The usefulness of the method lies in the feasibility of employing nanogram amounts of mRNA.
2
WGA is the method of choice for amplifying nanogram amounts of genomic DNA for different applications.
3
We consistently recorded over 500-fold increases, such that nanogram quantities of starting material could be amplified to microgram quantities.
4
SPMs and their lipid precursors exhibit anti-viral activity at nanogram doses in the setting of influenza without being immunosuppressive.
5
Volkov managed to get both his hands around Storm's neck, and the brutal Russian was squeezing with every nanogram of strength he had.
6
These results have allowed for the optimization of HPLC conditions so that nanogram quantities of A2E can be detected from extracts of tissue samples.
7
All began the test with blood testosterone levels below 275 nanograms per deciliter.
8
His technique is so refined it can work with a mere fifty nanograms of material.
9
For example, in experiments where cells are harvested by laser micro-dissection, available starting total RNA may measure in nanograms.
10
Doses as low as 10 nanograms injected intracerebroventricularly were effective in decreasing food intake in food-deprived and free-feeding rats.
11
Over half of those were over the state's new legal limit of 5 nanograms of THC per milliliter of blood.
12
In this study, the men started out with testosterone levels that averaged more than 500 nanograms per deciliter of blood.
13
The average kid had close to three nanograms - three billionths of a gram - of BPA in every milliliter of urine.
14
This technique offers direct, high-time resolution measurement capability with parts per trillion by volume (nanograms per cubic meter) gas-phase detection limits.
15
The Oklahoma Medical Examiner's Office said that Crutcher had 96 nanograms per milliliter of PCP in his bloodstream at the time of his death.
16
The average child had 2.6 nanograms, or 2.6 billionths of a gram, of BPA in every milliliter of urine.