Skip to search formSkip to main contentSkip to account menu

selenomethylselenocysteine

Known as: Se-methyl-seleno-L-cysteine, SeMCys, selenohomocysteine 
A naturally occurring organoselenium compound found in many plants, including garlic, onions, and broccoli, with potential antioxidant and… 
National Institutes of Health

Papers overview

Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
Highly Cited
2007
Highly Cited
2007
To establish the validity of various proposed structural models, we have investigated the structure of the binary As{sub x}Se{sub… 
Highly Cited
2004
Highly Cited
2004
To clarify the mechanism of oxidative stress in skeletal muscle atrophied by immobilization, we investigated the change of… 
Highly Cited
2002
Highly Cited
2002
Various Brassica species accumulate Se into the thousands of ppm. This suggests some of them as candidates for Se… 
Highly Cited
2001
Highly Cited
2001
In the rat mammary carcinogenesis model, premalignant lesions known as intraductal proliferations (IDPs) are detectable within a… 
Highly Cited
1998
Highly Cited
1998
Accumulation of specific groups of seleno-amino acids in plant tissue reflects not only the Se tolerance of a plant species, but… 
Highly Cited
1996
Highly Cited
1996
A reentrant peak effect is observed through low field ac susceptibility measurements on the weakly pinned flux line lattice in… 
Highly Cited
1983
Highly Cited
1983
Enriched stable isotopes of selenium are used for a double isotope dilution method employing rapid sample digestion, chelation… 
Highly Cited
1974
Highly Cited
1974
At the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), the exposure-rate standards for 60Co and 137Cs gamma rays were based for a number of…