Search results for "NEUROSCIENCE"

showing 10 items of 8040 documents

P4‐192: Mechanism of γ‐secretase cleavage: Evidence for independent generation of Aβ42 and Aβ38 peptide species

2008

chemistry.chemical_classificationCleavage factorEpidemiologyChemistryStereochemistryHealth PolicyPeptideCleavage (embryo)Psychiatry and Mental healthCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceDevelopmental NeuroscienceNeurology (clinical)γ secretaseGeriatrics and GerontologyAlzheimer's & Dementia
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Relationships between metabolic fluxes and enzyme amino acid composition

2013

AbstractMetabolic fluxes are a key parameter of metabolic pathways being closely related to the kinetic properties of enzymes and could be conditional on their sequence characteristics. This study examines possible relationships between the metabolic fluxes and the amino acid (AA) composition (AAC) for enzymes from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae glycolysis pathway. Metabolic fluxes were quantified by the COPASI tool using the kinetic models of Hynne and Teusink at 25 mM, 50 mM, and 100 mM of external glucose or employing literature data for cognate kinetic or stoichiometric models. The enzyme sequences were taken from the UniProtKB, and the AAC computed by the ExPASy/ProtParam tool. Mul…

chemistry.chemical_classificationGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyQH301-705.5General NeuroscienceSaccharomyces cerevisiaeExPASyBiologybiology.organism_classificationGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyYeastAmino acidMetabolic pathwayEnzymechemistryBiochemistrymultivariate relationshipssaccharomyces cerevisiaeGlycolysisComposition (visual arts)Biology (General)glycolytic enzymesamino acid compositionGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencesmetabolic fluxesOpen Life Sciences
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Discriminative features of type I and type III secreted proteins from Gram-negative bacteria

2006

AbstractThe amino acid composition of sequences and structural attributes (α-helices, β-sheets) of C-and N-terminal fragments (50 amino acids) were compared to annotated (SWISS-PROT/ TrEMBL) type I (20 sequences) and type III (22 sequences) secreted proteins of Gram-negative bacteria.The discriminant analysis together with the stepwise forward and backward selection of variables revealed the frequencies of the residues Arg, Glu, Gly, Ile, Met, Pro, Ser, Tyr, Val as a set of strong (1-P < 0.001) predictor variables to discriminate between the sequences of type I and type III secreted proteins with a cross-validated accuracy of 98.6–100 %. The internal and external validity of discriminant…

chemistry.chemical_classificationGram-negative bacteriaGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyQH301-705.5General Neurosciencediscriminant analysisbiology.organism_classificationLinear discriminant analysisgram-negative bacteriaGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologyamino acid sequenceAmino acidSecretory proteinBiochemistrychemistryprotein secretionSecretionBiology (General)General Agricultural and Biological SciencesPeptide sequenceBacteriaGramOpen Life Sciences
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O2‐04‐04: The metalloprotease meprin beta generates amino‐terminally truncated beta‐amyloid peptide species

2012

chemistry.chemical_classificationMetalloproteinaseAmyloidEpidemiologyHealth PolicyPeptideMolecular biologyPsychiatry and Mental healthCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceDevelopmental NeurosciencechemistryNeurology (clinical)Geriatrics and GerontologyBeta (finance)Alzheimer's & Dementia
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Tyramine action on motoneuron excitability and adaptable tyramine/octopamine ratios adjust Drosophila locomotion to nutritional state

2019

Adrenergic signaling profoundly modulates animal behavior. For example, the invertebrate counterpart of norepinephrine, octopamine, and its biological precursor and functional antagonist, tyramine, adjust motor behavior to different nutritional states. In Drosophila larvae, food deprivation increases locomotor speed via octopamine-mediated structural plasticity of neuromuscular synapses, whereas tyramine reduces locomotor speed, but the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms remain unknown. We show that tyramine is released into the CNS to reduce motoneuron intrinsic excitability and responses to excitatory cholinergic input, both by tyraminehonoka receptor activation and by downstrea…

chemistry.chemical_classificationMultidisciplinaryCalcium channelTyramineNorepinephrinechemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryNeuromodulationBiogenic aminemedicineExcitatory postsynaptic potentialCholinergicOctopamine (neurotransmitter)Neurosciencemedicine.drugProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Capillary Rise in Nanotubes Coated with Polymer Brushes

2009

The spontaneous rise of a fluid in a brush-coated nanocapillary is studied by molecular dynamics simulation of a coarse-grained model. The cases of changing wettability of both the capillary walls and the brush were examined. We also investigated the impact of polymer chain length on the transport of fluid along the nanotube. We found that capillary filling takes place in both lyophilic and lyophobic tubes, provided that the polymer brush coating is wetted by the fluid. In all the cases studied, capillary rise proceeds by a time-square law, but the mechanisms behind them (Lucas-Washburn or diffusive propagation) differ, depending on the chain length N. For a wettable wall, the speed of flui…

chemistry.chemical_classificationNanotubeMaterials scienceCapillary actionGeneral NeuroscienceBrushPolymerengineering.materialPolymer brushGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologylaw.inventionHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCoatingchemistrylawPolymer chemistryengineeringMeniscusWettingComposite materialAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Peripheral innervation of the heart

1987

The present immunohistochemical study demonstrates the multiplicity, histotopography and origin of peptidergic innervation in the mammalian heart. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is the major representative of peptides in cardiac sympathetic efferents. Sympathetic afferents are characterized by the presence of tachykinins, calcitonin gene-related peptide and apparently also some opioid peptides. Predominant peptides of the vagal system are tachykinins. The intrinsic peptidergic system predominantly consists of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide/peptide histidine isoleucine. Paracrine systems are merely opioid-ergic. Target relations of extrinsic and intrinsic peptidergic nerves were found to be more di…

chemistry.chemical_classificationParacrine signallingchemistryCalcitoninVasoactive intestinal peptideImmunohistochemistryPeptideBiologyNeuropeptide Y receptorOpioid peptideNeurosciencePhenotype
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Pharmacological modulation of redox signaling pathways in disease

2020

chemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesbusiness.industryOxidation reductionDiseaseBiochemistrychemistryPhysiology (medical)MedicinePharmacological modulationSignal transductionbusinessOxidation-ReductionNeuroscienceSignal TransductionIntroductory Journal ArticleFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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Conditioned taste aversion in rats for a threonine-deficient diet

2000

Rats avoid a diet that is deficient in one or more essential amino acids (EAAs). This phenomenon is thought to involve the development of a "learned aversion" for the sensory properties or spatial placement associated with the deficient diet. The dietary self-selection technique has been widely used to show this avoidance of the deficient diet. Because avoidance does not necessarily imply taste aversion, we used the Taste Reactivity Test initially created by Grill and Norgren (1978) to analyze the affective reactivity pattern of rats that ingested a threonine-deficient diet. The results showed that there was an increase in the aversive responses when ingesting the threonine-deficient (Thr-D…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTastemedicine.medical_specialtyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySensory systemBehavioral NeuroscienceEndocrinologySatiety ResponsechemistryInternal medicinemedicineTaste aversionConditioningPalatabilityFood scienceThreoninePsychologyEssential amino acidPhysiology & Behavior
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Inhibition of herpesvirus DNA synthesis by 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine in cellular and cell-free systems.

1977

9-beta-D-Arabinofuranosyladenine 5'-triphosphate (ara-ATP) is an inhibitor both of DNA polymerase-alpha and -beta from noninfected rabbit kidney cells and of the DNA-dependent DNA polymerase induced by herpes simplex virus Type 1 (strain IES). The studies were performed with partially purified enzymes, and each of the different polymerase preparations contained only one DNA-dependent DNA polymerase species. These enzymes were inhibited in a competitive manner. The HSV-induced DNA-dependent DNA polymerase was 39-fold more sensitive to ara-ATP than was cellular DNA polymerase-beta and 116-fold more sensitive than cellular DNA polymerase-alpha. The affinity of the HSV-induced enzyme for ara-AT…

chemistry.chemical_classificationVirus CultivationbiologyDNA synthesisCell-Free SystemChemistryDNA polymeraseGeneral Neurosciencemedicine.disease_causeMolecular biologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEnzyme assayProliferating cell nuclear antigenchemistry.chemical_compoundHerpes simplex virusEnzymeHistory and Philosophy of ScienceDNA Viralbiology.proteinmedicineSimplexvirusPolymeraseDNAVidarabineNucleic Acid Synthesis InhibitorsAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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