Search results for "Polyamine"

showing 10 items of 144 documents

Micellar electrokinetic chromatography of polyamines and monoacetylpolyamines

2001

A selective procedure for qualitative and quantitative analysis of ten polyamines by micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) was developed. Benzoylated polyamines and acetylpolyamines in micellar phase of SDS (10 mM) were separated at 25 degrees C by 20 mM borate buffer pH 8.5, containing 8% ethanol, with an applied voltage of 25 kV (5 microA) and then detected at 198 nm. The experimental factors and operational parameters were optimized by performing analysis at different surfactant concentrations, pH, voltage and temperature with and without ethanol. The repeatibility of migration times and peak heights is a peculiarity of the method here described.

EthanolChromatographyOrganic ChemistryAnalytical chemistryReproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationBiochemistryMicellar electrokinetic chromatographyAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPulmonary surfactantBORATE BUFFERPhase (matter)PolyaminesSample preparationDerivatizationQuantitative analysis (chemistry)Chromatography Micellar Electrokinetic CapillaryJournal of Chromatography A
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Studies of polyamines transport through liquid membranes with D2EHPA as a carrier.

2008

The transport of polyamines through the liquid membranes with di‐2‐ethylhexyl phosphoric acid (D2EHPA) was investigated. The study was performed in three main steps: liquid–liquid extraction (LLE), bulk liquid membrane (BLM) extraction, and supported liquid membrane (SLM) extraction. Equilibrium distribution experiments allowed determining the extraction constants and stoichiometric coefficients for each polyamine. It turned out that one amino group binds two molecules of carrier (one D2EHPA dimer) and the extractability of polyamine rises with the increase in number of function groups in the molecule. The BLM and SLM experiments showed that despite considerable differences in distribution …

Extraction (chemistry)Analytical chemistryFiltration and SeparationDi-(2-ethylhexyl)phosphoric acidMembranes ArtificialAcceptorHigh-performance liquid chromatographyextraction equilibriumAnalytical ChemistryChemical kineticschemistry.chemical_compoundKineticsliquid membranesMembranechemistryLiquid–liquid extractiondi-2-ethylhexyl phosphoric acidtransport mechanismPolyaminesPhosphoric acidChromatography High Pressure LiquidJournal of separation science
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Polyamines and microbiota in bicuspid and tricuspid aortic valve aortopathy

2019

Polyamines are small aliphatic cationic molecules synthesized via a highly regulated pathway and involved in general molecular and cellular phenomena. Both mammalian cells and microorganisms synthesize polyamines, and both sources may contribute to the presence of polyamines in the circulation. The dominant location for microorganisms within the body is the gut. Accordingly, the gut microbiota probably synthesizes most of the polyamines in the circulation in addition to those produced by the mammalian host cells. Polyamines are mandatory for cellular growth and proliferation. Established evidence suggests that the polyamine spermidine prolongs lifespan and improves cardiovascular health in …

Heart Defects Congenital0301 basic medicineAortic valveVascular smooth muscleHeart Valve Diseases030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyGut floraSystemic inflammation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBicuspid aortic valveBicuspid Aortic Valve Diseasemedicine.arteryPolyamines and microbiotaAscending aortaPolyaminesAnimalsHumansMedicineSettore MED/05 - Patologia ClinicaBicuspidMolecular BiologyAortabiologybusiness.industrymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationGastrointestinal MicrobiomeCell biologyEndothelial stem cell030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureAortic ValveDisease Progressioncardiovascular systemTricuspid Valvemedicine.symptombicuspid and tricuspid aortic valve aortopathybusinessCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
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Fluorescent chemosensors containing polyamine receptors

2000

Chemosensors have attracted interest in many different scientific fields, such as environmental chemistry, medicine, and the processing and storage of information. These molecular-scale devices have the advantage of working on the same spatial scale as the chemical structures that are responsible for macroscopic behaviour observed in the environment or those associated with health problems. Moreover, they allow the construction of molecular-scale devices for information storage. In this review, we describe a family of chemosensors based on a polyamine receptor and a fluorescent signalling unit. Polyamine receptors are water-soluble ambidentate receptors; they are able to coordinate either m…

Inorganic Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundHealth problemschemistryInformation storageOrganic chemistryPolyamineReceptorCombinatorial chemistryFluorescence
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CO 2 Fixation and Activation by Cu II Complexes of 5,5″‐Terpyridinophane Macrocycles

2007

An aza-terpyridinophane receptor containing the polyamine 4,7,10,13-tetraazahexadecane-1,16-diamine linked through methylene groups to the 5,5″ positions of a terpyridine unit has been prepared and characterized (L). The acid-base behaviour, CuII speciation and ability to form ternary complexes (CuII-L-carbonate) have been explored by potentiometric titrations in 0.15 M NaClO4 and by UV/Vis and paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy. Comparisons are made with a previously reported terpyridinophane containing the polyamine 4,7,10-triazatridecane-1,13-diamine (L1). For this latter receptor, reductive coupling between indigo and carbon dioxide at indigo-modified electrodes produces carboxylated derivat…

Inorganic Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPolymer chemistryCarbon fixationPotentiometric titrationInorganic chemistryNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyMethyleneTerpyridineTernary operationElectrochemistryPolyamineEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry
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Gliadin-mediated production of polyamines by RAW264.7 macrophages modulates intestinal epithelial permeability in vitro

2015

AbstractCeliac disease (CD) is an immune-mediated enteropathy sustained by dietary gluten in susceptible individuals, and characterized by a complex interplay between adaptive and innate responses against gluten peptides (PTG). In a recent contribution we have demonstrated that the treatment with PTG induces the expression and activity of arginase in both murine macrophages and human monocytes from healthy subjects, thus suggesting a role for arginine and its metabolites in gluten-triggered response of these cells. Here we further explore this field, by addressing the effects of PTG on polyamine synthesis and release in murine RAW264.7 macrophages, and how they affect epithelial permeabilit…

Intestinal permeabilityArginineArginaseInflammationBiologyIntestinal permeabilitymedicine.diseaseIn vitroGliadinCell biologyArginasechemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistrychemistrymedicinePutrescinebiology.proteinPolyaminesMolecular MedicineCeliac diseaseSecretionmedicine.symptomGliadinMolecular BiologyBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease
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Zn(II)-coordination and fluorescence studies of a new polyazamacrocycle incorporating 1H-pyrazole and naphthalene units.

2010

The synthesis and Zn(2+) coordination properties of a new macrocycle (L1) obtained by dipodal (2 + 2) condensation of the polyamine 3-(naphthalen-2-ylmethyl)pentane-1,5-diamine with 1H-pyrazole-3,5-dicarbaldehyde are reported. pH-metric studies show that L1 bears five measurable protonation steps in the 2.0-11.0 pH range. Fluorescence emission studies indicate that the removal of the first proton from the H(5)L1(5+) species leads to a significant decrease in the emission due to a photoinduced electron transfer process. Addition of Zn(2+) promotes a boat-like conformation that approaches both fluorophores and facilitates the formation of an excimer which reaches its highest emission for a 1 …

Macrocyclic CompoundsMolecular ConformationProtonationPyrazoleNaphthalenesPhotochemistryExcimerPhotoinduced electron transferFluorescenceInorganic Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundOrganometallic CompoundsPolyaminesMoietyFluorescent DyesMolecular StructureChemistryHydrogen bondHydrogen BondingElectrochemical TechniquesHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationFluorescenceZincPyrazolesDensity functional theoryProtonsCopperDalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003)
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Aminopropyltransferases involved in polyamine biosynthesis localize preferentially in the nucleus of plant cells

2012

Plant aminopropyltransferases consist of a group of enzymes that transfer aminopropyl groups derived from decarboxylated S-adenosyl-methionine (dcAdoMet or dcSAM) to propylamine acceptors to produce polyamines, ubiquitous metabolites with positive charge at physiological pH. Spermidine synthase (SPDS) uses putrescine as amino acceptor to form spermidine, whereas spermine synthase (SPMS) and thermospermine synthase (TSPMS) use spermidine as acceptor to synthesize the isomers spermine and thermospermine respectively. In previous work it was shown that both SPDS1 and SPDS2 can physically interact with SPMS although no data concerning the subcellular localization was reported. Here we study the…

Macromolecular AssembliesProteomicsS-AdenosylmethioninePlant anatomyImmunohistoquímicaArabidopsislcsh:MedicineSecondary MetabolismSpermineExpressionPlant ScienceSpermidine synthaseBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundBimolecular fluorescence complementationCytosolMolecular Cell BiologyPolyaminesPlant Genomicslcsh:SciencePlant Growth and DevelopmentMultidisciplinarybiologyPlant BiochemistryArabidopsis-ThalianaGenomicsImmunohistochemistryMetabolismeFunctional GenomicsBiochemistrySpermine synthasePlant proteinPlant PhysiologyMechanismResearch ArticleHistologyAcyltransferasePlant Cell BiologyActive Transport Cell NucleusSpermidine SynthaseBimolecular fluorescence complementationProtein InteractionsBiologyCell NucleusCrystal-Structurelcsh:RHistologiaBotanyProtein interactionsSubcellular localizationAnatomia vegetalExpressió gènicaMolecular WeightSpermidineMetabolismchemistryDecarboxylasebiology.proteinPutrescineBotànicalcsh:QGene expressionSpermidine synthase
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Mass spectrometric identification of the amino donor and acceptor sites in a transglutaminase protein substrate secreted from rat seminal vesicles.

1991

Four different transglutaminase-modified forms of a protein secreted by the rat seminal vesicles (SV-IV) were synthesized in vitro and characterized. FAB maps of both the native protein and its derivatives, produced by the purified guinea pig liver enzyme in the presence or absence of the polyamine spermidine, were obtained by mass spectrometric analysis after proteolytic digestions. Two differently derivatized SV-IV molecular forms, both possessing only one glutamine residue out of two (Gln-86) cross-linked to endogenous lysine residues, were produced when spermidine was omitted from the reaction mixture: (i) an insoluble homopolymer in which Lys-2, -4, -59, -78, -79, and -80 were involved…

MaleTissue transglutaminaseSeminal Plasma ProteinsLysineGuinea PigsMolecular Sequence DataBiochemistryMass SpectrometrySubstrate SpecificityResidue (chemistry)chemistry.chemical_compoundAnimalsAmino Acid Sequencechemistry.chemical_classificationIsopeptide bondTransglutaminasesbiologyHydrolysisSeminal Plasma ProteinsProstatic Secretory ProteinsProteinsSeminal VesiclesRats Inbred StrainsRatsSpermidineSecretory proteinchemistryBiochemistryLiverbiology.proteinPolyamineChromatography LiquidBiochemistry
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Dietary Arginine Slightly and Variably Affects Tissue Polyamine Levels in Male Swiss Albino Mice

2002

Many key metabolic and physiologic functions involve arginine and arginine-derived metabolites. Requirements for arginine, a "conditionally essential" amino acid for most mammalian species, are met in variable proportions by dietary intake and endogenous synthesis, the latter being sufficient to fulfill arginine needs in adult humans and mice under nonpathologic conditions. However, dietary arginine restriction causes orotic aciduria and abnormal function of the urea cycle. Furthermore, the importance of dietary arginine in the maintenance of homeostasis of arginine-derived metabolites in the body has not yet been analyzed in detail. We therefore examined whether the deprivation or suppleme…

Malechemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyNutrition and DieteticsArginineBiogenic PolyaminesMedicine (miscellaneous)SpermineBiologyArgininemedicine.diseaseDietAmino acidSpermidineMicechemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologychemistryUrea cycleInternal medicinemedicinePutrescineAnimalsPolyamineOrotic aciduriaThe Journal of Nutrition
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