Institution
Korea University
Education•Seoul, South Korea•
About: Korea University is a education organization based out in Seoul, South Korea. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Thin film. The organization has 39756 authors who have published 82424 publications receiving 1860927 citations. The organization is also known as: Bosung College & Bosung Professional College.
Topics: Population, Thin film, Catalysis, Large Hadron Collider, Cancer
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It is shown that a nanowire waveguide attached to the tapered tip of an optical fibre can guide visible light into intracellular compartments of a living mammalian cell, and can also detect optical signals from subcellular regions with high spatial resolution.
Abstract: A nanowire waveguide attached to an optical fibre can deliver payloads into cells and act as an endoscope capable of imaging single living cells with high spatial resolution.
302 citations
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TL;DR: A theoretical framework is developed to characterize artifacts of volume conduction, which may still be present even in reconstructed source time series as zero-lag correlations, and to distinguish their time-delayed brain interaction.
302 citations
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TL;DR: This Perspective discusses the opportunities that arise from synthetic antiferromagnets consisting of two or more ferromagnetic layers that are separated by metallic spacers or tunnel barriers and have antiparallel magnetizations.
Abstract: Spintronic and nanomagnetic devices often derive their functionality from layers of different materials and the interfaces between them. This is especially true for synthetic antiferromagnets - two or more ferromagnetic layers that are separated by metallic spacers or tunnel barriers and which have antiparallel magnetizations. Here, we discuss the new opportunities that arise from synthetic antiferromagnets, as compared to crystal antiferromagnets or ferromagnets.
302 citations
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TL;DR: For Au + Au collisions at 200 GeV, neutral pion production is measured with good statistics for transverse momentum, pT, and a fivefold suppression is found, which is essentially constant for 5 < pT < 20 GeV/c.
Abstract: For Au + Au collisions at 200 GeV, we measure neutral pion production with good statistics for transverse momentum, p(T), up to 20 GeV/c. A fivefold suppression is found, which is essentially constant for 5 in the parton quenching model. The spectral shape is similar for all collision classes, and the suppression does not saturate in Au + Au collisions.
302 citations
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TL;DR: PAL is an inducible enzyme that responds to biotic and abiotic stresses and its potential significance in the plant defence response to microbial pathogens is suggested.
Abstract: Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) has a crucial role in secondary phenylpropanoid metabolism and is one of the most extensively studied enzymes with respect to plant responses to biotic and abiotic stress. Here, we identified the pepper (Capsicum annuum) PAL (CaPAL1) gene, which was induced in pepper leaves by avirulent Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria (Xcv) infection. CaPAL1-silenced pepper plants exhibited increased susceptibility to virulent and avirulent Xcv infection. Reactive oxygen species (ROS), hypersensitive cell death, expression of the salicylic acid (SA)-dependent marker gene CaPR1, SA accumulation, and induction of PAL activity were significantly compromised in the CaPAL1-silenced pepper plants during Xcv infection. Overexpression (OX) of CaPAL1 in Arabidopsis conferred increased resistance to Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato (Pst) and Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis infection. CaPAL1-OX leaves exhibited restricted Pst growth, increased ROS burst and cell death, and induction of PR1 expression and SA accumulation. The increase in PAL activity in healthy and Pst-infected leaves was higher in CaPAL1-OX plants than in wild-type Arabidopsis. Taken together, these results suggest that CaPAL1 acts as a positive regulator of SA-dependent defence signalling to combat microbial pathogens via its enzymatic activity in the phenylpropanoid pathway.
302 citations
Authors
Showing all 40083 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Anil K. Jain | 183 | 1016 | 192151 |
Hyun-Chul Kim | 176 | 4076 | 183227 |
Yongsun Kim | 156 | 2588 | 145619 |
Jongmin Lee | 150 | 2257 | 134772 |
Byung-Sik Hong | 146 | 1557 | 105696 |
Daniel S. Berman | 141 | 1363 | 86136 |
Christof Koch | 141 | 712 | 105221 |
David Y. Graham | 138 | 1047 | 80886 |
Suyong Choi | 135 | 1495 | 97053 |
Rudolph E. Tanzi | 135 | 638 | 85376 |
Sung Keun Park | 133 | 1567 | 96933 |
Tae Jeong Kim | 132 | 1420 | 93959 |
Robert S. Brown | 130 | 1243 | 65822 |
Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin | 129 | 646 | 85630 |
Klaus-Robert Müller | 129 | 764 | 79391 |