124,637 research outputs found

    N. J. Sewell-Rutter, Guilt by Descent. Moral Inheritance and Decision Making in Greek Tragedy, 2007

    No full text
    Byl Simon. N. J. Sewell-Rutter, Guilt by Descent. Moral Inheritance and Decision Making in Greek Tragedy, 2007. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 78, 2009. pp. 269-270

    Word and Image in Ancient Greece, edited by N. Keith Rutter & Brian A. Sparkes

    No full text
    Létoublon Françoise. Word and Image in Ancient Greece, edited by N. Keith Rutter & Brian A. Sparkes. In: Gaia : revue interdisciplinaire sur la Grèce Archaïque, numéro 10, 2006. pp. 385-387

    La estética cubista en « Horizon carré » de Vicente Huidobro (variété)

    No full text
    Rutter F. La estética cubista en « Horizon carré » de Vicente Huidobro (variété). In: Bulletin Hispanique, tome 80, n°1-2, 1978. pp. 123-133

    Jan Huygen van Linschoten (1563-1611): An Annotated Bibliography (RUTTER Technical Note n. 9)

    No full text
    Technical Notes are research materials and studies resulting from the ac­tivities of members of the Project RUTTER—Making the Earth Global. Although their primary aim is to assist in the various tasks of the RUTTER Team, they are made public in the spirit of academic collaboration and shar­ing. RUTTER Technical Notes are non-periodic and will cover topics as diverse as the ones that interest the international and multidisciplinary Project’s team

    Rutter, Ann (Death, 1875-12-26)

    No full text
    Address: 368 Liberty St.Age at death: 55 yrsPg.314/1875/535/F W W/Pa./Dr. N. Leaman/Estep/Spring GroveOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'Runk-Ryan'

    How Cells Choose To Create Energy

    No full text
    To supply their energy needs, cells typically choose between utilizing glucose in the cytoplasm (aerobic glycolysis and lactic acid fermentation) or "burning" pyruvate in the mitochondria (mitochondrial carbohydrate oxidation). Although this is arguably the most fundamental metabolic decision that cells must make, prior to 2012 it was not clear how cells import pyruvate into mitochondria to fuel ATP production. That year, Rutter, Thummel and colleagues identified the heterodimeric MPC1/MPC2 complex as the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier. Their paper also identified and explained the severe metabolic defects found in families with mpc1 gene mutations. Rutter and collaborators have subsequently shown that the choice of whether or not to import pyruvate has far-reaching medical implications because stem cells and most cancer cells are glycolytic (the "Warburg Effect"). They showed that this is often because cells down-regulate MPC expression, and that MPC re-expression reverses the Warburg Effect, impedes tumor growth, and drives cell differentiation. These discoveries have revolutionized our understanding of the role of metabolic decisions in determining cell state and fate
    corecore