Search results for "VITRO"
showing 10 items of 2786 documents
EnzymesIn Vitro as indicators for pesticides: An examination
1992
Pesticides—a serious problem especially for drinking water quality—frequently are potent inhibitors of enzymes in their target organisms. As the established chemical analyses of pesticides are time-consuming, complicated, and expensive, so-called screening methods are urgently needed. For this purpose the sensitivity of 13 different enzymes was tested in vitro by inhibiting their kinetic rates and/or substrate conversions by 16 pesticides (herbicides and fungicides). Because of the stabilization and resulting low sensitivity of enzymes commercially available—especially in test kits—it was necessary to vary the test conditions and to develop special methods for detecting enzymatic inhibition…
Rollimembrin, a novel acetogenin inhibitor of mammalian mitochondrial complex I
1997
Abstract Rollimembrin (3), is a new adjacent bis-tetrahydrofuranic acetogenin with a scarce relative configuration, threo/cis/threo/cis/erythro, isolated from Rollinia membranacea seeds. The mechanism of cytotoxic activity, determined by NADH-oxidase experiments, establish that rollimembrin (3) is the most potent inhibitor of mammalian mitochondrial complex I.
The amphipathic peptide mellitin as a tool to study the membrane-dependent activation of tissue transglutaminase
2001
The role of membrane phospholipids on the cross-linking activity of guinea pig liver (tissue) transglutaminase has been investigated using the amphipathic model peptide melittin as glutaminyl substrate and the primary amine monodansylcadaverine as extrinsic amine donor. A marked increase of transglutaminase catalytic activity was observedin vitro assays in the presence of neutral membrane phospholipids. In contrast, activation was abolished in the presence of membranes containing pure anionic lipids. Enzyme activation could be ascribed to a direct binding of the lipid to the protein as demonstrated in enzymatic assays using a non membrane-interacting peptide (Cbz-Gln-Gly). The data obtained…
Improved micropropagation in Polygala myrtifolia
2004
Stem segments from apical shoot tips of Polygala myrtifolia were used as primary explants to establish in vitro cultures. Axillary shoots produced on noncontaminated explants were excised and recultured in the same medium to increase the stock of shoot cultures. Equal molar concentrations of five cytokinins 2-isopentenyladenine (2iP), kinetin, zeatin, N6-benzyladenine (BA) and adenine were tested for ability to induce axillary shoot development from double node stem segments. The highest rate of axillary shoot proliferation was induced on Murashige and Skoog agar medium supplemented with 1.8 M BA. Seven indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) concentrations (2.8, 5.7, 8.6, 11.4, 14.3, 17.1 M) were t…
Glucose, Lactate, and Ketone Body Utilization by Human Mammary Carcinomas in Vivo
1985
Uncontrolled growth, one of the fundamental properties of malignant tumors, requires a great supply of energy. This energy can be derived from the use of a variety of substrates. Besides glucose oxidation and glucose breakdown to lactic acid, the turnover of endogeneous substrates such as amino acids, free fatty acids and ketone bodies is well documented in vitro. However, under in vivo conditions, only glucose utilization has been investigated in detail, using tumor isotransplants in rodents. For human tumors, only scarce data is available, derived mainly from clinical observations rather than from systematic studies.
Neuroprotective, antioxidant and antiproliferative activity of grapefruit IntegroPectin on SH-SY5Y cells
2021
AbstractTested in vitro on SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells, grapefruit IntegroPectin is a powerful neuroprotective, antioxidant and antiproliferative agent. The strong antioxidant properties of grapefruit IntegroPectin, and its ability to preserve mitochondrial membrane potential and morphology, severely impaired in neurodegenerative disorders, make this new biopolymer highly soluble in water an attractive therapeutic agent for oxidative stress-associated brain disorders. Similarly, the ability of this new citrus pectin rich in naringin, linalool, linalool oxide and limonene adsorbed at the outer surface to inhibit cell proliferation or even kill, at high doses, neoplastic cells, coupled to its…
ChemInform Abstract: An Efficient Method for the Preparation of Antitumoral α-Keto-imines Benzyldihydroisoquinolines by Selective Benzylic Oxidation …
2010
A series of potent antitumor α-keto-imine BDHIQ derivatives were synthesized and assayed in vitro against L1210 leukemia cell line. A new and easy method for the direct formation of α-keto-imine from imine BDHIQ's was performed with 10% C/Pd in acetonitrile.
Risk assessment of beauvericin, enniatins and fusaproliferin present in follow-up infant formula by in vitro evaluation of the duodenal and colonic b…
2014
Abstract In this study, 72 samples of follow-up infant formula of Spanish origin were analyzed for the presence of the mycotoxins beauvericin (BEA), enniatins (ENs) (A, A1, B, B1), and fusaproliferin (FUS). The samples analyzed were extracted three times with ethyl acetate and then the mycotoxins were identified and quantified using a liquid chromatography (LC) coupled to a diode array detector (DAD). The positive samples analyzed in this study were digested through a simulated gastrointestinal digestion model, which permit to simulate the physiological condition of the human gastrointestinal tract (duodenal and colonic compartments) in order to assess the bioaccessibility of the bioactive …
Effect of antioxidants on sulfur mustard-induced toxicity in an in vitro-model of the human blood–air barrier
2007
Analysis of Invariant Chain Processing in 3 Day Cultured Rat Langerhans Cells
1995
MHC class II molecules, critical peptide binding elements involved in the presentation of exogenous antigen to T helper cells, are expressed constitutively by Langerhans cells (LC) within their epidermal microenvironment. Several studies in mouse and man demonstrated, that short term in vitro culture of LC entails remarkable functional and penotypic alterations, including a profound increase of class II elements exposed at the LC’s surface1. Biosynthetic analysis revealed a downregulation of class II synthesis during the culture period2,3. In recent work on rat LC we described the uncoupling of the coordinately regulated biosynthesis of class II and invariant chain proteins in the course of…