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| Article 1 to 6 out of 6 concerning University of Oxford
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Tagging-detagging for purification of radiotracers
(06/10/2008)
Veronique Gouverneur and colleagues from the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca, Cheshire, have developed a novel tagging-detagging strategy. This could be extremely useful for the purification of known and novel 18F-radiotracers for Positron ...
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Chemists measure chilli sauce hotness with nanotubes
(05/06/2008)
Nanotube device gives precise spice advice
If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen and into the lab - chemists can now use carbon nanotubes to judge the heat of chilli sauces. The technology might soon be available commercially as a cheap, disposable sensor for use in the food ...
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Agilent Technologies Tools Used to Derive New Type of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cell that Shares Key Features of Human Embryonic Stem
(07/30/2007)
Using a variety of Agilent Technologies genomics tools, researchers at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the University of Oxford, U.K., have achieved a major milestone in ...
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Oxford Genome Sciences and University of Oxford to develop new clinical biomarkers for colorectal cancer
(04/13/2006)
OGeS joins consortium focused on the development of new personalised management of colorectal cancer
Oxford Genome Sciences (UK) Ltd (OGeS) announced that it has entered into collaboration with the Department of Clinical Pharmacology at the University of Oxford to discover new clinical biomarkers for colorectal cancer (CRC).The collaboration forms ...
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SEQUENOM Secures Rights to Key Non-Invasive Prenatal Diagnostic Intellectual Property
(10/24/2005)
SEQUENOM, Inc. has acquired exclusive rights in certain countries including the United States, United Kingdom and other countries in Europe and elsewhere, to non-invasive prenatal diagnostic intellectual property from Isis Innovation Ltd., the ...
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NIH Awards $4.2 Million Grant to Scientists at Scripps Research to Speed DNA Sequencing Technologies
(08/10/2005)
A team of scientists at The Scripps Research Institute in California and Oxford University in England have been awarded a $4.2 million five-year grant to conduct basic science aimed at speeding the rate at which the next generation of DNA sequencing ...
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