Hormesis/Bibliography: Difference between revisions

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<ref>Hopkin K. (2008) [http://www.the-scientist.com/article/display/55118/ The Science of Stress.] ''The Scientist'' 22:54.
*”ll started with OxyR. Storz was recruited to the OxyR project in 1985, when her thesis advisor Bruce Ames got interested in studying how bacteria adapt to oxidative stress. "We knew that if you treated E. coli with low doses of oxidants, they became resistant to high doses of oxidants," says Storz. "And the question was: How did they induce these defenses?"”</ref>


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Revision as of 22:47, 11 December 2008

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A list of key readings about Hormesis.
Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner. For formatting, consider using automated reference wikification.

General articles: [1]

[2]


  1. Hormesis. NationMaster Encyclopedia.
    • Contents:
    • Possible explanation
    • Policy consequences
    • Consistency of low-dose benefits
    • Known hormetic substances
    • Non-acceptance
    • See also
    • References
  2. Hopkin K. (2008) The Science of Stress. The Scientist 22:54.
    • ”ll started with OxyR. Storz was recruited to the OxyR project in 1985, when her thesis advisor Bruce Ames got interested in studying how bacteria adapt to oxidative stress. "We knew that if you treated E. coli with low doses of oxidants, they became resistant to high doses of oxidants," says Storz. "And the question was: How did they induce these defenses?"”