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Nuclear weapons -- West (U.S.) -- Testing : The tainted desert : environmental ruin in the American West / Valerie L. Kuletz  1998 1
Nuclear weaponv -- China : Strategic views from the second tier : the nuclear weapons policies of France, Britain, and China / edited by John C. Hopkins and Weixing Hu  1995 1
Nuclear winter.   7
Nuclear winter -- Congresses. : The Long darkness : psychological and moral perspectives on nuclear winter / edited by Lester Grinspoon  1986 1
Nuclear winter -- Fiction.   5
Nuclear winter -- Juvenile fiction.   8
Nuclear winter -- Young adult fiction   2
 

Nuclear X-Ray -- See Gamma Rays


Penetrating, high-energy electromagnetic radiation emitted from atomic nuclei during NUCLEAR DECAY. The range of wavelengths of emitted radiation is between 0.1 - 100 pm which overlaps the shorter, more energetic hard X-RAYS wavelengths. The distinction between gamma rays and X-rays is based on their radiation source
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Nuclear X-Rays -- See Gamma Rays


Penetrating, high-energy electromagnetic radiation emitted from atomic nuclei during NUCLEAR DECAY. The range of wavelengths of emitted radiation is between 0.1 - 100 pm which overlaps the shorter, more energetic hard X-RAYS wavelengths. The distinction between gamma rays and X-rays is based on their radiation source
  1
Nuclease Protection Assays : DNA-protein interactions : principles and protocols / edited by Tom Moss and Benoît Leblanc  2009 1
 

Nuclease, RISC Multicomponent -- See RNA-Induced Silencing Complex


A multicomponent, ribonucleoprotein complex comprised of one of the family of ARGONAUTE PROTEINS and the "guide strand" of the one of the 20- to 30-nucleotide small RNAs. RISC cleaves specific RNAs, which are targeted for degradation by homology to these small RNAs. Functions in regulating gene expression are determined by the specific argonaute protein and small RNA including siRNA (RNA, SMALL INTERFERING), miRNA (MICRORNA), or piRNA (PIWI-INTERACTING RNA)
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  Nucleases -- 3 Related Subjects   3
Nucleases   3
Nucleases -- Laboratory manuals   2
 

Nucleases, RNA -- See Ribonucleases


Enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of ester bonds within RNA. EC 3.1.-
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Nucleate boiling. : Film and nucleate boiling processes / JAI guest editors, K. Narayan Prabhu, Nikolai Kobasko  2012 1
Nucleation.   21
 

Nucleation, Atmospheric -- See Atmospheric nucleation


  1
Nucleation -- Congresses. : Materials science and engineering : it's nucleation and growth : proceedings of a conference held at Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London, UK 14-15 May 2001 / edited by Malcolm McLean  2002 1
Nucleation -- Textbooks : Classical nucleation theory in multicomponent systems / Hanna Vehkamä̈ki  2006 1
 

Nuclei, Basal -- See Basal Ganglia


Large subcortical nuclear masses derived from the telencephalon and located in the basal regions of the cerebral hemispheres
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Nuclei, Cell -- See Cell Nucleus


Within a eukaryotic cell, a membrane-limited body which contains chromosomes and one or more nucleoli (CELL NUCLEOLUS). The nuclear membrane consists of a double unit-type membrane which is perforated by a number of pores; the outermost membrane is continuous with the ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM. A cell may contain more than one nucleus. (From Singleton & Sainsbury, Dictionary of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 2d ed)
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Nuclei, Exotic -- See Exotic nuclei


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Nuclei, Finite -- See Finite nuclei


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Nuclei, Galactic -- See Galactic nuclei


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Nuclei-hadron interactions -- See Hadron-nuclei interactions


  1
 

Nuclei Tractus Solitarii -- See Solitary Nucleus


GRAY MATTER located in the dorsomedial part of the MEDULLA OBLONGATA associated with the solitary tract. The solitary nucleus receives inputs from most organ systems including the terminations of the facial, glossopharyngeal, and vagus nerves. It is a major coordinator of AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM regulation of cardiovascular, respiratory, gustatory, gastrointestinal, and chemoreceptive aspects of HOMEOSTASIS. The solitary nucleus is also notable for the large number of NEUROTRANSMITTERS which are found therein
  1
 

Nuclei Tractus Solitarius -- See Solitary Nucleus


GRAY MATTER located in the dorsomedial part of the MEDULLA OBLONGATA associated with the solitary tract. The solitary nucleus receives inputs from most organ systems including the terminations of the facial, glossopharyngeal, and vagus nerves. It is a major coordinator of AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM regulation of cardiovascular, respiratory, gustatory, gastrointestinal, and chemoreceptive aspects of HOMEOSTASIS. The solitary nucleus is also notable for the large number of NEUROTRANSMITTERS which are found therein
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  Nuclei, Vestibular -- 2 Related Subjects   2
Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques   12
 

Nucleic Acid Conformation -- See Also RNA Folding


The processes of RNA tertiary structure formation
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Nucleic Acid Conformation   14
 

Nucleic Acid Conformations -- See Nucleic Acid Conformation


The spatial arrangement of the atoms of a nucleic acid or polynucleotide that results in its characteristic 3-dimensional shape
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Nucleic Acid Database -- See Databases, Nucleic Acid


Databases containing information about NUCLEIC ACIDS such as BASE SEQUENCE; SNPS; NUCLEIC ACID CONFORMATION; and other properties. Information about the DNA fragments kept in a GENE LIBRARY or GENOMIC LIBRARY is often maintained in DNA databases
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Nucleic Acid Databases -- See Databases, Nucleic Acid


Databases containing information about NUCLEIC ACIDS such as BASE SEQUENCE; SNPS; NUCLEIC ACID CONFORMATION; and other properties. Information about the DNA fragments kept in a GENE LIBRARY or GENOMIC LIBRARY is often maintained in DNA databases
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Nucleic Acid Denaturation -- See Also RNA Stability


The extent to which an RNA molecule retains its structural integrity and resists degradation by RNASE, and base-catalyzed HYDROLYSIS, under changing in vivo or in vitro conditions
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Nucleic acid fractionation -- See Nucleic acids Separation


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Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes. : Nuclear magnetic resonance and nucleic acids / edited by Thomas L. James  1995 1
 

Nucleic acid hybridization -- See Also the narrower term In situ hybridization


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Nucleic acid hybridization.   24
Nucleic Acid Hybridization -- methods. : Diagnostic molecular microbiology : principles and applications / edited by David H. Persing ... [and others]  1993 1
 

Nucleic Acid Hybridizations -- See Nucleic Acid Hybridization


Widely used technique which exploits the ability of complementary sequences in single-stranded DNAs or RNAs to pair with each other to form a double helix. Hybridization can take place between two complimentary DNA sequences, between a single-stranded DNA and a complementary RNA, or between two RNA sequences. The technique is used to detect and isolate specific sequences, measure homology, or define other characteristics of one or both strands. (Kendrew, Encyclopedia of Molecular Biology, 1994, p503)
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Nucleic Acid-Independent Peptide Biosynthesis -- See Peptide Biosynthesis, Nucleic Acid-Independent


The enzymatic synthesis of PEPTIDES without an RNA template by processes that do not use the ribosomal apparatus (RIBOSOMES)
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Nucleic Acid Precursors : Spliceosomal pre-mRNA splicing : methods and protocols / edited by Klemens J. Hertel  2014 1
  Nucleic acid probes -- 2 Related Subjects   2
Nucleic acid probes.   11
Nucleic acid probes -- Laboratory manuals.   2
 

Nucleic Acid Regulatory Sequences -- See Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid


Nucleic acid sequences involved in regulating the expression of genes
  1
 

Nucleic Acid Repetitive Sequences -- See Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid


Sequences of DNA or RNA that occur in multiple copies. There are several types: INTERSPERSED REPETITIVE SEQUENCES are copies of transposable elements (DNA TRANSPOSABLE ELEMENTS or RETROELEMENTS) dispersed throughout the genome. TERMINAL REPEAT SEQUENCES flank both ends of another sequence, for example, the long terminal repeats (LTRs) on RETROVIRUSES. Variations may be direct repeats, those occurring in the same direction, or inverted repeats, those opposite to each other in direction. TANDEM REPEAT SEQUENCES are copies which lie adjacent to each other, direct or inverted (INVERTED REPEAT SEQUENCES)
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Nucleic acid separation -- See Nucleic acids Separation


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