Keyword "GENETICS" found in the following publications:
THE ROLE OF DNA METHYLATION IN LUNG CANCER (REVIEW)
Background: Lung cancer has been a difficult-to-treat disease for decades, despite the efforts of oncologists and pharmaceutical companies. One ...
MENDELIAN RANDOMIZATION: USING GENETIC INFORMATION IN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES (REVIEW)
Background: Mendelian randomization is a research method that exploits the instrumental variable framework using genetic information to assess the ...
Background: The use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) is a promising therapy in cancer treatment, in particular renal cell ...
HUMANITARIAN EXPERTISE AND PROSPECTIVE GENOMIC RESEARCH
 The article analyzes the influence of the so-called "humanitarian" expertise on research conducted in the field of biology of individual ...
MODERN GENOMICS IN STUDYING THE PROBLEMS OF HUMAN ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE IN NORTH SIBERIA
Background: Indigenous people of north Siberia live in some of the harshest natural conditions on Earth, experiencing prolonged ...
MOLECULAR CYTOGENETIC AND CYTOPOSTGENOMIC ANALYSIS OF THE HUMAN GENOME
 Background: Despite the achievements of human genomics, comprehensive genome analysis, including acquiring the knowledge about intercellular and interindividual variations ...
Background: The study of the multifactor nature of anxiety is caused by its role in multiple aspects of human ...
STRUCTURE PLAN OF LIVING ORGANISMS. BACKGROUND
The article examines one of the most interesting problems of theoretical biology, the origins of which are already found in ...
THE ETHOS OF SCIENCE: HUMANITARIAN EXPERTISE OF INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
The article discusses the ethical problems caused by the development of biomedical technologies. Emphasis is placed on techniques aimed at ...
ESTROGENS AND UTERINE FIBROIDS: AN INTEGRATED VIEW
 Background: Uterine fibroids or uterine leiomyomata (UL) are common benign tumors of the uterine myometrium affecting a significant ...
Background: The ideal dose of drugs varies widely among patients, mainly due to genetic factors. Introduction to clinical practice ...