Search results for "Sugar"
showing 4 items of 334 documents
Cosolutes affect structure and dynamics of myoglobin-trehalose amorphous systems: a FTIR and MD study
2013
Expression and characterization of the human sweet taste receptor expressed in a mammalian inducible cell line
2018
International audience; Sweet taste perception is mediated by a heterodimeric receptor composed of the two distinct protein subunits, TAS1R2 and TAS1R3. TAS1R2 and TAS1R3 subunits are members of the small family of class C GPCRs. Class C GPCRs share a large N-terminal domain (NTD) linked to the heptahelical transmembrane domain by a cysteine-rich region. TAS1R2/TAS1R3 is the primary receptor for a diverse range of sweet compounds including natural sugars, sweet amino acids, artificial sweeteners and plant sweet-tasting proteins. In order to understand the molecular mechanisms that govern receptor – ligand interactions and the relative contribution of the two subunits to the detection of swe…
Expression hétérologue, repliement in vitro et caractérisation biophysique du domaine N-terminal de la sous-unité T1R3 du récepteur humain au goût su…
2010
The sweet taste receptor is a heterodimer composed of two subunits called T1R2 and T1R3. Each subunit belongs to the class C of G protein-coupled receptors and is constituted by a large extracellular N-terminal domain (NTD) linked to the transmembrane domain by a cysteine-rich region. It has been shown that T1R2 and T1R3 NTDs are both able to bind natural sugars and sucralose with distinct affinities and undergo ligand-dependent conformational change (Nie et al., Curr Biol, 2005). However, the binding properties of T1R3 NTD and the relative contribution of the two subunits to the heterodimeric receptor function remained largely unknown. To characterize the binding properties of each subunit…
Advances in Wine Fermentation
2021
Fermentation is a well-known natural process that has been used by humanity for thousands of years, with the fundamental purpose of making alcoholic beverages such as wine, and also other non-alcoholic products. From a strictly biochemical point of view, fermentation is a process of central metabolism in which an organism converts a carbohydrate, such as starch or sugar, into an alcohol or an acid. The fermentation process turns grape juice (must) into wine. This is a complex chemical reaction whereby the yeast interacts with the sugars (glucose and fructose) in the must to create ethanol and carbon dioxide. Fermentation processes to produce wines are traditionally carried out with Saccharo…