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10868 results for: ‘短视频+直播企业级运营源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.yCStFinJkRdn’

  • Study reveals mysteries of enzyme mechanism

    An international research team led by our University has made a breakthrough advance by trapping an intermediate in the mechanism of enzymes called heme peroxidases and determining its structure using a beam of neutrons from the heart of a nuclear reactor.

  • Resources

    Resources for higher education students, on genetic-related issues and how the law effects research.

  • Project to investigate genetic roots of resistance to anti-cancer therapy agents

    The mechanisms that cause cancers to respond poorly to therapy are to be investigated in a project that commemorates and honours the work of an eminent Leicester geneticist.

  • If tomorrow never comes.

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on February 7, 2018 This blog post is dedicated to the man who stepped out in front of my car as I drove to work this morning.

  • Research institutes and centres

    The College of Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities has two research centres and nine research institutes, working on groundbreaking and exciting developments within their fields.

  • Groundbreaking research into cancer treatment receives financial boost

    Groundbreaking research to track how cancers evolve and investigate what treatments work best, has received a £455,000 financial boost.

  • Professor Sir Hans Kornberg

    Hans Kornberg with colleagues in 1974. L-R: Geoff Turnock, Arthur Rowe, unknown, David Critchley, Hans Kornberg, Ron Cooper, unknown, Colin Jones, Peter Henderson(possibly), Ken Jones (photo: Chris Willmott) The Biochemistry Department in 1974.

  • What do grasshoppers eat? It’s not just grass! New Leicester research shows similarities with mammal teeth like never before

    But analysis of the ecological importance of grasshoppers is not straightforward, and finding out what they eat requires detailed study of the contents of their guts or painstaking and time-consuming observations of how they feed in the wild. There is, however, a better way.

  • Academic year: 2003-2004

    Browse the speakers from the Centre for English Local History's seminar events, held in 2003-2004.

  • Phil Evans

    Dr Phil Evans, Swift Development Scientist, develops tools and techniques to facilitate the exploitation of x-ray data from Swift for astrophysical research. Follow him on Twitter @swift_phil.

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