Increased disease susceptibility in some communities is problematic for health planners and providers. The previous gene-behavior theory outlined a causal relationship between behavior and disease susceptibility in non-coding satellite DNA. While this theoretical viewpoint requires further thought to know more about this relationship; it does provide a platform for further rigorous research. In this review, glycosylation was reviewed from a new perspective, thus we focused and tracked its association with satellite DNA and cancer susceptibility using sequential reasoning. Our model suggests glycosylation is a major tangible action of satellite DNA alterations caused by behaviors. Our model also suggests glycosylation is influenced by genetic anticipation. In addition, glycosylation patterns may function as behavioral biomarkers for the social sciences, community-targeted approaches, and early prognostic tools for behavioralrelated pathogenesis. These notions open up new avenues for behavioral immunogenetics and behavioral epidemiology areas. Therefore, more in-depth and improved treatment strategies are required, especially for cancer.
In recent decades, nanocomposites have become one of the centers of interest in research and industrial fields because they provide electrical, mechanical and optical enhancements significantly superior to conventional microscale composites which makes them suitable for a wide range of applications in electronics industry, packaging industry, biomedical research and much more. This review thoroughly discusses three types of nanocomposites: ceramic-matrix nanocomposites (CMNCs), polymer-matrix nanocomposites (PMNCs), and metal-matrix nanocomposites (MMNCs) and provides an overview of the most common fillers, methods of preparation, challenges, properties and applications.
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