domains 12 to 16 of tropoelastin promote cell attachment and spreading through interactions with glycosaminoglycan and integrins alphaV and alpha5beta1
  13. A step closer to elastogenesis on demand; Inducing mature elastic fibre deposition in a natural biomaterial scaffold
  14. Novel Recombinant Tropoelastin Implants Restore Skin Extracellular Matrix
  15. Human‐Recombinant‐Elastin‐Based Bioinks for 3D Bioprinting of Vascularized Soft Tissues
  16. Transglutaminase-Mediated Cross-Linking of Tropoelastin to Fibrillin Stabilises the Elastin Precursor Prior to Elastic Fibre Assembly
  17. A novel tropoelastin-based resorbable surgical mesh for pelvic organ prolapse repair
  18. Tubular Fibrous Scaffolds Functionalized with Tropoelastin as a Small-Diameter Vascular Graft
  19. Plasma treatment in air at atmospheric pressure that enables reagent-free covalent immobilization of biomolecules on polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)
  20. Covalent Biofunctionalization of the Inner Surfaces of a Hollow-Fiber Capillary Bundle Using Packed-Bed Plasma Ion Implantation
  21. Elastin Biomaterials in Dermal Repair
  22. Elastin in Vascular Grafts
  23. Elastin architecture
  24. Fabrication Techniques for Vascular and Vascularized Tissue Engineering
  25. Tuneable cellulose nanocrystal and tropoelastin-laden hyaluronic acid hydrogels
  26. Coarse-Grained Model of Tropoelastin Self-Assembly into Nascent Fibrils
  27. Fabricated tropoelastin-silk yarns and woven textiles for diverse tissue engineering applications
  28. Hierarchical assembly of elastin materials
  29. Tropoelastin-Coated Tendon Biomimetic Scaffolds Promote Stem Cell Tenogenic Commitment and Deposition of Elastin-Rich Matrix
  30. Allysine modifications perturb tropoelastin structure and mobility on a local and global scale
  31. Injectable and Magnetic Responsive Hydrogels with Bioinspired Ordered Structures
  32. Freestanding hierarchical vascular structures engineered from ice
  33. Soluble matrix protein is a potent modulator of mesenchymal stem cell performance
  34. Optically robust, highly permeable and elastic protein films that support dual cornea cell types
  35. Plasma processing of PDMS based spinal implants for covalent protein immobilization, cell attachment and spreading
  36. HiPIMS carbon coatings show covalent protein binding that imparts enhanced hemocompatibility
  37. Tropoelastin is a Flexible Molecule that Retains its Canonical Shape
  38. Plasma‐Activated Substrate with a Tropoelastin Anchor for the Maintenance and Delivery of Multipotent Adult Progenitor Cells
  39. Photocrosslinkable Gelatin/Tropoelastin Hydrogel Adhesives for Peripheral Nerve Repair
  40. Role for Cela1 in Postnatal Lung Remodeling and Alpha-1 Antitrypsin–Deficient Emphysema
  41. Molecular model of human tropoelastin and implications of associated mutations
  42. The elastin matrix in tissue engineering and regeneration
  43. Plasma ion implantation enabled bio-functionalization of PEEK improves osteoblastic activity
  44. Tropoelastin Implants That Accelerate Wound Repair
  45. Engineering magnetically responsive tropoelastin spongy-like hydrogels for soft tissue regeneration
  46. Engineering a sprayable and elastic hydrogel adhesive with antimicrobial properties for wound healing
  47. Plasma mediated protein immobilisation enhances the vascular compatibility of polyurethane with tissue matched mechanical properties
  48. A cell adhesive peptide from tropoelastin promotes sequential cell attachment and spreading via distinct receptors
  49. Computational smart polymer design based on elastin protein mutability
  50. Tropoelastin coated PLLA-PLGA scaffolds promote vascular network formation
  51. Tropoelastin inhibits intimal hyperplasia of mouse bioresorbable arterial vascular grafts
  52. A sterilizable, biocompatible, tropoelastin surface coating immobilized by energetic ion activation
  53. 2.18 Elastin Biopolymers ☆
  54. Targeted modulation of tropoelastin structure and assembly
  55. Design of an elastin-layered dermal regeneration template
  56. Promoting Tropoelastin Expression in Arterial and Venous Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells and Fibroblasts for Vascular Tissue Engineering
  57. Plasma Ion Activated Expanded Polytetrafluoroethylene Vascular Grafts with a Covalently Immobilized Recombinant Human Tropoelastin Coating Reducing Neointimal Hyperplasia
  58. Tropoelastin-Bound Plasma-Activated Stents Strikingly Reduce Thrombogenicity While Simultaneously Inhibiting Neointimal Hyperplasia
  59. Elastomers in vascular tissue engineering
  60. Tropoelastin enhances nitric oxide production by endothelial cells
  61. Cost-Effective Creation of Biofunctionalised Scaffolds, Tailored to Function as Stem Cell Niches for Expansion, Transport and Delivery
  62. Elastic proteins and elastomeric protein alloys
  63. Synthetic-Elastin Systems
  64. Plasma-Activated Tropoelastin Functionalization of Zirconium for Improved Bone Cell Response
  65. Silk-ionomer and silk-tropoelastin hydrogels as charged three-dimensional culture platforms for the regulation of hMSC response
  66. TROPOELASTIN-BOUND PLASMA-ACTIVATED STENTS STRIKINGLY REDUCE THROMBOGENICITY WHILE SIMULTANEOUSLY INHIBITING NEOINTIMAL HYPERPLASIA
  67. Blended Polyurethane and Tropoelastin as a Novel Class of Biologically Interactive Elastomer
  68. Subtle balance of tropoelastin molecular shape and flexibility regulates dynamics and hierarchical assembly
  69. Accelerated wound repair and promoted angiogenesis in a tropoelastin� modified dermal regeneration template
  70. Perspectives on the Molecular and Biological Implications of Tropoelastin in Human Tissue Elasticity*
  71. Bio-functionalisation of polyether ether ketone using plasma immersion ion implantation
  72. Force fields for simulating the interaction of surfaces with biological molecules
  73. Highly Elastic and Conductive Human-Based Protein Hybrid Hydrogels
  74. Mechanical Properties of Plasma Immersion Ion Implanted PEEK for Bioactivation of Medical Devices
  75. Direct covalent coupling of proteins to nanostructured plasma polymers: a route to tunable cell adhesion
  76. A potential role for endogenous proteins as sacrificial sunscreens and antioxidants in human tissues
  77. Depth-Resolved Structural and Compositional Characterization of Ion-Implanted Polystyrene that Enables Direct Covalent Immobilization of Biomolecules
  78. Characterization of Endothelial Progenitor Cell Interactions with Human Tropoelastin
  79. Mechanistic Insight into the Elastin Degradation Process by the Metalloprotease Myroilysin from the Deep-Sea Bacterium Myroides profundi D25
  80. Fabricated Elastin
  81. Silk–tropoelastin protein films for nerve guidance
  82. Wound Healing: Tropoelastin Incorporation into a Dermal Regeneration Template Promotes Wound Angiogenesis (Adv. Healthcare Mater. 4/2015)
  83. Electrodeposited gels prepared from protein alloys
  84. Elastin-based biomaterials and mesenchymal stem cells
  85. Non-thrombogenic, bioactive stent platform
  86. Tropoelastin Incorporation into a Dermal Regeneration Template Promotes Wound Angiogenesis
  87. 114
  88. A Negatively Charged Residue Stabilizes the Tropoelastin N-terminal Region for Elastic Fiber Assembly
  89. Molecular-level characterization of elastin-like constructs and human aortic elastin
  90. Surface plasma modification and tropoelastin coating of a polyurethane co-polymer for enhanced cell attachment and reduced thrombogenicity
  91. Elastin based cell-laden injectable hydrogels with tunable gelation, mechanical and biodegradation properties
  92. Biocompatibility of silk-tropoelastin protein polymers
  93. Tropoelastin: A versatile, bioactive assembly module
  94. Immobilisation of a fibrillin-1 fragment enhances the biocompatibility of PTFE
  95. Large-Scale Investigation of Leishmania Interaction Networks with Host Extracellular Matrix by Surface Plasmon Resonance Imaging
  96. PM172 Bioengineering synthetic elastin conduits for arterial revascularisation
  97. PM049 Bioengineering Stents With Proactive Biocompatibility
  98. A Novel Cell Adhesion Region in Tropoelastin Mediates Attachment to Integrin  V 5
  99. Large-Scale Investigation of Leishmania Interaction Networks with Host Extracellular Matrix by Surface Plasmon Resonance Imaging
  100. Functional Biomaterials: Highly Elastic Micropatterned Hydrogel for Engineering Functional Cardiac Tissue (Adv. Funct. Mater. 39/2013)
  101. Tropoelastin modulates TGF-β1-induced expression of VEGF and CTGF in airway smooth muscle cells
  102. Multifunctional SilkTropoelastin Biomaterial Systems
  103. The use of plasma-activated covalent attachment of early domains of tropoelastin to enhance vascular compatibility of surfaces
  104. Elastomeric recombinant protein-based biomaterials
  105. Engineered cell-laden human protein-based elastomer
  106. Elastin sequences trigger transient proinflammatory responses by human dermal fibroblasts
  107. Biomechanics of Synthetic Elastin: Insights from Magnetic Resonance Microimaging
  108. Highly Elastic Micropatterned Hydrogel for Engineering Functional Cardiac Tissue
  109. Tropoelastin — A multifaceted naturally smart material
  110. Elastin biology and tissue engineering with adult cells
  111. Charge‐Tunable Autoclaved Silk‐Tropoelastin Protein Alloys That Control Neuron Cell Responses
  112. Hydrogel-coated microfluidic channels for cardiomyocyte culture
  113. Synthesis of functionalized-thermo responsive-water soluble co-polymer for conjugation to protein for biomedical applications
  114. Tropoelastin Selectively Inhibits Smooth Muscle Cell Proliferation
  115. The Role of Elastin in Wound Healing and Dermal Substitute Design
  116. Ion implanted, radical-rich surfaces for the rapid covalent immobilization of active biomolecules
  117. Plasma Based Biofunctionalisation of Cardiovascular Stents
  118. Plasma-based biofunctionalization of vascular implants
  119. In vivo biocompatibility of a plasma-activated, coronary stent coating
  120. Electrospun synthetic human elastin:collagen composite scaffolds for dermal tissue engineering
  121. Elastolytic Mechanism of a Novel M23 Metalloprotease Pseudoalterin from Deep-sea Pseudoalteromonas sp. CF6-2: CLEAVING NOT ONLY GLYCYL BONDS IN THE HYDROPHOBIC REGIONS BUT ALSO PEPTIDE BONDS IN THE HYDROPHILIC REGIONS INVOLVED IN CROSS-LINKING
  122. Elastin signaling in wound repair
  123. Cell patterning via linker-free protein functionalization of an organic conducting polymer (polypyrrole) electrode
  124. Protein-based composite materials
  125. Elastin in asthma
  126. Resolving Nitrogen-15 and Proton Chemical Shifts for Mobile Segments of Elastin with Two-dimensional NMR Spectroscopy
  127. Tropoelastin bridge region positions the cell-interactive C terminus and contributes to elastic fiber assembly
  128. Molecular Orientation of Tropoelastin is Determined by Surface Hydrophobicity
  129. Enhancement of Biocompatibility of Synthetic Vascular Grafts by Covalent Immobilisation of Recombinant Human Tropoelastin
  130. Endothelial Progenitor Cell (EPC) Interaction with Recombinant Human Elastin (rhELN) is Through Integrin αVβ3
  131. The action of neutrophil serine proteases on elastin and its precursor
  132. The influence of elasticity and surface roughness on myogenic and osteogenic-differentiation of cells on silk-elastin biomaterials
  133. Fabrication of porous PCL/elastin composite scaffolds for tissue engineering applications
  134. Tropoelastin Switch and Modulated Endothelial Cell Binding to PTFE
  135. Alignment of human vascular smooth muscle cells on parallel electrospun synthetic elastin fibers
  136. Directed cell attachment by tropoelastin on masked plasma immersion ion implantation treated PTFE
  137. Tailoring the porosity and pore size of electrospun synthetic human elastin scaffolds for dermal tissue engineering
  138. Increasing the Pore Size of Electrospun Scaffolds
  139. Coacervation of tropoelastin
  140. Elastin Based Constructs
  141. Colocalization in vivo and association in vitro of perlecan and elastin
  142. Free radical functionalization of surfaces to prevent adverse responses to biomedical devices
  143. Binding of the cell adhesive protein tropoelastin to PTFE through plasma immersion ion implantation treatment
  144. Structure and Activity of Aspergillus nidulans Copper Amine Oxidase
  145. Elastin as a Nonthrombogenic Biomaterial
  146. Severe Burn Injuries and the Role of Elastin in the Design of Dermal Substitutes
  147. Synthetic Vascular Conduits for Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery. Synopsis and State of the Art
  148. Shape of tropoelastin, the highly extensible protein that controls human tissue elasticity
  149. The effect of elastin on chondrocyte adhesion and proliferation on poly (ɛ-caprolactone)/elastin composites
  150. Elastin Biopolymers
  151. Recombinant Human Elastin (rhELN)) Enhances Endothelial Progenitor Cell (EPC)-mediated Endothelialisation
  152. A multilayered synthetic human elastin/polycaprolactone hybrid vascular graft with tailored mechanical properties
  153. Universal Biomolecule Binding Interlayers Created by Energetic Ion Bombardment
  154. A Synthetic Internal Mammary Artery
  155. ChemInform Abstract: Elastin‐Based Materials
  156. Stability of a Therapeutic Layer of Immobilized Recombinant Human Tropoelastin on a Plasma-Activated Coated Surface
  157. Biomaterials derived from silk–tropoelastin protein systems
  158. The immobilization of recombinant human tropoelastin on metals using a plasma-activated coating to improve the biocompatibility of coronary stents
  159. Synthetic elastin hydrogels that are coblended with heparin display substantial swelling, increased porosity, and improved cell penetration
  160. Substrate elasticity provides mechanical signals for the expansion of hemopoietic stem and progenitor cells
  161. A Novel Elastin-coated e-PTFE Vascular Conduit
  162. Homology models for domains 21–23 of human tropoelastin shed light on lysine crosslinking
  163. Stages in tropoelastin coalescence during synthetic elastin hydrogel formation
  164. Structural disorder and dynamics of elastinThis paper is one of a selection of papers published in this special issue entitled “Canadian Society of Biochemistry, Molecular & Cellular Biology 52nd Annual Meeting — Protein Folding: Principles and Dis...
  165. Degradation of tropoelastin by matrix metalloproteinases – cleavage site specificities and release of matrikines
  166. Transient tropoelastin nanoparticles are early-stage intermediates in the coacervation of human tropoelastin whose aggregation is facilitated by heparan sulfate and heparin decasaccharides
  167. Cross-linked open-pore elastic hydrogels based on tropoelastin, elastin and high pressure CO2
  168. The linker-free covalent attachment of collagen to plasma immersion ion implantation treated polytetrafluoroethylene and subsequent cell-binding activity
  169. Synthetic human elastin microfibers: Stable cross-linked tropoelastin and cell interactive constructs for tissue engineering applications
  170. Elastin-based materials
  171. Immobilized Recombinant Human Tropoelastin on a Plasma-Activated Coating Dramatically Enhances Biocompatibility of Metal Alloys: Implications for Coronary Stents
  172. Synthetic Recombinant Human Elastin-based Vascular Grafts with Biological and Mechanical Properties Matching the Human Vasculature
  173. Linker-free covalent attachment of the extracellular matrix protein tropoelastin to a polymer surface for directed cell spreading
  174. Primary human dermal fibroblast interactions with open weave three-dimensional scaffolds prepared from synthetic human elastin
  175. Covalently Bound Biomimetic Layers on Plasma Polymers with Graded Metallic Interfaces for in vivo Implants
  176. Synthesis of highly porous crosslinked elastin hydrogels and their interaction with fibroblasts in vitro
  177. Cell Adhesion to Tropoelastin Is Mediated via the C-terminal GRKRK Motif and Integrin  V 3
  178. Tropoelastin as a thermodynamically unfolded premolten globule protein: The effect of trimethylamine N-oxide on structure and coacervation
  179. In vitro studies of cells grown on the superconductor PrOxFeAs
  180. Tropoelastin
  181. In vitro degradation of human tropoelastin by MMP-12 and the generation of matrikines from domain 24
  182. Covalent immobilisation of tropoelastin on a plasma deposited interface for enhancement of endothelialisation on metal surfaces
  183. In situ polymerization of tropoelastin in the absence of chemical cross-linking
  184. Towards development of a novel bio-engineered vascular bypass conduit
  185. “Setting paint” analogy for the hydrophobic self‐association of tropoelastin into elastin‐like hydrogel
  186. Engineered Tropoelastin and Elastin-Based Biomaterials
  187. Plasma-mediated immobilisation of recombinant tropoelastin dramatically enhances vascular biocompatibility of metals: Implications for coronary stents
  188. The fabrication of elastin-based hydrogels using high pressure CO2
  189. Bioengineering a Human Elastin-derived Small-diameter Conduit with Biomechanical and Biological Properties of a Native Human Artery
  190. Effects of Surface Attachment of Recombinant Human Elastin on the Thrombogenicity of Synthetic Vascular Conduits
  191. Plasma Treatment of ePTFE for Covalent Attachment of Human Elastin, and its Effects on Endothelialisation
  192. Glycosaminoglycan-Mediated Coacervation of Tropoelastin Abolishes the Critical Concentration, Accelerates Coacervate Formation, and Facilitates Spherule Fusion: Implications for Tropoelastin Microassembly
  193. Covalent attachment of functional protein to polymer surfaces: a novel one-step dry process
  194. Mapping of macrophage elastase cleavage sites in insoluble human skin elastin
  195. Effect of Dense Gas CO2 on the Coacervation of Elastin
  196. Electrospun Elastin-based Vascular Grafts
  197. Elastin-coated ePTFE Vascular Conduit
  198. Development and Characterisation of a Novel Elastin Hydrogel
  199. Flexibility in the Solution Structure of Human Tropoelastin
  200. The N-Terminal A Domain of Staphylococcus aureus Fibronectin-Binding Protein A Binds to Tropoelastin
  201. Domains 17–27 of tropoelastin contain key regions of contact for coacervation and contain an unusual turn-containing crosslinking domain
  202. Abnormal Levels of Serum Antielastin Antibodies in Children with Diabetes Mellitus Type 1
  203. A turning point in elastin structure
  204. A radioassay for synaptic core complex assembly: Screening of herbal extracts for effectors
  205. Aggrecan expression is substantially and abnormally upregulated in Hutchinson–Gilford Progeria Syndrome dermal fibroblasts
  206. Tropoelastin Massively Associates during Coacervation To Form Quantized Protein Spheres
  207. Electrospun protein fibers as matrices for tissue engineering
  208. Complementary mass spectrometric techniques to achieve complete sequence coverage of recombinant human tropoelastin
  209. Cellular interactions with elastin
  210. Fibrillin-1 Interactions with Heparin: IMPLICATIONS FOR MICROFIBRIL AND ELASTIC FIBER ASSEMBLY
  211. Coacervation Is Promoted by Molecular Interactions between the PF2 Segment of Fibrillin-1 and the Domain 4 Region of Tropoelastin
  212. Fibulin-5 interacts with fibrillin-1 molecules and microfibrils
  213. The hydrophobic domain 26 of human tropoelastin is unstructured in solution
  214. Specificity in the coacervation of tropoelastin: solvent exposed lysines
  215. A model two-component system for studying the architecture of elastin assembly in vitro
  216. Heparan sulphate interacts with tropoelastin, with some tropoelastin peptides and is present in human dermis elastic fibers
  217. Elastin
  218. Synthetic elastin hydrogels derived from massive elastic assemblies of self-organized human protein monomers
  219. Lamin A expression levels are unperturbed at the normal and mutant alleles but display partial splice site selection in Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome
  220. Microfibril‐associated glycoprotein‐1 binding to tropoelastin
  221. Molecular Basis of Elastic Fiber Formation: CRITICAL INTERACTIONS AND A TROPOELASTIN-FIBRILLIN-1 CROSS-LINK
  222. Integrin αvβ3 binds a unique non-RGD site near the C-terminus of human tropoelastin
  223. Proteomic Analysis of the Genetic Premature Aging Disease Hutchinson Gilford Progeria Syndrome Reveals Differential Protein Expression and Glycosylation
  224. Structural changes and facilitated association of tropoelastin
  225. Rational design of tropoelastin peptide-based inhibitors of metalloproteinases
  226. The S-star trial bioinformatics course: An on-line learning success
  227. Asn78 and His81 form a destabilizing locus within the Max HLH‐LZ homodimer
  228. Hydrophobic Domains of Human Tropoelastin Interact in a Context-dependent Manner
  229. Protein Interaction Studies of MAGP-1 with Tropoelastin and Fibrillin-1
  230. Building Elastin
  231. Cloning and structural analysis of partial acetylcholine receptor subunit genes from the parasitic nematode Teladorsagia circumcincta
  232. Thermodynamic and Hydrodynamic Properties of Human Tropoelastin. ANALYTICAL ULTRACENTRIFUGE AND PULSED FIELD-GRADIENT SPIN-ECHO NMR STUDIES
  233. Expression of Recombinant Human Tropoelastin inSaccharomyces cerevisiae Containing a Synthetic Gene with a High Codon Adaptation Index Coupled to theSUC2 Invertase Signal Sequence
  234. Expression of Recombinant Human Tropoelastin in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Containing a Synthetic Gene with a High Codon Adaptation Index Coupled to the SUC2 Invertase Signal Sequence
  235. A novel b(1-4)galactosyltransferase gene silent mutation (594C>T) associated with Hutchinson-Gilford progeria Communicated by Mark H. Paalman Online Citation: Human Mutation, Mutation and Polymorphism Report #231 (2001) Online http://journals.wiley.com...
  236. A novel elastin gene mutation (1281delC) in a family with supravalvular aortic stenosis: A mutation cluster within exon 20 Communicated by Mark H. Paalman Online Citation: Human Mutation, Mutation and Polymorphism Report #197 (2000) Online http://journ...
  237. Sedimentation Equilibrium Analysis of Recombinant Human Tropoelastin Isoform
  238. Interfacial Asparagine Residues within an Amide Tetrad Contribute to Max Helix-Loop-Helix Leucine Zipper Homodimer Stability
  239. Domain 26 of Tropoelastin Plays a Dominant Role in Association by Coacervation
  240. A novel elastin gene mutation (1281delC) in a family with supravalvular aortic stenosis: A mutation cluster within exon 20
  241. Deficient coacervation of two forms of human tropoelastin associated with supravalvular aortic stenosis
  242. Sex determination using the polymerase chain reaction
  243. Glycosaminoglycans Mediate the Coacervation of Human Tropoelastin through Dominant Charge Interactions Involving Lysine Side Chains
  244. Haemonchus contortus: Sequence Heterogeneity of Internucleotide Binding Domains from P-Glycoproteinsand an Association with Avermectin/Milbemycin Resistance
  245. Biochemistry of tropoelastin
  246. Hutchinson–Gilford progeria: faithful DNA maintenance, inheritance and allelic transcription of β(1-4) galactosyltransferase
  247. Action of Tropoelastin and Synthetic Elastin Sequences on Vascular Tone and on Free Ca 2+ Level in Human Vascular Endothelial Cells
  248. The nicotinic acetylcholine α-subunit gene tar-1 is located on the X chromosome but its coding sequence is not involved in levamisole resistance in an isolate of Trichostrongylus colubriformis
  249. Coacervation Characteristics of Recombinant Human Tropoelastin
  250. Zipping up transcription factors: Rational design of anti-Jun and anti-Fos peptides
  251. mle-1, a mariner-like transposable element in the nematode Trichostrongylus colubriformis
  252. Characterization of an acetylcholine receptor gene of haemonchus contortus in relation to levamisole resistance1Note: Nucleotide sequence data reported in this paper are available in the GenBank™ database under accession No. U72490.1
  253. Cloning and sequence analysis of the candidate nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha subunit gene tar-1 from Trichostrongylus colubriformis
  254. High Resolution NMR Solution Structure of the Leucine Zipper Domain of the c-Jun Homodimer
  255. Development of a Sensitive Peptide-Based Immunoassay:  Application to Detection of the Jun and Fos Oncoproteins
  256. Multimer formation as a consequence of separate homodimerization domains: the human c-Jun leucine zipper is a transplantable dimerization module
  257. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Characterization of the Jun Leucine Zipper Domain: Unusual Properties of Coiled-Coil Interfacial Polar Residues
  258. Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Fibroblasts Exhibit Metabolically Normal Uridine Uptake and RNA Synthetic Rates
  259. Tandem integration of multipleILV5 copies and elevated transcription in polyploid yeast
  260. Hutchinson-Gilford progeria types defined by differential binding of lectin DSA
  261. Total synthesis and expression in Escherichia coli of a gene encoding human tropoelastin
  262. Conservation of the 168 divIB gene in Bacillus subtilis W23 and B. licheniformis, and evidence for homology to ftsQ of Escherichia coli
  263. Cloning, expression, and spectroscopic studies of the Jun leucine zipper domain
  264. The solution structure of the leucine zipper motif of the Jun oncoprotein homodimer
  265. Elevated levels of glycoprotein gp200 in progeria fibroblasts
  266. A Scal RFLP at the E-selectin (SELE) locus in a progeria family
  267. Southern transfer and hybridization: A class experiment
  268. Hyaluronic Acid in Progeria and the Aged Phenotype?
  269. BREWING YEAST IDENTIFICATION AND CHROMOSOME ANALYSIS USING HIGH RESOLUTION CHEF GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
  270. Does Progeria Provide the Best Model of Accelerated Ageing in Humans?
  271. Yeast artificial chromosomes: rapid extraction for high resolution analysis
  272. Transposon-mediated restriction mapping of the Bacillus subtilis chromosome
  273. Rapid method for preparation and cleavage of bacterial DNA for pulsed-field gel electrophoresis
  274. An immobilized fork as a termination of replication intermediate in Bacillus subtilis
  275. A unique DNA intermediate associated with termination of chromosome replication in Bacillus subtilis
  276. Impediment to replication fork movement in the terminus region of the Bacillus subtilis chromosome
  277. Restriction map of DNA spanning the replication terminus of the Bacillus subtilis chromosome
  278. Cloning DNA from the replication terminus region of the Bacillus subtilis chromosome
  279. Analysis of the terminus region of the Bacillus subtilis chromosome