Search results for " Serum"

showing 10 items of 377 documents

Potential anticarcinogenic peptides from bovine milk.

2012

Bovine milk possesses a protein system constituted by two major families of proteins: caseins (insoluble) and whey proteins (soluble). Caseins (αS1,αS2,β, andκ) are the predominant phosphoproteins in the milk of ruminants, accounting for about 80% of total protein, while the whey proteins, representing approximately 20% of milk protein fraction, includeβ-lactoglobulin,α-lactalbumin, immunoglobulins, bovine serum albumin, bovine lactoferrin, and lactoperoxidase, together with other minor components. Different bioactivities have been associated with these proteins. In many cases, caseins and whey proteins act as precursors of bioactive peptides that are released, in the body, by enzymatic pro…

animal structuresAntioxidantmedicine.medical_treatmentProteolysisReview ArticleBiochemistryfluids and secretionsmedicineFood scienceBovine serum albuminMolecular Biologychemistry.chemical_classificationbiologymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryLactoperoxidasefood and beveragesBiological activityGeneral MedicineAntimicrobialEnzymechemistryBiochemistrybiology.proteinAntibodybusiness
researchProduct

The deubiquitinase USP11 is a versatile and conserved regulator of autophagy

2021

Autophagy is a major cellular quality control system responsible for the degradation of proteins and organelles in response to stress and damage to maintain homeostasis. Ubiquitination of autophagy-related proteins or regulatory components is important for the precise control of autophagy pathways. Here, we show that the deubiquitinase ubiquitin-specific protease 11 (USP11) restricts autophagy and that KO of USP11 in mammalian cells results in elevated autophagic flux. We also demonstrate that depletion of the USP11 homolog H34C03.2 in Caenorhabditis elegans triggers hyperactivation of autophagy and protects the animals against human amyloid-β peptide 42 aggregation-induced paralysis. USP11…

autophagyhAβ42 human amyloid-β protein 1 to 42Lipid kinase activityPI(3)P phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphatemTORC1BiochemistryCell LineGene Knockout Techniqueschemistry.chemical_compoundubiquitinAnimalsHumansULK1 unc-51-like autophagy activating kinase 1WIPI WD-repeat domain phosphoinositide-interacting proteinPI3KC3-C1Caenorhabditis elegansCaenorhabditis elegans ProteinsmTORC1Molecular BiologyMechanistic target of rapamycinUSP11 ubiquitin-specific protease 11proteostasisAmyloid beta-PeptidesS6K S6 kinasebiologyPhosphatidylinositol 3-phosphateAutophagyDUB deubiquitinaseLFQ label-free quantificationIP immunoprecipitationNHT nonhuman targetingPI3KC3-C1 class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase complex ICell BiologyACN acetonitrile amyloid-βNRBF2 nuclear receptor-binding factor 2Peptide FragmentsCell biologydeubiquitinase (DUB)ProteostasischemistryProteotoxicitymTORC1 mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1biology.proteinAutophagy-Related Protein-1 HomologBSA bovine serum albuminThiolester HydrolasesResearch ArticleJournal of Biological Chemistry
researchProduct

Thermal aggregation of proteins in presence of metal ions.

2008

The study of the aggregation processes in presence of metal ions is an essential step for understanding the key role of metals in protein-protein and protein-solvent interactions. Indeed, the presence of metal ions can radically change the main features of the standard denaturation/aggregation processes and such effects result to be strongly dependent on the kind of metal and on its concentration. Metal ions have an active role in thermal aggregation and cold set gelation processes. These processes are intrinsically different, but both are based on the proteins ability to form aggregates.

beta-LactoglobulinBovine Serum AlbuminProteins aggregation processeMetal IonConformational changeSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)
researchProduct

Spectroscopic studies of water-soluble superstructured iron(III) porphyrin. Interaction with the bovine serum albumin protein

2018

Acid-base equilibrium of the “one-face”-hindered sulfonated porphyrin, α5,15-[2,2′(dodecamethyleneoxy),(5-sulfonato)diphenyl]-10,20-bis(2-hydroxy,5-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrinato iron(III), has been ...

biologyAlbumin02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesPorphyrin0104 chemical scienceslaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundWater solublechemistrylawMaterials Chemistrybiology.proteinPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryBovine serum albumin0210 nano-technologyElectron paramagnetic resonanceNuclear chemistryJournal of Coordination Chemistry
researchProduct

Drug Binding Properties of Tyrosine-Modified Human Serum Albumin

1978

Human serum albumin (HSA) has only a small number of specific binding sites for drugs. There are facts indicating that tyrosine residues may be involved in these binding sites. Thus we modified HSA with tetranitromethan, a reagent specific for tyrosine residues in proteins. As derived from an UV-absorption quotient three albumins with a degree of modification of two, five and eight residues per molecule were obtained. Only for the albumin with eight residues modified a small reduction of ordered secondary structure was found.

biologyChemistryAlbuminSerum albuminPlasma protein bindingHuman serum albuminBiochemistrybiology.proteinmedicineBinding siteTyrosineBovine serum albuminProtein secondary structuremedicine.drug
researchProduct

Protein transport through gold-coated, charged nanopores: Effects of applied voltage

2006

The flux of bovine serum albumin and bovine hemoglobin through charged nanopores inside polymeric membranes is analysed as a function of the applied voltage to the nanopore surface, the solution ionic strength and pH. The electrostatic interaction of the protein with the nanopore surface gives low transport rates except at the protein isoelectric point and the minimum of the effective, voltage-induced nanopore charge. This electrostatic sieving effect allows for the separation of proteins with similar molecular weights.

biologyChemistryAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomyFluxTransport proteinNanoporeIsoelectric pointChemical engineeringIonic strengthbiology.proteinPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryBovine serum albuminPolymeric membraneVoltageChemical Physics Letters
researchProduct

Biosynthesis of the Collagen-like C1q Molecule and its Receptor Functions for Fc and Polyanionic Molecules on Macrophages

1983

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, knowledge of immunity was limited to a few practical methods based on empirical observations, e.g., the observation by Jenner in 1798 that inoculation with cowpox material induced an immunity to smallpox. The discoveries by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch that microorganisms caused fermentations and were responsible for a number of infectious diseases, greatly advanced the concepts of susceptibility and immunity in a limited number of diseases. In the late nineteenth century, the complement system was discovered by Fodor(1887), Nuttall(1888), and Buchner (1889a, b) through studying the bactericidal action of blood serum. It was recognized that killi…

biologyInoculationCowpoxPhilosophymedicine.diseaseImmunoglobulin GComplement systemMicrobiologyBlood serumImmunityImmunologybiology.proteinmedicineAntibodyComplement C1s
researchProduct

Action de la chlorhexidine sur l'expression de la virulence de

1999

Abstract Candida albicans is an opportunistic yeast. Its pathogenicity is linked to the susceptibility of the host surface as well as to particular factors of the strain: adhesion, filamentous growth and secretion of proteolytic enzymes. Chlorhexidine digluconate is an antiseptic with fungicidal properties. The action of the antiseptic on the growth of the yeast shows a minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) at 50 μg·mL−1 and a minimal fungicidal concentration (MFC) at 100 μg·mL−1. The consequences of antiseptic treatment are studied using two indicators of pathogenicity: filamentation and the secretion of acid proteinase. Concerning the morphological indicator, a complete inhibition of fil…

biologymedicine.drug_classChlorhexidineProteolytic enzymesbiology.organism_classificationYeastMicrobiologyMinimum inhibitory concentrationAntisepticBiochemistryCaseinmedicinebiology.proteinBovine serum albuminCandida albicansEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedicine.drugCryptogamie Mycologie
researchProduct

Prognostic value of neurotrophic growth factor (BDNF) in patients with colorectal cancer during chemotherapy

2019

INTRODUCTION: The brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a protein belonging to neurotrophins that plays a key role in the proper development and functioning of the mammalian central nervous system. Previous studies have focused on assessment of the BDNF concentration in blood serum as a potential biomarker in neurological disorders. Recently, the BDNF signalling pathway has been recognised as a potential target for anticancer drugs, while its receptor (TrkB) as an oncogene in colorectal cancer cells. Despite the significant role in carcinogenesis, there are few studies on BDNF as a biomarker in colorectal cancer. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The study included 25 patients with clinically and…

blood serumbrain-derived neurotrophic factorbiomarkercolorectal cancerAnnales Academiae Medicae Silesiensis
researchProduct

A combined determination of circulating gelatinases and inflammatory markers in breast cancer patients during therapeutic treatment

2008

breast cancer patients seruminflammatory markersSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E Citologia
researchProduct