Two examples for you to use OR you can use one of your own
Genome-wide analysis of hepatic LRH-1 reveals a promoter binding preference and suggests a role in regulating genes of lipid metabolism in concert with FXR.
Chong HK, Biesinger J, Seo YK, Xie X, Osborne TF.
BMC Genomics. 2012 Feb 1;13:51. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-13-51.
Sterol regulatory element-binding proteins are essential for the metabolic programming of effector T cells and adaptive immunity.
Kidani Y, Elsaesser H, Hock MB, Vergnes L, Williams KJ, Argus JP, Marbois BN, Komisopoulou E, Wilson EB, Osborne TF, Graeber TG, Reue K, Brooks DG, Bensinger SJ.
Nat Immunol. 2013 May; 14(5):489-99. doi: 10.1038/ni.2570. Epub 2013 Apr 7.
- Go to a library database and do an
Advanced Search
on your topic, limit your results
to Full Text.
- Use the Library's Journals A-Z link and search for the journal title OR try the
Citation Linker
.
- Go to PubMed.gov Note: Set up your personal PubMed account.
- Type in the article title in the search box
- Research Tip 1: In PubMed Advanced Search Builder, you can limit your results to
Author – Last
OR
- Select “Single Citation Matcher” link under “PubMed Tools” and type in the title (or whatever information you have).
- Research Tip 2: Note how you can limit authors to “Only as first author OR Only as last author”
- Go to https://scholar.google.com
- Under “Settings”, add your preferred “Library Links”
- Type in the article title
- Research Tip: See if we subscribe to this journal or if it is available freely elsewhere
- Research Tip: Check out who has cited your author; you can also do this in PubMed
- Type in the author name, e.g., Bossy-Wetzel, to check her profile https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=bossy-wetzel&btnG=&as_sdt=1%2C10&as_sdtp=
Or, click on User profiles for bossy-wetzel https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=oB0PbasAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao