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  2. Pancreatic ribonuclease family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancreatic_ribonuclease_family

    Pancreatic ribonuclease family (EC 4.6.1.18, RNase, RNase I, RNase A, pancreatic RNase, ribonuclease I, endoribonuclease I, ribonucleic phosphatase, alkaline ribonuclease, ribonuclease, gene S glycoproteins, Ceratitis capitata alkaline ribonuclease, SLSG glycoproteins, gene S locus-specific glycoproteins, S-genotype-assocd. glycoproteins, ribonucleate 3'-pyrimidino-oligonucleotidohydrolase) is ...

  3. Pancreas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancreas

    Pancreatic adenocarcinoma is the most common form of pancreatic cancer, and is cancer arising from the exocrine digestive part of the pancreas. Most occur in the head of the pancreas. [ 27 ] Symptoms tend to arise late in the course of the cancer, when it causes abdominal pain, weight loss, or yellowing of the skin ( jaundice ).

  4. RNASE1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNASE1

    According to the US National Library of Medicine, "This gene encodes a member of the pancreatic-type of secretory ribonucleases, a subset of the ribonuclease A super-family. The encoded endonuclease cleaves internal phosphodiester RNA bonds on the 3'-side of pyrimidine bases. It prefers poly(C) as a substrate and hydrolyses 2',3'-cyclic ...

  5. Pancreatic Cancer Is Rising at an Alarming Rate in Women ...

    www.aol.com/pancreatic-cancer-rising-alarming...

    The researchers discovered that, while there was a similar rate of pancreatic cancer in older Americans, rates of the disease in women under the age of 55 rose 2.4% higher than the rates of ...

  6. Nuclease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclease

    In biochemistry, a nuclease (also archaically known as nucleodepolymerase or polynucleotidase) is an enzyme capable of cleaving the phosphodiester bonds that link nucleotides together to form nucleic acids. Nucleases variously affect single and double stranded breaks in their target molecules.

  7. Pancreatic polypeptide cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancreatic_polypeptide_cells

    Once it is produced, pancreatic polypeptide is shown to be a 36 amino acid long peptide that can be sent out to different areas within the pancreas or organism. [6] Pancreatic polypeptide cells are most active and secrete more pancreatic polypeptide after a meal with high protein, fasting, physical activity, and acute hypoglycemia.

  8. Body of mysterious tattooed woman found stuffed inside fridge ...

    www.aol.com/corpse-mysterious-tattooed-woman...

    The tattooed corpse of a woman was found bizarrely stuffed in a refrigerator dumped in some New Jersey woods — and cops say they need the public’s help identifying her. Adding to the mystery ...

  9. Development of the endocrine system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_of_the...

    Five weeks later, the pancreatic alpha and beta cells have begun to emerge. Reaching eight to ten weeks into development, the pancreas starts producing insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, and pancreatic polypeptide. [13] During the early stages of fetal development, the number of pancreatic alpha cells outnumbers the number of pancreatic beta cells.