Dataset Viewer
Auto-converted to Parquet Duplicate
pmcid
stringclasses
6 values
title
stringclasses
6 values
abstract
stringclasses
4 values
fulltext
stringclasses
6 values
file_path
stringclasses
6 values
176548
Monitoring Malaria: Genomic Activity of the Parasite in Human Blood Cells
null
Every year, malaria kills as many as 2.5 million people. Of these deaths, 90% occur in sub-Saharan Africa, and most are children. While four species of the single-celled organism Plasmodium cause malaria, Plasmodium falciparum is the deadliest. Harbored in mosquito saliva, the parasite infects its human host as the mos...
/Users/keerthanasridhar/biomedlm/data/EXTRACTED/PMC000xxxxxx/hello/PMC176548.xml
193605
From Gene Trees to Organismal Phylogeny in Prokaryotes:The Case of the γ-Proteobacteria
The rapid increase in published genomic sequences for bacteria presents the first opportunity to reconstruct evolutionary events on the scale of entire genomes. However, extensive lateral gene transfer (LGT) may thwart this goal by preventing the establishment of organismal relationships based on individual gene phylog...
Introduction The availability of complete sequences of genomes for clusters of related organisms presents the first opportunity to reconstruct events of genomic evolution. By comparing related genomes and inferring ancestral ones, we can identify events, such as specific chromosomal rearrangements, gene acquisitions, d...
/Users/keerthanasridhar/biomedlm/data/EXTRACTED/PMC000xxxxxx/hello/PMC193605.xml
193604
Drosophila Free-Running Rhythms Require Intercellular Communication
Robust self-sustained oscillations are a ubiquitous characteristic of circadian rhythms. These include Drosophila locomotor activity rhythms, which persist for weeks in constant darkness (DD). Yet the molecular oscillations that underlie circadian rhythms damp rapidly in many Drosophila tissues. Although much progress ...
Introduction Circadian rhythms of diverse organisms are based on similar intracellular molecular feedback loops ( Dunlap 1999 ; Allada et al. 2001 ; Panda et al. 2002 ). Based on this view, it is believed that one or a small number of clock cells are sufficient for self-sustained rhythms ( Dunlap 1999 ). This is despit...
/Users/keerthanasridhar/biomedlm/data/EXTRACTED/PMC000xxxxxx/hello/PMC193604.xml
176545
The Transcriptome of the Intraerythrocytic Developmental Cycle of Plasmodium falciparum
Plasmodium falciparum is the causative agent of the most burdensome form of human malaria, affecting 200–300 million individuals per year worldwide. The recently sequenced genome of P. falciparum revealed over 5,400 genes, of which 60% encode proteins of unknown function. Insights into the biochemical function and regu...
Introduction Human malaria is caused by four species of the parasitic protozoan genus Plasmodium . Of these four species, Plasmodium falciparum is responsible for the vast majority of the 300–500 million episodes of malaria worldwide and accounts for 0.7–2.7 million annual deaths. In many endemic countries, malaria is ...
/Users/keerthanasridhar/biomedlm/data/EXTRACTED/PMC000xxxxxx/hello/PMC176545.xml
176547
Borneo Elephants: A High Priority for Conservation
null
A new study settles a long-standing dispute about the genesis of an endangered species. With scant fossil evidence supporting a prehistoric presence, scientists could not say for sure where Borneo's elephants came from. Did they descend from ancient prototypes of the Pleistocene era or from modern relatives introduced ...
/Users/keerthanasridhar/biomedlm/data/EXTRACTED/PMC000xxxxxx/hello/PMC176547.xml
176546
DNA Analysis Indicates That Asian Elephants Are Native to Borneo and Are Therefore a High Priority for Conservation
The origin of Borneo's elephants is controversial. Two competing hypotheses argue that they are either indigenous, tracing back to the Pleistocene, or were introduced, descending from elephants imported in the 16th–18th centuries. Taxonomically, they have either been classified as a unique subspecies or placed under th...
Introduction Elephants have a very limited distribution in Borneo, being restricted to approximately 5% of the island in the extreme northeast ( Figure 1 ). There are no historical records of elephants outside of this range. Fossil evidence for the prehistoric presence of elephants on Borneo is limited to a single spec...
/Users/keerthanasridhar/biomedlm/data/EXTRACTED/PMC000xxxxxx/hello/PMC176546.xml
README.md exists but content is empty.
Downloads last month
3