Zobrazeno 1 - 4
of 4
pro vyhledávání: '"Peter Reavey"'
Autor:
Shashi Kaithamana, Melisa Carey-Barber, Kelly Murphy, Olivier Blondel, Thomas Kaufman, Malia A. McLean, Charles E. Birse, Oxana K. Pickeral, Robert Schulingkamp, Jana K. Siskind, Peter Reavey, Palanisamy Kanakaraj, Dan Crossan, Jason Bock, Andy Garcia, Susan Cheng, Mallika Singh, Blaire L. Osborn, Helmut Schneider, Surekha R. Krishnan, Steve Ruben, Alokesh Duttaroy, Cecil Chen, Guiyi Zhang
Publikováno v:
Diabetes. 54:251-258
The primary therapeutic goal for the treatment of diabetes is maintenance of a long-term, near-normoglycemic condition and prevention of the onset or progression of the complications associated with the disease. Although several analogs of human insu
Autor:
Charles E. Birse, Steve Ruben, Melisa C. Barber, Yanick Lazard, Ya-Qin Zhang, Carrie L. Fischer, Susan Cheng, Qinghai Zhao, Alokesh Duttaroy, Laurie Pukac, Linyi Zhang, Peter Reavey, Qi Wang, Lilin Zhong, Mallika Singh, Timothy A. Coleman, Steve Barash, Cecil Chen, Olivier Blondel, Krzysztof J. Grzegorzewski, Jon Hirsch, Indra Sanyal, Helmut Schneider, Roxanne Duan, Zhi-Dong Ma, Baiqin Teng, Adam Bell
Publikováno v:
Nature Biotechnology. 21:294-301
A coordinated functional genomics program was implemented to identify secreted polypeptides with therapeutic applications in the treatment of diabetes. Secreted factors were predicted from a diverse expressed-sequence tags (EST) database, representin
Autor:
Peter Reavey, Jean C. Kirkham, Nancy B. Kuemmerle, William S. Laster, Kristoffer Valerie, Luhua Cheng
Publikováno v:
Photochemistry and Photobiology. 64:280-285
Short wavelength (254 nm) ultraviolet light (UVC) radiation was much more potent in activating transcription of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV) reporter genes stably integrated into the genomes of human and monkey cells than ionizing radiation (
Autor:
Peter Reavey, Michael A. Friedman, James W. Langenbucher, Robert M. Pallay, Terry Falco, Stacey C. Cahn
Publikováno v:
Behavioral sleep medicine. 3(2)
In this study, we examined whether the common sense model of illness representation (CSMIR) could be successfully used to predict interest in cognitive-behavioral treatment for insomnia (CBT-I) among older primary care patients with disturbed sleep.