4 results match your criteria: "Medical University of Viena[Affiliation]"
Echocardiography
July 2020
Departments of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Introduction: Risk stratification for acute pulmonary embolism (PE) incorporates metrics of right ventricle (RV) function. Significant RV dysfunction influences left ventricular (LV) function, though LV function metrics are not utilized for stratifying outcomes in patients with PE. Mitral annular plane systolic excursion (MAPSE) is a linear echocardiographic (TTE) measure that evaluates longitudinal LV function and may aid in risk stratification for acute PE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
February 2014
Max F. Perutz Laboratories, Medical University of Viena, 1030 Viena, Austria.
Alternative splicing (AS) is an important regulatory process that leads to the creation of multiple RNA transcripts from a single gene. Alternative transcripts often carry premature termination codons (PTCs), which trigger nonsense-mediated decay (NMD), a cytoplasmic RNA degradation pathway. However, intron retention, the most prevalent AS event in plants, often leads to PTC-carrying splice variants that are insensitive to NMD; this led us to question the fate of these special RNA variants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
September 2010
Max F. Perutz Laboratories, Medical University of Viena, A-1030 Viena, Austria.
Growing interest in alternative splicing in plants and the extensive sequencing of new plant genomes necessitate more precise definition and classification of genes coding for splicing factors. SR proteins are a family of RNA binding proteins, which function as essential factors for constitutive and alternative splicing. We propose a unified nomenclature for plant SR proteins, taking into account the newly revised nomenclature of the mammalian SR proteins and a number of plant-specific properties of the plant proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNuklearmedizin
January 2007
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Medical University of Viena, Austria.