Search results for "Kinetics"

showing 10 items of 2224 documents

Conversion of the Ca2+-ATPase from Rhodospirillum rubrum into a Mg2+-dependent enzyme by 1,N6-etheno ATP

1980

Nucleoside triphosphate hydrolysis of R.rubrum ATPase complexes can be changed from Ca2+-dependence to Mg2+-dependence by replacing ATP with 1,N6-etheno ATP. Four ATPase complexes which have been prepared by different procedures hydrolyze ATP and 1,N6-etheno ATP at different rates in dependence on the added metal ions. These differences allow an easy distinction of the various enzyme forms.

ATPaseBiophysicsPhotophosphorylationCalcium-Transporting ATPasesRhodospirillum rubrumBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundAdenosine TriphosphateMagnesiumMolecular BiologyEdetic Acidchemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyATP synthaseChemiosmosisCell MembraneRhodospirillum rubrumCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationKineticsEnzymeBiochemistrychemistrybiology.proteinNucleoside triphosphateOligomycinsATP synthase alpha/beta subunitsEthenoadenosine TriphosphateProtein BindingBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
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Asymptotic potentials and rate constants in the adiabatic capture centrifugal sudden approximation for X + OH(X-2 Pi) -> OX + H(S-2) reactions where …

2012

International audience; New long-range multipolar coefficients for the X + OH(X-2 Pi) interactions, where X = O(P-3), S(P-3) and N(S-4), are given here. They have been evaluated on the basis or monomer properties of the atoms and OH such as the dipole and quadrupole moments, and the static and dynamic polarizabilities. Each matrix element of the 18 x 18 (8 x 8 for N + OH) quasi-degenerate asymptotic potentials has been built up by means of the perturbation theory up to second order including or not the fine-structure of O, S and OH. The adiabatic potentials, obtained after diagonalization of the full matrix, show many crossings and complex behaviors near the asymptotes. Using the entrance c…

Ab initio010402 general chemistryKinetic energy7. Clean energy01 natural sciencesBiochemistryDIPOLE POLARIZABILITIESATOMSAb initio quantum chemistry methodsLOW-TEMPERATUREOH RADICALS0103 physical sciencesCOUPLED-CLUSTER CALCULATIONSPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPerturbation theoryAdiabatic processKINETICS010304 chemical physicsChemistryRANGECondensed Matter PhysicsPotential energy0104 chemical sciencesQUADRUPOLE-MOMENTSO-2[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]QuadrupoleCLAtomic physicsGround state
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Release kinetics of early ischaemic biomarkers in a clinical model of acute myocardial infarction

2014

ObjectiveTo determine the release kinetics of different biomarkers with potential as novel early ischaemic biomarkers in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS); it is difficult to establish the detailed release kinetics in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI).MethodsWe analysed the release kinetics of soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase (sFlt-1), ischaemia modified albumin (IMA), and heart-type fatty acid binding protein (hFABP) in patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy who were undergoing transcoronary ablation of septal hypertrophy (TASH), a procedure mimicking AMI. Consecutive patients (n=21) undergoing TASH were included. Blood samples were collected before T…

Ablation TechniquesMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAcute coronary syndromeMyocardial InfarctionCardiomyopathySerum albuminSerum Albumin HumanFatty Acid-Binding ProteinsFatty acid-binding proteinPredictive Value of TestsInternal medicineHumansMedicineMyocardial infarctionSerum AlbuminAgedImmunoassayVascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1biologybusiness.industryCardiomyopathy HypertrophicMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseUp-RegulationKineticsEarly DiagnosisPredictive value of testsbiology.proteinCardiologyFemaleFatty Acid Binding Protein 3Myocardial infarction diagnosisCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessFatty Acid Binding Protein 3BiomarkersHeart
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Viscosity-mediated negative food effect on oral absorption of poorly-permeable drugs with an absorption window in the proximal intestine: In vitro ex…

2014

Concomitant food intake can diminish oral absorption of drugs with limited permeability and an absorption window in the proximal intestine, due to viscosity-mediated decrease in dosage form disintegration time and drug dissolution rate. Three poorly-permeable drugs (atenolol, metformin hydrochloride, and furosemide) exhibiting negative food effect, and one highly-soluble and highly-permeable (metoprolol tartrate), serving as a negative control, were selected for the study. In vitro and in silico tools were used to evaluate the influence of media viscosity on drug bioperformance under fasted and fed conditions. The obtained results demonstrated that increased medium viscosity in the presence…

Absorption (pharmacology)DrugMetoprolol Tartratemedia_common.quotation_subjectPharmaceutical ScienceAdministration OralPharmaceutical formulationPharmacologyDosage formPermeabilityFood-Drug InteractionsPharmacokineticsPoorly-permeable drugsFurosemideHumansDissolution testingSolubilityDisintegrationmedia_commonChromatographyChemistryViscosityReproducibility of ResultsHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationFood effectMetforminAtenololIntestinal AbsorptionSolubilityFoodDissolutionAbsorption simulationEuropean journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences
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Micellar liquid chromatography for prediction of drug transport.

2000

Abstract The vast majority of well absorbed drugs are transported passively across the cell membranes. Physicochemical descriptors of drug molecules that are believed to influence transcellular transport are routinely used to predict drug absorption by means of complex mathematical models. In this paper, a new in vitro method, based on the retention data in micellar liquid chromatography (MLC), is validated for the prediction of passive drug absorption. The retention of a heterogeneous drugs set in MLC using Brij 35 as surfactant in the mobile phase is compared with the retention data reported in literature obtained in red cell membrane lipid liposomes, human red cell membranes vesicles (ve…

Absorption (pharmacology)LiposomeChromatographyChemistryVesicleOrganic ChemistryCell MembraneAdministration OralGeneral MedicineBiochemistryHigh-performance liquid chromatographyAnalytical ChemistryMembranePulmonary surfactantMicellar liquid chromatographyParacellular transportHumansPharmacokineticsSpectrophotometry UltravioletMicellesChromatography LiquidJournal of chromatography. A
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Influence of gamma-aminobutyric acid on baclofen intestinal absorption.

1994

Since previous studies suggested that baclofen absorption in the rat middle intestine was inhibited by beta-alanine and therefore mediated, at least in part, by the beta-aminoacid carrier, we focused our new studies on the analysis of the possible inhibition of the drug by a gamma-aminoacid model compound, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). A rat jejunum in situ study was undertaken in order to evaluate the effect of GABA on baclofen absorption and to establish the inhibition model. Assays using isotonic perfusion solutions of 0.5 mM baclofen with starting GABA concentrations ranging from 0 to 100 mM are reported. The results show that the absorption rate pseudoconstants of the drug decrease a…

Absorption (pharmacology)MaleBaclofenPharmaceutical ScienceIn Vitro TechniquesMichaelis–Menten kineticsAminobutyric acidModels BiologicalIntestinal absorptionchemistry.chemical_compoundNon-competitive inhibitionmedicineAnimalsPharmacology (medical)Rats WistarChromatography High Pressure Liquidgamma-Aminobutyric AcidPharmacologyGeneral MedicineMembrane transportSmall intestineRatsPerfusionBaclofenmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemchemistryBiochemistryIntestinal AbsorptionBiophysicsBiopharmaceuticsdrug disposition
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Partially competitive inhibition of intestinal baclofen absorption by beta-alanine, a nonessential dietary aminoacid.

1991

In situ intestinal absorption of baclofen in the rat in the presence of beta-alanine has been investigated. Through the perfusion of 0.50 mM baclofen solutions containing variable concentrations of the aminoacid (from 5 to 100 mM), a partially competitive inhibition of baclofen absorption was characterized: absorption rate pseudoconstants of the spasmolytic drug decrease as beta-alanine concentration increases, until a limiting value is obtained (36.8 per cent of that found for baclofen alone). A computer method was developed in order to calculate parameters governing baclofen absorption in the presence of beta-aminoacid, with the following results: Vm = 11.22 mM h-1; Km = 7.42 mM; Ki = 2.4…

Absorption (pharmacology)MaleBaclofenStereochemistryPharmaceutical Sciencebeta-AlanineMichaelis–Menten kineticsIntestinal absorptionchemistry.chemical_compoundNon-competitive inhibitionPharmacokineticsIntestine SmallAnimalsPharmacology (medical)Drug InteractionsPharmacologyChromatographyWaterRats Inbred StrainsGeneral MedicineRatsDietary aminoacidBaclofenchemistryIntestinal Absorptionbeta-AlanineBiopharmaceuticsdrug disposition
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Digestion and absorption rates of [3H]-oleic acid and [14C]-triolein do not differ in rats fed heated (-) and (+) gossypol cottonseed and soybean flo…

1998

This study was conducted to compare in vivo the acute effects of heated (+) and (-) gossypol cottonseed flours with those of soybean flour on lipid digestion and absorption in growing rats. Rats were fed by gastric intubation mixed [ 3 H]-oleic acid and [ 14 C]-triolein with heated flours or without flour (control). Lipid digestion and absorption were determined for 6 h after meal intubation. Both radioactivities recovered in gastrointestinal tract were significantly higher in rats fed (+) gossypol cottonseed flour than in all other groups. The majority of both recovered radioactivities was found in stomach contents, then in stomach wall and finally in intestinal wall. The distribution of b…

Absorption (pharmacology)MaleHot TemperatureCottonseed OilMedicine (miscellaneous)BiologyFatty Acids NonesterifiedTritiumCottonseedchemistry.chemical_compoundAnimalsTrioleinFood scienceCarbon RadioisotopesIntestinal MucosaRats WistarIntubation GastrointestinalTriglyceridesGastrointestinal tractNutrition and DieteticsfungiGossypolfood and beveragesRatsOleic acidKineticschemistryBiochemistryIntestinal AbsorptionGossypollipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)DigestionSoybeansDigestionLipid digestionTrioleinOleic AcidThe Journal of nutrition
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Kinetics of the intestinal uptake of zinc acexamate in normal and zinc-depleted rats.

1990

Abstract The uptake of zinc as acexamic acid salt in the small intestine of the anaesthetized rat was shown to be a two-phase process in normal animals. The first phase is rapid mucosal binding which satisfies the Freundlich isotherm equation and which involves about 30 per cent of the initially perfused zinc. The second phase was characterized as an apparent absorption step which obeys Michaelis-Menten and first-order combined kinetics, with the following parameters: Vm = 6.51 mg h−1; Km = 2.96 mg; ka = 0.306 h−1. In largely non-saturated conditions, an apparent global rate constant of about 2.50 h−1 was calculated. No significant interference due to endogenous zinc excretion into the smal…

Absorption (pharmacology)MaleKineticsPharmaceutical Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementZincExcretionReaction rate constantPharmacokineticsIntestine SmallmedicineAnimalsFreundlich equationIntestinal MucosaPharmacologyAminocaproatesSpectrophotometry AtomicRats Inbred StrainsSmall intestineRatsPerfusionZincmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistrychemistryIntestinal AbsorptionAminocaproic AcidBiophysicsThe Journal of pharmacy and pharmacology
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Intestinal absorption pathway of gamma-aminobutyric acid in rat small intestine.

1994

Intestinal absorption of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), as a model compound for gamma-aminoacids, has not been extensively studied from the kinetic viewpoint. Since data from our laboratory suggested that some competition arises between intestinal absorption of beta-alanine and GABA and since our intent was to maintain the aqueous stagnant diffusion layer in order to approach absorption tests to in vivo physiological conditions, a rat jejunum in situ study was undertaken in order to gain an insight into the mechanism of GABA absorption. In the present paper, results from assays using isotonic perfusion solutions with starting GABA concentrations ranging from 1 to 50 mM are reported. They s…

Absorption (pharmacology)MalePharmaceutical ScienceMichaelis–Menten kineticsAminobutyric acidIntestinal absorptionDiffusionNon-competitive inhibitionBody WaterIn vivoIntestine SmallmedicineAnimalsPharmacology (medical)Rats WistarChromatography High Pressure Liquidgamma-Aminobutyric AcidPharmacologyAlanineChemistryGeneral MedicineMembrane transportSmall intestineRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureSpectrometry FluorescenceBiochemistryIntestinal AbsorptionBiophysicsBiopharmaceuticsdrug disposition
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