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The People's Commissariat for State Security (Russian: Народный комиссариат государственной безопасности, romanized: Narodnyy komissariat gosudarstvennoy bezopasnosti) or NKGB, was the name of the Soviet secret police, intelligence and counter-intelligence force that existed from 3 February 1941 to 20 July 1941, and again from 1943 to 1946, before ...
Neurokinin B (NKB) belongs in the family of tachykinin peptides. Neurokinin B is implicated in a variety of human functions and pathways such as the secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone . [ 1 ]
NK 1 receptor consists of 407 amino acid residues, and it has a molecular weight of 58.000. [13] [16] NK 1 receptor, as well as the other tachykinin receptors, is made of seven hydrophobic transmembrane (TM) domains with three extracellular and three intracellular loops, an amino-terminus and a cytoplasmic carboxy-terminus.
NKB may refer to: Neurokinin B, a neuropeptide; Dutch Korfball Association, former name of the Royal Dutch Korfball Association; National Royalist Movement, a Belgian resistance group in World War II; People's Commissariat of Munitions, in the USSR; the ISO 639-3 language code for Khoibu language, a language spoken in India
NKB and dynorphin are the two peptides that regulate the secretion of kisspeptin. [1] NKB is the stimulating peptide that initiates the pulsatile release of GnRH by activating NKB receptors, called TACR3 , on mutually connected KNDy neurons to release kisspeptin in an autocrine signalling pathway. [ 1 ]
Kristen Anderson-Lopez (born March 21, 1972) is an American songwriter. She is known for co-writing the songs for the 2013 animated musical film Frozen and its 2019 sequel Frozen II with her husband Robert Lopez .
Kristin Lavransdatter is the daughter of Lavrans, a charismatic, respected nobleman in a rural area of Norway, and his wife Ragnfrid, who suffers from depression after the loss of three infant sons and the crippling of her younger daughter Ulvhild in an accident.
Leopold Zunz contends that it was written by Daniel ben Yehudah Dayan, [1] who spent eight years in improving it, completing it in 1404. [2] Some see in the last line of "Yigdal" a signature, "Yechiel b'Rav Baruch", though it is unclear who this might be. Hartwig Hirschfeld argues that the famous poet Immanuel of Rome is the author. Immanuel ...