Institution
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Nonprofit•Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States•
About: American Association for the Advancement of Science is a nonprofit organization based out in Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Science education & Government. The organization has 353 authors who have published 897 publications receiving 18841 citations. The organization is also known as: AAAS.
Topics: Science education, Government, Public policy, Cancer, Higher education
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: This Podcast features a conversation with the author of Research Articles published in the 14 February 2012 and 29 November 2011 issues of Science Signaling, where David Glass discusses how protein synthesis is regulated in muscles in the contexts of both hypertrophy and atrophy.
Abstract: This Podcast features a conversation with the author of Research Articles published in the 14 February 2012 and 29 November 2011 issues of Science Signaling . David Glass discusses how protein synthesis is regulated in muscles in the contexts of both hypertrophy and atrophy. The changes in muscle mass that characterize hypertrophy and atrophy are caused by changes in protein production and degradation rather than changes in cell number. Research by Glass’s group has demonstrated that signaling through the G protein Gα i2 promotes hypertrophy and regeneration and inhibits atrophy. They also found that the kinase MNK2 promotes atrophy by inhibiting protein translation through two mechanisms, one of which involves the target of rapamycin (TOR) pathway.
••
TL;DR: This annual feature summarizes major advances in signaling research published during the past year and describes the potential new avenues of research opened by these findings.
Abstract: This annual feature summarizes major advances in signaling research published during the past year. Notable findings in signaling research nominated by leading researchers in signal transduction and by the STKE editors are described, along with the potential new avenues of research opened by these findings.
••
01 Jan 1994TL;DR: In this article, a lack of understanding about the relationship between population and the environment has been identified, and actions needed to obtain the information necessary to develop rational and focused responses are discussed.
Abstract: Expanding world populations have a potentially adverse impact on the global environment. While this largely intuitive statement has broad acceptance, articulating the precise nature of the relationship between population and environment has been difficult. There is a significant lack of understanding about this relationship and the actions needed to obtain the information necessary to developing rational and focused responses.
••
TL;DR: The guanine nucleotide exchange factor Brx is required in lymphocytes for the expression of nfat5 in response to osmotic stress and this is a conversation with Tomoshige Kino, corresponding author of a Research Article published in the 10 February issue of Science Signaling.
Abstract: This is a conversation with Tomoshige Kino, corresponding author of a Research Article published in the 10 February issue of Science Signaling . He discusses his group’s findings about how osmotic stress triggers expression of the genes required to restore osmotic balance in cells of the immune system.
••
TL;DR: A conversation with Mike Fainzilber about a Research Article published in the 13 July 2010 issue of Science Signaling about network redundancies lend robustness to the neuronal injury response.
Abstract: This is a conversation with Mike Fainzilber about a Research Article published in the 13 July 2010 issue of Science Signaling.
Authors
Showing all 359 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kendall N. Houk | 112 | 997 | 54877 |
M. Cooke | 110 | 915 | 52792 |
Federica Sallusto | 107 | 244 | 66684 |
Peter Agre | 104 | 248 | 39051 |
Michael B. Yaffe | 102 | 379 | 41663 |
Abul K. Abbas | 88 | 251 | 34965 |
Jose M. F. Moura | 80 | 647 | 25819 |
Marcia C. Linn | 72 | 337 | 25744 |
Eli Y. Adashi | 66 | 442 | 17139 |
William H. Press | 63 | 180 | 102433 |
Richard A. Berk | 58 | 293 | 15288 |
James L. Salzer | 56 | 111 | 11437 |
Robert E. Kopp | 56 | 199 | 10227 |
Herbert C. Kelman | 52 | 155 | 12853 |
Gerard Gilfoyle | 50 | 255 | 8716 |