Search results for "Buffers"

showing 10 items of 53 documents

Kidney donors and kidney transplants have abnormal aminothiol redox status, and are at increased risk of oxidative stress and reduced redox buffer ca…

2013

Abstract Objective Living kidney donors have been part of a successful kidney transplant programme in Norway for almost 50 years. Glomerular filtration rates (GFRs) have tended to remain stable at about 70% of pre-donation levels. Plasma total homocysteine (Hcy) has an inverse relationship to kidney function, and previous reports indicate elevated levels of Hcy in kidney donors. We wanted to examine the most important plasma aminothiols in kidney donors, i.e. Hcy, cysteine (Cys) and cysteinylglycine (CG) with their redox species. The aminothiol redox-system appears to be an integral part of the extracellular antioxidant defence system in the body. Design and methods Plasma concentrations of…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAntioxidantHomocysteinemedicine.medical_treatmentClinical BiochemistryRenal functionBuffersmedicine.disease_causeRedoxPreeclampsiachemistry.chemical_compoundRisk FactorsInternal medicineLiving DonorsmedicineExtracellularHumansCysteineSulfhydryl CompoundsHomocysteineDemographyKidneyurogenital systemDipeptidesGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseKidney TransplantationOxidative StressEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryCase-Control StudiesFemaleOxidation-ReductionOxidative stressClinical Biochemistry
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Uptake and metabolism of choline by rat brain after acute choline administration.

1992

The present study is concerned with the uptake and metabolism of choline by the rat brain. Intraperitoneal administration of choline chloride (4-60 mg/kg) caused a dose-dependent elevation of the plasma choline concentration from 11.8 to up to 165.2 microM within 10 min and the reversal of the negative arteriovenous difference (AVD) of choline across the brain to positive values at plasma choline levels of greater than 23 microM. Net choline release and uptake were linearly dependent on the plasma choline level in the physiological range of 10-50 microM, whereas the CSF choline level was significantly increased only at plasma choline levels of greater than 50 microM. The bolus injection of …

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsPhosphorylcholineBiologyBuffersBiochemistryCholineVeinsCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundCerebrospinal fluidInternal medicinePhosphatidylcholinemedicineCholineAnimalsHomeostasisCerebrospinal FluidDose-Response Relationship DrugPhosphorylcholineOsmolar ConcentrationBrainRats Inbred StrainsMetabolismArteriesRatsDose–response relationshipKineticsEndocrinologychemistryHomeostasisCholine chlorideJournal of neurochemistry
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Binding of urate and caffeine to hemocyanin of the lobster Homarus vulgaris (E.) as studied by isothermal titration calorimetry.

2000

Hemocyanin serves as an oxygen carrier in the hemolymph of the European lobster Homarus vulgaris. The oxygen binding behavior of the pigment is modulated by metabolic effectors such as lactate and urate. Urate and caffeine binding to 12-meric hemocyanin (H. vulgaris) was studied using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Binding isotherms were determined for fully oxygenated hemocyanin between pH 7.55 and 8.15. No pH dependence of the binding parameters could be found for either effector. Since the magnitude of the Bohr effect depends on the urate concentration, the absence of any pH dependence of urate and caffeine binding to oxygenated hemocyanin suggests two conformations of the pigme…

Malemedicine.medical_treatmentBohr effectBuffersCalorimetryBiochemistryCaffeineHemolymphmedicineAnimalsBinding siteTromethamineBinding SitesChemistryTitrimetryIsothermal titration calorimetryHemocyaninHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationBinding constantNephropidaeUric AcidCrystallographyHemocyaninsThermodynamicsTitrationOxygen bindingBiochemistry
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Mechanistic analysis and experimental verification of bicarbonate-controlled enteric coat dissolution: Potential in vivo implications

2019

Enteric coatings have shown in vivo dissolution rates that are poorly predicted by traditional in vitro tests, with the in vivo dissolution being considerably slower than in vitro. To provide a more mechanistic understanding of this, the dependence of the release properties of various enteric-coated (EC) products on bulk pH and bicarbonate molarity was investigated. It was found that, at presumably in vivo-relevant values, the bicarbonate molarity is a more significant determinant of the dissolution profile than the bulk pH. The findings also indicate that this steep relationship between the dissolution of enteric coatings and bicarbonate molarity limits those coatings' performance in vivo.…

Molar concentrationChemistry PharmaceuticalBicarbonateInorganic chemistryKineticsPharmaceutical ScienceCapsules02 engineering and technologyBuffers030226 pharmacology & pharmacyExcipientsDiffusion layer03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundHypromellose Derivatives0302 clinical medicineIntestine SmallmedicineHumansIntestinal MucosaMesalamineDissolutionAcetaminophenCarbonic acidGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion Concentration021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyEnteric coatingBicarbonatesDrug LiberationModels ChemicalSolubilitychemistryCarbon dioxide0210 nano-technologyBiotechnologymedicine.drugEuropean Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics
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Iontophoretic Transdermal Delivery of Sumatriptan: Effect of Current Density and Ionic Strength

2005

ABSTRACT: Iontophoretic transdermal delivery of sumatriptan was investigated in vitro . Among the conditions tested, 0.25 mA/cm 2 and low ionic strength (NaCl 25 mM) was the best experimental condition to increase its transport across the skin. The flux increased 385-fold respective to passive diffusion, thus resulting in a transdermal flux of sumatriptan of 1273 ± 83 nmol/cm 2 h. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association

OsmosisTime FactorsSwineSkin AbsorptionDiffusionPharmaceutical ScienceBuffersSodium ChloridePharmacologyAdministration CutaneousPharmaceutical technologymedicineAnimalsSkinTransdermalIontophoresisSumatriptanChemistryOsmolar ConcentrationEarIontophoresisLow ionic strengthSerotonin Receptor AgonistsSumatriptanIonic strengthCurrent densitymedicine.drugBiomedical engineeringJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
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The Closed/Open Model for Lipase Activation. Addressing Intermediate Active Forms of Fungal Enzymes by Trapping of Conformers in Water-Restricted Env…

2001

The behavior of prototypic fungal lipases in a water-restricted environment has been investigated by exploiting the reported experimental strategy that allows the trapping (freeze-drying) of the enzyme in the conformation present in aqueous solution and to subsequently assay it in nonaqueous media [Mingarro, I., Abad, C., and Braco, L. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 92, 3308-3312]. We now report, using simple esterification as well as acidolysis (triglycerides as substrates) as nonaqueous model reactions, that the presence of a detergent (n-octyl-beta-glucopyranoside) in the freeze-drying buffer, at concentrations below the critical micellar concentration, generates different catalyti…

Protein ConformationStereochemistryThioglucosidesDetergentsTrappingBuffersBiochemistryFungal ProteinsAscomycotaEnzyme StabilityMoleculeLipaseConformational isomerismMicellesTriglyceridesCandidachemistry.chemical_classificationAqueous solutionbiologyWaterLipaseGeotrichumEnzyme ActivationSolutionsFreeze DryingEnzymeModels ChemicalchemistryCritical micelle concentrationbiology.proteinFungal enzymesRhizopusBiochemistry
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Biocatalytic formation of synthetic melanin: The role of vanadium haloperoxidases, L-DOPA and iodide

2011

The vanadium haloperoxidase (V-HPO) enzyme, extracted from the brown alga Laminaria saccharina, is able to catalyze the formation of a black precipitate, using as precursor the amino acid L-dopa in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and iodide, in one-pot synthesis. The L-dopa oxidation is a multistep reaction with a crucial role played by the iodide in the enzyme catalyzed peroxidative production of dopachrome, a well known intermediate in the synthesis of melanin. Dopachrome is then converted to a synthetic form of melanin through a polymerization reaction. Factors, such as buffer composition and pH, influence significantly the reaction first steps, but further steps of melanin production …

Protein ConformationTyrosinaseIodideBuffersBiochemistryPolymerizationLevodopaInorganic ChemistryMelaninchemistry.chemical_compoundHaloperoxidaseOrganic chemistryIndolequinonesHydrogen peroxideMelaninschemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryVanadiumHydrogen PeroxideHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationIodidesKineticsPeroxidasesPolymerizationBiocatalysisBiocatalysisMicroscopy Electron ScanningDopachromeJournal of Inorganic Biochemistry
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Bohr-effect and buffering capacity of hemocyanin from the tarantula E. californicum.

2003

A previous report showed that binding of oxygen to the 24-meric hemocyanin from E. californicum does not correlate linearly with the release of protons as known from hemoglobin. However, this unusual complex phenomenological observation could not be explained at that time. Here, I present a full analysis of the thermodynamic coupling between protons and oxygen for the 24-meric tarantula hemocyanin in Ringer-solution based on the Nested-MWC-model. A strategy is presented which allows to reduce the number of free parameters when fitting the model to the data by including explicitly the equilibrium constants for binding of protons to the different conformations. The results show that the Neste…

Proton bindingProtonmedicine.medical_treatmentAllosteric regulationBiophysicsBohr effectBuffersBiochemistryProton transportmedicineAnimalsEquilibrium constantChemistryOrganic ChemistryHemocyaninSpidersHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationModels TheoreticalRinger's SolutionOxygenCrystallographyOxyhemoglobinsHemocyaninsProton affinityThermodynamicsIsotonic SolutionsProtonsProtein BindingBiophysical chemistry
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Charge-Neutral Constant pH Molecular Dynamics Simulations Using a Parsimonious Proton Buffer

2016

In constant pH molecular dynamics simulations, the protonation states of titratable sites can respond to changes of the pH and of their electrostatic environment. Consequently, the number of protons bound to the biomolecule, and therefore the overall charge of the system, fluctuates during the simulation. To avoid artifacts associated with a non-neutral simulation system, we introduce an approach to maintain neutrality of the simulation box in constant pH molecular dynamics simulations, while maintaining an accurate description of all protonation fluctuations. Specifically, we introduce a proton buffer that, like a buffer in experiment, can exchange protons with the biomolecule enabling its…

ProtonprotonationAnalytical chemistryProtonationBuffersMolecular Dynamics Simulation010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBuffer (optical fiber)Molecular dynamics0103 physical sciencesPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryNuclear Experimentta116chemistry.chemical_classificationQuantitative Biology::Biomolecules010304 chemical physicspHQuantitative Biology::Molecular NetworksBiomoleculeProteinsCharge (physics)molecular dynamics simulationselectrostatic environmentHydrogen-Ion Concentration0104 chemical sciencesComputer Science ApplicationschemistryChemical physicsThermodynamicsTitrationbufferProtonsConstant (mathematics)Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
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Potential of human serum albumin as chiral selector of basic drugs in affinity electrokinetic chromatography-partial filling technique

2006

The enantiomeric resolution of compounds using HSA by means of affinity EKC (AEKC)-partial filling technique is the result of a delicate balance between different experimental variables such as protein concentration, running pH (background electrophoretic buffer (BGE), protein, and compound solutions), and plug length. In this paper, the possibility of using HSA as chiral selector for enantioseparation of 28 basic drugs using this methodology is studied. The effect of the physicochemical parameters, the structural properties of compounds, and compound-HSA protein binding percentages over their chiral resolution with HSA is outlined. Based on the results obtained, a decision tree is proposed…

Resolution (mass spectrometry)Clinical BiochemistryPlasma protein bindingBuffersBiochemistryChromatography AffinityAnalytical ChemistryElectrokinetic phenomenaMolar volumemedicineHumansSerum AlbuminChromatography Micellar Electrokinetic CapillaryChromatographyMolecular StructureChemistryStereoisomerismHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationHuman serum albuminChiral resolutionbody regionsElectrophoresisPharmaceutical Preparationsembryonic structuresEnantiomerHydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactionsmedicine.drugELECTROPHORESIS
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