Search results for "glutamine"

showing 10 items of 122 documents

Application of a MTT Assay for Screening Nutritional Factors in Growth Media of Primary Sponge Cell Culture

2004

Marine sponges (Porifera) are producers of the largest variety of bioactive compounds among benthic marine organisms. In vitro culture of marine sponge cells has been proposed for the sustainable production of these pharmacologically interesting compounds from marine sponges but with limited success. The development of a suitable growth medium is an essential prerequisite for sponge cells grown in vitro. The MTT (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide) assay was adapted to screen for potential nutritional factors in formulating a growth medium for primary cell culture of Suberites domuncula. In 96-well plates, the effects of nutritional factors including glutamine, pyr…

Cell SurvivalGlutamineIronCell Culture TechniquesCell CountMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundPyruvic AcidAnimalsNutritional Physiological PhenomenaMTT assayViability assayFood scienceGrowth mediumbiologyCell growthSilicatesbiology.organism_classificationCulture MediaPoriferaSuberites domunculaGlutamineSpongechemistryCell cultureBiotechnologyBiotechnology Progress
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Short hydrogen bonds enhance nonaromatic protein-related fluorescence

2021

Significance Intrinsic fluorescence of nonaromatic amino acids is a puzzling phenomenon with an enormous potential in biophotonic applications. The physical origins of this effect, however, remain elusive. Herein, we demonstrate how specific hydrogen bond networks can modulate fluorescence. We highlight the key role played by short hydrogen bonds, present in the protein structure, on the ensuing fluorescence. We provide detailed experimental and molecular evidence to explain these unusual nonaromatic optical properties. Our findings should benefit the design of novel optically active biomaterials for applications in biosensing and imaging.

Chemical transformationOptics and PhotonicsGlutamineIntrinsic fluorescenceMolecular Dynamics SimulationPhotochemistryFluorescenceAb initio molecular dynamicsAmmoniaHumansSingle amino acidshort hydrogen bondDensity Functional TheoryMultidisciplinaryHydrogen bondChemistryintrinsic fluorescenceultraviolet fluorescenceHydrogen BondingConical intersectionFluorescenceBiophysics and Computational BiologyExcited statePhysical Sciences408PeptidesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Core Histones Are Glutaminyl Substrates for Tissue Transglutaminase

1996

Chicken erythrocyte core histones are glutaminyl substrates in the transglutaminase (TGase) reaction with monodansylcadaverine (DNC) as donor amine. The modification is very fast when compared with that of many native substrates of TGase. Out of the 18 glutamines of the four histones, nine (namely glutamine 95 of H2B; glutamines 5, 19, and 125 of H3; glutamines 27 and 93 of H4; and glutamines 24, 104, and 112 of H2A) are the amine acceptors in free histones. The use of Gln112 of H2A requires a temperature-dependent partial unfolding of the histone, showing that structural determinants are decisive for the glutamine specificity. The structures of H2A and H2B do not appreciably change upon mo…

Circular dichroismErythrocytesTissue transglutaminaseGlutamineGuinea PigsMolecular Sequence DataIn Vitro TechniquesBiochemistrySubstrate SpecificityHistoneschemistry.chemical_compoundCadaverineAnimalsNucleosomeAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyPeptide sequenceTransglutaminasesMolecular StructurebiologyMethylamineCell BiologyNucleosomesChromatinGlutamineKineticsHistonechemistryBiochemistrybiology.proteinJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Structural characterisation of the natural membrane-bound state of melittin: a fluorescence study of a dansylated analogue

1997

Abstract The binding of a dansylated analogue of melittin (DNC–melittin) to natural membranes is described. The cytolytic peptide from honey bee venom melittin was enzymatically labelled in its glutamine-25 with the fluorescent probe monodansylcadaverine using guinea pig liver transglutaminase. The labelled peptide was characterised functionally in cytolytic assays, and spectroscopically by circular dichroism and fluorescence. The behaviour of DNC–melittin was, in all respects, indistinguishable from that of the naturally occurring peptide. We used resonance energy transfer to measure the state of aggregation of melittin on the membrane plane in synthetic and natural lipid bilayers. When bo…

Circular dichroismProtein ConformationGlutamineGuinea PigsLipid BilayersBiophysicsPeptideHemolysiscomplex mixturesBiochemistryMelittinchemistry.chemical_compoundCadaverinePhosphatidylcholineAnimalsHumansLipid bilayerFluorescent Dyeschemistry.chemical_classificationBinding SitesTransglutaminasesCircular DichroismDansyl labelingtechnology industry and agricultureMembrane structureMelittinFluorescence energy transferCell BiologyMelittenFluorescenceSpectrometry FluorescenceMembraneEnergy TransferLiverBiochemistrychemistryBiophysicslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Natural membraneLipid-protein interactionProtein BindingBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
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Effects of HIV, antiretroviral therapy and prebiotics on the active fraction of the gut microbiota

2018

In a recent blinded randomized study, we found that in HIV-infected individuals a short supplementation with prebiotics (scGOS/lcFOS/glutamine) ameliorates dysbiosis of total gut bacteria, particularly among viremic untreated patients. Our study goal was to determine the fraction of the microbiota that becomes active during the intervention and that could provide additional functional information.A total of six healthy individuals, and 16 HIV-infected patients comprising viremic untreated patients (n = 5) and antiretroviral therapy-treated patients that are further divided into immunological responders (n = 7) and immunological nonresponders (n = 4) completed the 6-week course of prebiotic …

DNA Bacterial0301 basic medicine030106 microbiologyImmunologyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)HIV InfectionsGut floramedicine.disease_causeDNA Ribosomallaw.inventionPlacebos03 medical and health sciencesPharmacotherapyImmune systemRandomized controlled triallawRNA Ribosomal 16SmedicineCluster AnalysisHumansImmunology and AllergyPhylogenyBacteriabiologybusiness.industrySequence Analysis DNAMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationAntiretroviral therapyGastrointestinal MicrobiomeGlutaminePrebiotics030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesAnti-Retroviral AgentsImmunologybusinessDysbiosisFollow-Up StudiesAIDS
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The combined effects of CO2, ozone and drought on rubisco and nitrogen metabolism of young oak trees (Quercus petraea) A phytotron study

1998

Abstract In this phytotron experiment we investigated the influence of increased CO 2 , O 3 and drought on the content of soluble proteins and some enzymes of carbon and nitrogen metabolism. We found that the amounts of soluble proteins and the large subunit of the rubisco per fresh weight in young oak leaves declined under conditions of increasing levels of CO 2 and after temporary water stress. The activities of nitrite reductase and glutamine synthetase were reduced when O 3 and CO 2 levels were raised.

Environmental EngineeringbiologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisRuBisCOPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryMetabolismbiology.organism_classificationNitrite reductasePollutionchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPhytotronGlutamine synthetaseCarbon dioxideBotanybiology.proteinEnvironmental ChemistryQuercus petraeaNitrogen cycleChemosphere
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Determination of N-acetyl-l-glutamine in urine by HPLC

1986

The determination of N-acetyl-l-glutamine (AC-GLN) in urine of rats after derivatization with xanthydrol by HPLC is described. The urine samples were collected from two groups of rats, one group fed normal nutrition, the other treated with AC-GLN. About 5 mM/l AC-GLN was detected in urine of untreated animals, whereas the excretion of the other group was in the range of 50 mM/l corresponding to about 50 wt.-% of the given AC-GLN.

Excretionchemistry.chemical_compoundChromatographyChemistryClinical BiochemistryN-acetyl-L-glutamineGeneral Materials ScienceGeneral MedicineUrineXanthydrolDerivatizationHigh-performance liquid chromatographyAnalytical ChemistryFresenius' Zeitschrift für analytische Chemie
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Risk Assessment of "Other Substances" – L-Glutamine and L-glutamic Acid

2020

The Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety (Vitenskapskomiteen for mattrygghet, VKM) has, at the request of the Norwegian Food Safety Authority (Mattilsynet; NFSA), assessed the risk of "other substances" in food supplements and energy drinks sold in Norway. VKM has assessed the risk of doses given by the NFSA. These risk assessments will provide the NFSA with the scientific basis for regulating the addition of “other substances” to food supplements and other foods.
 "Other substances" are described in the food supplement directive 2002/46/EC as substances other than vitamins or minerals that have a nutritional or physiological effect. They are added mainly to food supplements,…

Food supplementAdverse health effectbusiness.industryL-glutamineMedicineGlutamic acidPharmacologyRisk assessmentbusinessEuropean Journal of Nutrition & Food Safety
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Molecular Characterization of the Multigene Family Encoding the Different Glutamine Synthetase Isoforms in the Amphidiploid CROP Brassica Napus

1998

The fusion of the A genome of Brassica campestris (AA/n=10) and the C genome type of Brassica oleracea (CC/n=9) has led to the origin of the amphidiploid crucifer Brassica napus (AACC/n=19) [1], one of the most important oil crop in modern farming. The production of high quality industrial lubricants, edible oils and fatty acids or the supply of high protein press-residues for animal mast are only some utilizations of oilseed rape. Furthermore, rape oil can also be used for the manufacture of alternative fuels like ‘Bio-Dieser’.

Gene isoformCropCruciferbiologyBiochemistryHigh proteinGlutamine synthetaseBotanyBrassicaBrassica oleraceabiology.organism_classificationGenome
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The Effect of Phosphinothricin (Glufosinate) on Photosynthesis II. The Causes of Inhibition of Photosynthesis

1987

It was shown in the previous study that phosphinothricin (glufosinate) causes an accumulation of ammonia and inhibition of photosynthesis. The extent to which there is a connection between these two processes is now investigated in the present study. First of all. the role of NH3 per se in the impairment of photosynthesis was to be clarified. For this purpose, the inhibition of photosyn­thesis was investigated in relation to exogenously applied ammonia in chloroplasts, protoplasts and entire leaves. The comparison with the experimental results in leaves in which the ammonia was formed endogenously (by action of phosphinothricin) shows that the ammonia toxicity at least cannot be solely resp…

GlutamineChloroplastchemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistrychemistryGlufosinateGlutamine synthetaseBotanyPhotorespirationAmmoniumMetabolismPhotosynthesisGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyZeitschrift für Naturforschung C
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