The protein appears to associate with the centrosome complex during the cell cycle.
The protein can appear in older people, even if they do not show signs of the disease.
This was the first evidence, he said, that the same protein can appear in different shapes.
Most believed, at least implicitly, that a protein could just appear because there was a need for it.
This protein also appears to be involved in erythrocyte invasion.
The protein appears to be localized in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm.
The liquid proteins marketed today appear to be safer than those sold in the 1970's.
The protein appears to mark a particular risk for white men and women under 65.
This protein also appears to be important in ovarian cancer where it seems to act as an antioncogene.
The protein appears to be down-regulated during bladder cancer progression.