Search results for "Dyes"

showing 10 items of 324 documents

Determination of type A trichothecenes by high-performance liquid chromatography with coumarin-3-carbonyl chloride derivatisation and fluorescence de…

2000

A method for the analysis of type A trichothecenes T-2 toxin, HT-2 toxin, neosolaniol and diacetoxyscirpenol by high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection using coumarin-3-carbonyl chloride has been developed. Different parameters concerning the analytical procedure such as stability of both the reagent and derivatised analytes, time and temperature of the derivatisation reaction, were studied and optimised. Three different clean-up procedures (solid-phase extraction with silica gel or C-18 cartridges, and liquid-liquid partition between toluene and dihydrogen phosphate buffer) were tested in order to remove the excess reagent peaks. The last procedure gave the best …

Detection limitChromatographybiologyOrganic ChemistryTrichotheceneOryzaGeneral MedicineReversed-phase chromatographyHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryHigh-performance liquid chromatographyFusarium sporotrichioidesZea maysDiacetoxyscirpenolAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundSpectrometry FluorescencechemistryCoumarinsReagentSample preparationTrichothecenesChromatography High Pressure LiquidFluorescent DyesJournal of chromatography. A
researchProduct

Synaptic release of zinc from brain slices: factors governing release, imaging, and accurate calculation of concentration.

2006

Cerebrocortical neurons that store and release zinc synaptically are widely recognized as critical in maintenance of cortical excitability and in certain forms of brain injury and disease. Through the last 20 years, this synaptic release has been observed directly or indirectly and reported in more than a score of publications from over a dozen laboratories in eight countries. However, the concentration of zinc released synaptically has not been established with final certainty. In the present work we have considered six aspects of the methods for studying release that can affect the magnitude of zinc release, the imaging of the release, and the calculated concentration of released zinc. We…

Diagnostic ImagingPyridinesColoring agentschemistry.chemical_elementZincIn Vitro TechniquesRats Sprague-DawleyPregnancyAnimalsAcido edeticoPolycyclic CompoundsRats WistarColoring AgentsEdetic AcidFluorescent DyesNeuronsExtramuralChemistryGeneral NeuroscienceTemperatureBrainOriginal dataRatsSprague dawleyZincDentate GyrusMossy Fibers HippocampalSynapsesFemaleSynaptic VesiclesNeuroscienceJournal of neuroscience methods
researchProduct

Imaging of nitric oxide in a living vertebrate using a diaminofluorescein probe

2007

Abstract Numerous approaches have been described to identify nitric oxide (NO), a free radical involved in various physiological and pathophysiological processes. One of these approaches is based on the use of chemical probes whose transformation by NO generates highly fluorescent derivatives, permitting detection of NO down to nanomolar concentrations. Here, we show that the cell-permeant diaminofluorophore 4-amino-5-methylamino-2′-7′-difluorofluorescein diacetate (DAF-FM-DA) can be used to detect NO production sites in a living vertebrate, the zebrafish Danio rerio. The staining pattern obtained in larvae includes the bulbus arteriosus, forming bones, the notochord, and the caudal fin. Th…

Diagnostic Imagingmedicine.medical_specialtyDanioBulbus arteriosusNitric OxideBiochemistryNitric oxidechemistry.chemical_compoundPhysiology (medical)Internal medicineNotochordmedicineAnimalsZebrafishZebrafishFluorescent DyesbiologyfungiSnapMolecular Pharmacologybiology.organism_classificationStainingCell biologyEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryLarvaFluoresceinFree Radical Biology and Medicine
researchProduct

Dual-affinity avidin molecules

2005

A recently reported dual-chain avidin was modified further to contain two distinct, independent types of ligand-binding sites within a single polypeptide chain. Chicken avidin is normally a tetrameric glycoprotein that binds water-soluble d-biotin with extreme affinity (Kd ≈ 10−15M). Avidin is utilized in various applications and techniques in the life sciences and in the nanosciences. In a recent study, we described a novel avidin monomer-fusion chimera that joins two circularly permuted monomers into a single polypeptide chain. Two of these dual-chain avidins were observed to associate spontaneously to form a dimer equivalent to the wt tetramer. In the present study, we successfully used …

DimerBiochemistryChromatography AffinityProtein Structure Secondarychemistry.chemical_compoundBiotinAffinity chromatographyTetramerStructural BiologyAnimalsBinding siteMolecular BiologyFluorescent Dyeschemistry.chemical_classificationBinding SitesbiologyChemistryTemperatureAvidinBiochemistryBiotinylationbiology.proteinThermodynamicsGlycoproteinChickensProtein BindingAvidinProteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics
researchProduct

Vibrio cholerae cytolysin: assembly and membrane insertion of the oligomeric pore are tightly linked and are not detectably restricted by membrane fl…

2000

AbstractHemolytic strains of Vibrio cholerae secrete a cytolysin that, upon binding as a monomer, forms pentameric pores in animal cell membranes. Pore formation is inhibited at low temperature and in the absence of cholesterol. We here posed the following questions: firstly, can oligomerization be observed in the absence of pore formation? Secondly, is membrane fluidity responsible for the effect of temperature or of cholesterol upon pore formation? The first issue was approached by chemical cross-linking, by electrophoretic heteromer analysis, and by electron microscopy. None of these methods yielded any evidence of a non-lytic pre-pore oligomer. The second question was addressed by the u…

DiphenylhexatrieneCell Membrane PermeabilityMembrane permeabilityMembrane FluidityBacterial ToxinsBiophysicsPorinsFluorescence PolarizationBiologymedicine.disease_causePore forming toxinBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundProtein oligomerizationBacterial ProteinsBacteriocinsmedicineMembrane fluidityProtein oligomerizationVibrio choleraePhospholipidsFluorescent DyesLiposomeCytotoxinsCell MembraneCell BiologyFluoresceinsCholesterolMembranechemistryBiochemistryVibrio choleraeLiposomesPhosphatidylcholinesCytolysinDiphenylhexatrieneBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
researchProduct

Amphiphilic HPMA-LMA copolymers increase the transport of Rhodamine 123 across a BBB model without harming its barrier integrity.

2012

Abstract The successful non-invasive treatment of diseases associated with the central nervous system (CNS) is generally limited by poor brain permeability of various developed drugs. The blood–brain barrier (BBB) prevents the passage of therapeutics to their site of action. Polymeric drug delivery systems are promising solutions to effectively transport drugs into the brain. We recently showed that amphiphilic random copolymers based on the hydrophilic p(N-(2-hydroxypropyl)-methacrylamide), pHPMA, possessing randomly distributed hydrophobic p(laurylmethacrylate), pLMA, are able to mediate delivery of domperidone into the brain of mice in vivo. To gain further insight into structure–propert…

Drug CarriersPharmaceutical SciencePolymer architectureBiological TransportPharmacologyBlood–brain barrierRhodamine 123Models BiologicalPermeabilityCell Linechemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryTranscytosisIn vivoBlood-Brain BarrierNanoparticles for drug delivery to the brainAmphiphilemedicineHumansMethacrylatesRhodamine 123Barrier functionFluorescent DyesJournal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society
researchProduct

Simultaneous Removal and Recovery of Metal Ions and Dyes from Wastewater through Montmorillonite Clay Mineral

2019

The main objective of this work was to evaluate the potential of Montmorillonite nanoclay (Mt), readily and inexpensively available, for the simultaneous adsorption (and removal) of two classes of pollutants: metal ions and dyes. The attention was focused on two &ldquo

DyeGeneral Chemical EngineeringMetal ions in aqueous solutionGroundwater remediation02 engineering and technologyAdsorption; Dyes; Metal ions; Montmorillonite; Wastewaters010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesdyesmetal ionArticlechemistry.chemical_compoundsymbols.namesakeAdsorptionGeneral Materials ScienceCrystal violetMetal ionwastewater0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSettore CHIM/02 - Chimica FisicaMontmorilloniteSettore GEO/06 - MineralogiaAqueous solutionLangmuir adsorption modelmetal ions021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyWastewatersMontmorilloniteWastewaterChemical engineeringchemistryadsorptionsymbolsAdsorption0210 nano-technologywastewatersNanomaterials
researchProduct

Hydrophobic pocket targeting probes for enteroviruses

2015

Visualization and tracking of viruses without compromising their functionality is crucial in order to understand virus targeting to cells and tissues, and to understand the subsequent subcellular steps leading to virus uncoating and replication. Enteroviruses are important human pathogens causing a vast number of acute infections, and are also suggested to contribute to the development of chronic diseases like type I diabetes. Here, we demonstrate a novel method to target site-specifically the hydrophobic pocket of enteroviruses. A probe, a derivative of Pleconaril, was developed and conjugated to various labels that enabled the visualization of enteroviruses under light and electron micros…

EchovirusEndosomevirusesCoxsackievirus InfectionsBiologyCoxsackievirusmedicine.disease_causeenterovirusesVirusCell Line TumormedicineHumansGeneral Materials Sciencemolecular probesta116OxazolesFluorescent DyesInfectivityOxadiazolesVirus Uncoatingta1182trackingbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyEnterovirus B HumanCapsidhydrophobic pocketCytoplasmBiophysicsGoldHydrophobic and Hydrophilic InteractionsNanoscale
researchProduct

A combined approach for gene discovery identifies insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-related protein 1 as a new gene implicated in human endo…

2003

In the past, human endometrial receptivity has been investigated by chasing specific molecules throughout the menstrual cycle. Now the genomic approach allows us to investigate the hierarchical contribution of a high number of genes to a specific function. In this study, we analyzed differentially the gene expression pattern of 375 human cytokines, chemokines, and related factors, plus that of their receptors, in endometrial receptivity. To do this, we used a combined approach of human endometrium and cell lines. We have compared the gene expression pattern in receptive vs. prereceptive human endometria and contrasted the results with gene expression in the highly adhesive cell line (to JAR…

Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolismmedicine.medical_treatmentClinical BiochemistryBiologyEndometriumBiochemistryInsulin-like growth factor-binding proteinCell LineEndometriumMiceEndocrinologyPregnancyGene expressionmedicineCell AdhesionAnimalsHumansRNA MessengerReceptorGeneIn Situ HybridizationMenstrual CycleFluorescent DyesMessenger RNAReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionBiochemistry (medical)Epithelial CellsMolecular biologyImmunohistochemistryInsulin-Like Growth Factor Binding ProteinsCytokinemedicine.anatomical_structureBlastocystGene Expression RegulationCell culturebiology.proteinFemaleStromal CellsCarrier ProteinsThe Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
researchProduct

Fluorescence labels as sensors for oxygen binding of arthropod hemocyanins

2004

The molecular basis of high cooperativity in multi-subunit proteins is still unknown in most cases. Oxygen binding by multi-subunit hemocyanins produces two intrinsic spectroscopic signals which are, however, either limited to the UV or are very weak. Here we demonstrate that fluorescence labels emitting in the visible can be used as sensors for cooperative oxygen binding of hemocyanins. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer to the oxygenated active sites quenches the emission of the labels by roughly 50% upon oxygenation of the protein. The labels give strong and photo-stable emission, allowing imaging of single hemocyanin molecules. Therefore, this study opens up a new perspective for in…

Energy transfermedicine.medical_treatmentBiophysicsAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementCooperativityBiochemistryOxygenFluorescence Resonance Energy TransfermedicineAnimalsMoleculePalinuridaeArthropodsMolecular BiologyFluorescent DyesChemistrySpidersHemocyaninCell BiologyFluorescenceOxygenSpectrometry FluorescenceFörster resonance energy transferEnergy TransferHemocyaninsBiophysicsOxygen bindingBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
researchProduct