Adrenergic receptors are plasma membrane proteins that mediate cellular responses to the hormone/neurotransmitters adrenaline and nonadrenaline which are released from sympathetic nerve terminals or the adrenal gland.
A team of Stanford researchers have identified a set of biomarkers that could be used to recognize patients with age-related declines in their immune function.
Introduction: Blood cell transfusion plays a vital role in modern medicineāsupporting surgery, obstetrics, trauma care, and cancer chemotherapy. In the US alone, more than 12 million red-cell units are consumed annually.
Stanford researchers have developed a new, low-cost method for tumor methylation profiling that enables tumor classification even from low amounts of fragmented DNA characteristic of liquid biopsies.
Stanford researchers in the Snyder lab have discovered and developed an innovative immunoglobulin modality for the treatment of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.
Stanford researchers have proposed a novel, in vivo, real-time epifluorescence imaging method in the second near-infrared region using single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs).
Fiber photometry, a measurement technique that aggregates fluorescence signal using a fiber optic, is a highly pervasive approach in the field of systems neuroscience to study in vivo brain tissue dynamics during ecologically relevant behavior.
Lab designation: RA3 6B2; A rat-mouse hybridoma cell line producing a monoclonal IgG2a rat AB which recognizes a B cell specific form of the T200 family of cell surface glycoproteins. B220 was first characterized by another MAB, RA3-3A1.
Adrenergic receptors are plasma membrane proteins that mediate cellular responses to the hormone/neurotransmitters adrenaline and nonadrenaline which are released from sympathetic nerve terminals or the adrenal gland.
Adrenergic receptors are plasma membrane proteins that mediate cellular responses to the hormone/neurotransmitters adrenaline and nonadrenaline which are released from sympathetic nerve terminals or the adrenal gland.
Psoriasis is a chronic skin inflammatory disease that affects 7.5 million people in the US and accounts for $1.2 billion in annual direct medical costs.
Stanford researchers at the Bao Research Group have patented a body area sensor network (bodyNET) that can be used to monitor human physiological signals for next-generation personalized healthcare.