2 results match your criteria: "The University of New SouthWales[Affiliation]"

Genome-wide screens for gene products regulating lipid droplet dynamics.

Methods Cell Biol

May 2012

School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, the University of New SouthWales, Sydney, Australia.

Lipid droplets (LDs) are emerging as dynamic cellular organelles that play a key role in lipid and membrane homeostasis. Abnormal lipid droplet dynamics are associated with the pathophysiology of many metabolic diseases, such as obesity, diabetes, atherosclerosis, fatty liver, and even cancer. Understanding the molecular mechanisms governing the dynamics of LDs, namely, their biogenesis, growth, maintenance, and degradation, will not only shed light on the cellular functions of LDs, but also provide additional clues to treatment of metabolic diseases.

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Fuzzy scaling analysis of a mouse mutant with brain morphological changes.

IEEE Trans Inf Technol Biomed

July 2009

School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering, The University of New SouthWales, Canberra, A.C.T. 2600, Australia.

Scaling behavior inherently exists in fundamental biological structures, and the measure of such an attribute can only be known at a given scale of observation. Thus, the properties of fractals and power-law scaling have become attractive for research in biology and medicine because of their potential for discovering patterns and characteristics of complex biological morphologies. Despite the successful applications of fractals for the life sciences, the quantitative measure of the scale invariance expressed by fractal dimensions is limited in more complex situations, such as for histopathological analysis of tissue changes in disease.

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