@prefix this: . @prefix sub: . @prefix rdfs: . @prefix xsd: . @prefix sio: . @prefix lld: . @prefix miriam-gene: . @prefix miriam-pubmed: . @prefix eco: . @prefix wi: . @prefix prov: . @prefix pav: . @prefix prv: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix np: . @prefix dgn-gda: . @prefix dgn-void: . sub:head { this: np:hasAssertion sub:assertion; np:hasProvenance sub:provenance; np:hasPublicationInfo sub:publicationInfo; a np:Nanopublication . } sub:assertion { dgn-gda:DGNd03c54cd92401e27a6ef3213998eeba5 sio:SIO_000628 miriam-gene:134864, lld:C1301797; a sio:SIO_001121 . } sub:provenance { sub:assertion dcterms:description "[We have previously shown that several thyronamines, decarboxylated and deiodinated metabolites of the thyroid hormone, potently activate an orphan G protein-coupled receptor in vitro (TAAR1) and induced hypothermia in vivo on a rapid time scale [Scanlan, T. S.; Suchland, K. L.; Hart, M. E.; Chiellini, G.; Huang, Y.; Kruzich, P. J.; Frascarelli, S.; Crossley, D. A.; Bunzow, J. R.; Ronca-Testoni, S.; Lin, E. T.; Hatton, D.; Zucchi, R.; Grandy, D. K. 3-Iodothyronamine is an endogenous and rapid-acting derivative of thyroid hormone.Nat.Med.2004, 10 (6), 638-642].]. Sentence from MEDLINE/PubMed, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine."@en; wi:evidence dgn-void:source_evidence_literature; sio:SIO_000772 miriam-pubmed:16451074; prov:wasDerivedFrom dgn-void:BEFREE; prov:wasGeneratedBy eco:ECO_0000203 . dgn-void:BEFREE pav:importedOn "2017-02-19"^^xsd:date . dgn-void:source_evidence_literature a eco:ECO_0000212; rdfs:comment "Gene-disease associations inferred from text-mining the literature."@en; rdfs:label "DisGeNET evidence - LITERATURE"@en . } sub:publicationInfo { this: dcterms:created "2017-10-17T13:19:07+02:00"^^xsd:dateTime; dcterms:rights ; dcterms:rightsHolder dgn-void:IBIGroup; dcterms:subject sio:SIO_000983; prv:usedData dgn-void:disgenetv3.0rdf; pav:authoredBy , , , , ; pav:createdBy ; pav:version "v5.0.0.0" . dgn-void:disgenetv3.0rdf pav:version "v5.0.0" . }