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41 - 90 of 102 search results for Cambridge Animal Alphabet |u:haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk where 11 match all words and 91 match some words.
  1. Results that match 2 of 3 words

  2. 1 Towards an Open Material Transfer Agreement OPENPLANT IP ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/OpenMTA-Report.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: These include improving the quality and yield of biofuels, animal feed, food and high value products through carbohydrate engineering. ... Some universities such as Cambridge and Stanford provide more autonomy for researchers to share their inventions
  3. A map of KNAT gene expression in the Arabidopsis ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Truernit2006.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Homeodomain proteins are key regulators of patterning during the development of animal and plant bodyplans. ... A specific class oftranscription factors, the homeodomain proteins,was first characterized in animals, where they havebeen shown to be key
  4. 00-0404

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/BoisnardLorig2001.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: b. Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EA, United Kingdom. ... The time scale observed iscompatible with previous observations in animal cells (Engeret al., 1968) but is much more rapid than that reported
  5. postpn298

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/POST_note298_2008.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Sequencing advances were instrumental in the success of the Human Genome Project and have allowed complete and large-scale DNA sequencing of many bacterial, and several plant and animal genomes. • ... The UK had four teams in the 2007 competition -
  6. pnas200906322 2711..2716

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Dupuy2010.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EA, United Kingdom. ... Numerousmodeling studies of animal and plant systems have been key toemphasize the role of these processes in the regulation of cellproliferation (33, 34), but
  7. THE POLITICS OF PROTEIN INTRODUCTION 1 EXAMINING CLAIMS ABOUT ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/PoliticsOfProtein.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: animals in food production is by far the most destructive technology on earth. ... Furthermore, although different production models diverge considerably in their implications for animal welfare, we consider claims about the general suffering of farmed
  8. 15103352228400 1..21

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Wintle2017.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: In the workshop, convened in Cambridge,UK, in November 2016, participants systemati-cally discussed each issue in turn. ... tion and methane release from large-animal agri-. culture. This would also enable production of.
  9. TECHNICAL ADVANCE High-resolution live imaging of plant growth in ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Maizel2011.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: D-60438 Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and3Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EA, UK. ... relatively simple repetitive units. However, in contrast to. animals, most organogenesis occurs post-embryonically.
  10. ANRV356-CB24-18.tex

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/CDBPart1B_refs/Lecture-2/Friml2008.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Nonethe-less, although apical-basal targeting in plantsand apical-basolateral delivery in animals can. ... 2007). In plant cells, as in animals,phosphatidylinositol-dependent signals mayregulate endocytosis and vesicle trafficking.
  11. The EMBO Journal vol.4 no.3 pp.817-827, 1985 2' Phosphomonoester, …

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Kiberstis85.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Paula A.Kiberstis1, Jim Haseloff and David ZimmernMRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 2QH,UK. ... Present address: Cell, 292 Main Street, Cambridge, MA 02142, USACommunicated by A.Klug.
  12. 1 SY NTH ETIC BIO LOG Y P RO ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/7_myths_final-1.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: do not allow animal use. This low biosafety level precludes many of the ethical questions. ... related to animal experiments or the use of. pathogens. In addition, most DIYers advocate transparency in their work.
  13. INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR CONSERVATION OF NATURE Genetic frontiers for…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/2019-012-En.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: It is an international agreement between governments aimed at ensuring that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival. ... This is the basis of genetic engineering, and has allowed researchers to speed
  14. Preparing for Future Products of Biotechnology

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/NAS_FutureProducts_24605.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: contaminated sites with engineered microbes, replacing animal-derived meat with meat cultured from animal cells, and controlling invasive species through gene drives.7. ... based rather than based on an animal or plant host (Table S-2).
  15. PL280076.dvi

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Jensen2000.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: 800. Introduction. Many of the components of plant signal transduc-tion and cellular trafficking pathways are similarto those of yeast and animal systems. ... domain. The ZAC-ZFD shows significant similarity to ARFGAP proteins from animals and fungi.
  16. kina24537enc_002

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/ebs_341_winds_en.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: DKs).38. Figure 15: Awareness of animal cloning for food production, EU27.42. ... Animal cloning for food products. Cloning animals for food products is even less popular than GM food with 18 per cent of Europeans in.
  17. A New Biology for the 21st Century

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/NewBiologyfor21stCentury.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: CaliforniaDavid Goldston, Princeton University, New JerseyJames Hanken, Harvard University, Cambridge, MassachusettsRobert Langer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, CambridgeRick Miranda, Colorado State University, Fort CollinsNorman Pace,
  18. INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR CONSERVATION OF NATURE Genetic frontiers for…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/2019-012-En-Syn.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Are there health concerns for humans or animals who consume chestnuts from genetically engineered trees? ... An example of mitigation that is being explored is to use gene drive to eradicate invasive rodents on islands, one of the main causes of animal
  19. No Job Name

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Aequea2012.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: 1Departamento Genética Molecular y Microbiología, Facultad Ciencias Biológicas, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile,Santiago, Chile, 2Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK and 3Departamento de CienciasVegetales
  20. Synthetic Biology Investment Report 2019 Q2 July 17, 2019 ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/Synthetic-Biology-Investment-Report-2019Q2-SynBioBeta.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Fauna Bio  Developing new ways to treat human diseases by adopting mechanisms animals have developed for . ... Funding by region The East and West Coasts have been the historical beneficiaries of new investment in  synthetic biology, with the
  21. Trans-splicing Ribozymes for Targeted Gene Delivery

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Kohler99.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Clea-. Present addresses: U. KoÈ hler, and J. Haseloff,Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge,Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EA, England;B.
  22. Workshop Report Genetic resources in the age of the ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/Nagoya_workshop_report_2018.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Hosted by the Sainsbury Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. 2018 University of Edinburgh. ... the University of Cambridge, John Innes Centre and the Earlham Institute: https://www.openplant.org.
  23. Synthetic Biology in Australia

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/ACOLA_HS3_SynBiology_2018.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: 3.3.6 Plant and animal biofactories 54. 3.3.7 Industrial biocatalysis 55. 3.3.8 Perspective 56. ... human and animal health and enhance. commercial opportunity in biomedicine. Cell engineering is an area of significant.
  24. OP-ANNB150080 1..16

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/Part2SynBio_refs/Lecture-1/Paris2015.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: They are an important source of water, an ar-ticle of cooked food and provide animal fodder in resource-poor, remote parts of southern Africa (Welman, 2011; Jensen,2012; Mujaju et
  25. Achieving food security in the face of climate change ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/climate_food_commission-final-mar2012.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: From there, diet structure changes are observed: consumption of cereals and vegetables decreases while that of sugar, fats and animal products increases. ... and people, a warming climate is likely to increase the incidence and geographic spread of human,
  26. PHC44

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Moreno2006.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Pawley, SpringerScienceBusiness Media, New York, 2006. Nuno Moreno • Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, PT-2780-156 Oeiras, PortugalSusan Bougourd • University of York, York YO10 5DD, United KingdomJim Haseloff • University of Cambridge,
  27. PrecisionAgriculture andthe Future ofFarming in EuropeTechnical…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/EPRS_STU(2016)581892_EN.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Reasonsfor the static EU consumption levels include animal welfare, the environment, health concerns and theageing EU population. ... It is expected that the concerns will be mitigated by increasedmovements of live animals across national borders.
  28. integratedproducts developmentscientific areassynthetic base type-in…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/SyntheticBiologyRoadmap.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: In the 1990s, Professor Shankar Balasubramanian and Professor David Klenerman of the University of Cambridge invented Solexa sequencing: an ultrafast method for sequencing DNA that improved cost and speed by ... The workshops followed a process
  29. Synthetic biology josi q7v2:Synthetic biology

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/RAE_Synthetic_biology.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: The first is. 7. Weiner N: Cybernetics or control and communication in the animal and machine. ... MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. (1948)8. Shannon C, Bell System Technical Journal, Vol.
  30. Blockingthe chainIndustrial food chain concentration, Big Data…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/ETC_blockingthechain_2018.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: The technique can cut or add gene sequences to chromosomes to alter the characteristics of the plant, animal or human, either temporarily or permanently. ... Although governments are struggling to control the use of Big Data, the tech-nology is still
  31. Delivery Plan 2019 1 UK RESEARCH AND INNOVATION Contents ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/UKRI-DP-19.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Bioscience (£55 million). • The Human Cell Atlas initiative (British Heart Foundation – £6.7 million)• Physics of life (£31.2 million)• UK Animal and Plant Health: understanding and countering bacterial. ... how genes affect the health of
  32. May 2020 The Bio Revolution: Innovations transforming econom ies, ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/MGI_The-Bio-Revolution_Report_May-2020.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Our analysis suggests that around one-third of these inputs are biological materials, such as wood, cotton, and animals bred for food. ... Mushroom roots rather than animal hide can be used to make leather.11 Plastics can be made with yeast instead of
  33. A new lease of life

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/Emerging-Risk-Report-2018---A-new-lease-of-life.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Today’s plants, animals and microorganisms have been gradually shaped by this evolutionary pressure for billions of years. ... Humans have been breeding animals and plants with the most desirable characteristics for thousands of years.
  34. GM plantsQuestions and answers GM plants: Questions and…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/Part2SynBio_refs/Lecture-1/RoyalSoc-gm-plant-q-and-a.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: QUESTION 2. How common are genes in food? All food, whether from plants or animals, contains genes. ... Humans have always eaten DNA from plants and animals. Most plants or animal cells contain about 30,000 genes, and most GM crops contain an additional
  35. Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol. 63, No. 14, pp. ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Wenzel2012.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: by ensuring primary production, water oxygenation and. provides niches for some animals, besides counteracting. ... M. Bougourd1. 1 Department of Biology, University of York, York, Y010 5DD, UK2 Biology Department, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC,
  36. 1 SY NTH ETIC BIO LOG Y P RO ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/SYNBIO_create-an-agenda_v4.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Nitrogen fixation in non-legumes (Cambridge, MA). Christopher Voigt, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. ... Gene drive systems (Cambridge, MA). Kevin Esvelt, Andrea Smidler and George Church, Harvard University.
  37. Growing the future About the UK Plant Sciences FederationThe ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/RoySocBiol_UKPSF_Growing_the_future_2019.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: University of Cambridge, the University of Oxford, the University of Essex and Lancaster University in the UK. ... Road verges, railway lines and other assets could be managed to enhance biodiversity and dispersal of plants and animals, allowing species
  38. THE SCIENCE AND APPLICATIONS OF SYNTHETIC AND SYSTEMS BIOLOGY ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/French2011.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: 34 Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge. 35 Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge. ... mit.edu/wiki/index.php/University_of_Edinburgh_2006; iGEM 2007, University of Cambridge, http://parts.mit.edu/iGEM07/index.php/Cambridge;
  39. B5_EUR21796_EN

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/NEST_syntheticbiology_2005.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Members:. Yaakov BENENSON (Weizmann Institute, Israel). Philipp HOLLIGER (MRC Cambridge, UK) Sven PANKE (ETH Zürich, Switzerland). ... Several such molecules show much increased therapeutic potency, but are currently difficult to mass-produce at an
  40. Synthetic Biology report final FINAL

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/Synthetic-Biology-report-FINAL.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: they! ... EPSRC/TSB_funded!multi_disciplinary!OpenPlant!Centre,!based!in!Norwich!and!Cambridge,!aims!to!deliver!a!number!of!synthetic!biology!tools,!resources!and!training!opportunities!for!plant!science!
  41. Synthetic Biology: social and ethical challenges

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/0806_synthetic_biology.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: between low gene number and increased complexity in the higher animals. ... EraGen Biosciences26 , founded by Steven Benner uses his expanded genetic alphabet and holds multiple patents related to synthetic biology including a number with broad claims
  42. A System for Modelling Cell – Cell Interactions during ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Dupuy2008.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EA, UK. ... A popular approach, also developedin animal sciences, is based on the Cellular Potts Models(Merks and Glazier, 2005).
  43. The NAC Domain Transcription Factors FEZ and SOMBRERO Control the…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Willemsen2009.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Jim Haseloff,2 and Ben Scheres1,1Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Utrecht, Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht, The Netherlands2Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EA, ... precisely controlled. In
  44. The future of food and agriculture: Trends and challenges

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/FAO_a-i6583e.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: OIE World Organisation for Animal Health. PPP purchasing power parity. R&D research and development. ... However, the needed acceleration in productivity growth is hampered by the degradation of natural resources, the loss of biodiversity, and the spread
  45. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/SixAcademies_13316.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: vii. UNITED KINGDOM SYMPOSIUM PLANNING GROUP Richard I. Kitney, Imperial College London Peter Leadlay, University of Cambridge Staff Shafiq Ahmed, The Royal Academy of Engineering Jessica Bland, The Royal Society Nick ... Kitney, Imperial College London;
  46. IRGC_ConceptNote_SyntheticBiology_Final_30April

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/IRGC_ConceptNote_SyntheticBiology_Final_30April.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: There are activities going on under the heading of synthetic biology which do not fit easily under these three headings, such as attempts to create an alternative genetic alphabet with new ... J. Craig Venter Institute, Rockville, MD, Center for
  47. Imaging green fluorescent protein in transgenic plants. Jim Haseloff…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Haseloff98.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Imaging green fluorescent protein in transgenic plants. Jim Haseloff. MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge. ... It is possible that altered mRNA sequences affect post-transcriptional processing. in animal cells.
  48. Orthogonal intercellular signaling for programmed spatial behavior

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/LabPapers/Grant2016.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: such as spatially organized microbial populations for bioprocessing. or remediation, novel plant structures, and animal tissues or organs,. ... Wu et al, 2014; Davis et al, 2015). 1 Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK2
  49. GMO-cover-100920.indd

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/a-decade-of-eu-funded-gmo-research_en.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Biomarkers for post-market monitoring of short- and long-term effects of genetically modified organisms on animal and human health[ GMSAFOOD ]. 178. 6. Chapter 3. GMOs for biomaterials and biofuels – Emerging ... On the basis of the precau-tionary
  50. AGRIFOOD ATLASFacts and figures about the corporations that control…

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/agrifoodatlas2017_facts-and-figures-about-the-corporations-that-control-what-we-eat.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: This led to the emergence of companies that produced seeds and animal breeding stock. ... These four crops are used not only as food, but also as animal feed, biofuel and industrial feed-stock, earning them the moniker “flex crops”.
  51. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. ...

    https://haseloff.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/resources/SynBio_reports/IndustrialisationBiology.pdf
    14 Aug 2023: Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Industrialization of Biology: A Roadmap to Accelerate the Advanced Manufacturing of Chemicals. Committee on Industrialization of Biology:A Roadmap to Accelerate the Advanced Manufacturing

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