Search results for "growth"

showing 10 items of 5134 documents

Effect of Xyloglucan Oligosaccharides on Growth, Viscoelastic Properties, and Long-Term Extension of Pea Shoots

1997

Abstract The growth-promoting effect of xyloglucan-derived oligosaccharides was investigated using a bioassay with entire pea (Pisum sativum L., var Alaska) shoots. After a 24-h incubation period at 25[deg]C, xyloglucan oligosaccharide (XGO) solutions with concentrations of 10–6 M notably increased the growth rate of pea shoots, whereas the same oligosaccharides at 10–7 M were less effective. To investigate the possible correlation between growth rate changes in the XGO-treated shoots and changes in the wall mechanical properties of their growing regions (third internodes), we used a short-term creep assay. The promotion of elongation by XGOs was reflected in an enhancement of the viscoelas…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyPhysiologyfood and beveragesPlant ScienceOligosaccharidebiology.organism_classificationPisumXyloglucanCell wallchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryBiochemistryShootGeneticsGrowth rateElongationResearch ArticlePlant stemPlant Physiology
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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…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyfood and beveragesSettore AGR/04 - Orticoltura E FloricolturaPlant Scienceshoot multiplication in vitro rooting growth regulators tissue culture polygalabiology.organism_classificationPolygala myrtifoliaPolygalachemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMicropropagationAuxinBotanyShootKinetinZeatinBiotechnologyExplant cultureIn Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant
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Kultivierung humaner Zellen auf polymerbeschichteten Bioimplantaten?ein neues Konzept zur Verbesserung der Implantateigenschaften

2004

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Calcific degeneration with the resulting need for operative replacement remains the major drawback of bioprostheses. Previous studies have shown that cellular surface seeding decreases calcium uptake in vitro and in vivo, but complete coverage remains difficult to achieve. A new approach is presented, masking glutaraldehyde residues with a covalently bound polymer layer thus facilitating cell seeding. The aim of this study was to evaluate different polymers for their ability to promote surface cell adhesion and formation of complete monolayers. MATERIAL AND METHODS Ten ultrathin polymers, covalently bound to glass and exhibiting different physicochemical characteristi…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbusiness.industryCell growthScanning electron microscopeBiomaterialPolymerchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCovalent bondMonolayerBiophysicsMedicineGlutaraldehydeCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineCell adhesionbusinessHerz
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Cardenolide variation within and among natural populations of Digitalis obscura

1999

Summary Cardenolide content in 49 wild-growing Digitalis obscura plants from six natural populations on the Iberian Peninsula was determined by HPLC. Series A and B glycosides were the predominant cardenolides in all samples, but absolute values varied among and within populations. Hierarchic analysis of variance showed that the proportion of variation attributable to individuals was significantly higher than that attributable to population differences. Furthermore, analyses from greenhouse-grown plants, generated from seeds collected from selected parental genotypes, attributed nearly all the variability in cardenolide content to single plants. Some individual plants showed a leaf content …

chemistry.chemical_classificationeducation.field_of_studyPhysiologyScrophulariaceaePopulationDigitalis obscurafood and beveragesGlycosidePlant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundNatural population growthchemistryBotanyCardenolideGenetic selectioneducationAgronomy and Crop Science
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Diabetic Retinopathy and Oxidative Stress

2014

Abstract Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is the leading cause of acquired blindness in working age adults worldwide. Biochemical changes in DR contribute to both the microscopic structural and functional changes in the retina. All these alterations result in macroscopic retinal damage that can be assessed by funduscopy. The overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the mitochondria is considered a causal link between elevated glucose and biochemical abnormalities in the pathophysiology of DR. Moreover, oxidatively induced pathways also seem to provide positive feedback to ROS production, resulting in a vicious cycle. ROS can directly damage lipids, proteins and DNA, leading to cell death…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesProgrammed cell deathDiabetic retinopathyMitochondrionBiologymedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeProinflammatory cytokineVascular endothelial growth factorchemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologychemistryInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusImmunologymedicineOxidative stress
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From Food Map to FODMAP in Irritable Bowel Sindrome.

2016

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is one of the most common gastrointestinal diseases in the general population, with a prevalence ranging from 12 % to 30 %, mainly affecting younger patients (i.e., <50 years of age) and women [1]. As in other chronic functional gastrointestinal disorders, abdominal discomfort or pain, abnormal bowel habits, and often bloating and abdominal distension are the main clinical features. Their diagnosis is based on symptom patterns (i.e., the Rome III criteria), which also allow categorization in diarrhea-predominant (D-IBS), constipation-predominant (C-IBS), mixed diarrhea and constipation (M-IBS), and unclassified (U-IBS) IBS [2]. Symptom severity ranges from tol…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyeducation.field_of_studyConstipationSettore MED/09 - Medicina Internabusiness.industryPopulationIrritable Bowel Sindrome.FODMAPAbdominal distensionmedicine.diseaseFODMAP; Irritable Bowel Sindrome.DiarrheaBloatingchemistryInternal medicineSmall intestinal bacterial overgrowthmedicinemedicine.symptomeducationbusinessFODMAPIrritable bowel syndrome
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Polymerization of methyl and phenyl oxazoline initiated with alkyl chloroformates

2010

It has been shown that alkyl chloroformates are capable of initiating the polymerization of oxazolines. Esters itself initiate rather slowly and the polymerization proceeds via covalent growing species. Exchange of counter ions with triflate or iodide anions leads to faster initiation and higher reaction rates. The polymerization is of living character.

chemistry.chemical_classificationtechnology industry and agricultureChain transfermacromolecular substancesGeneral ChemistryOxazolinePhotochemistryLiving free-radical polymerizationchemistry.chemical_compoundChain-growth polymerizationchemistryPolymerizationPolymer chemistryReversible addition−fragmentation chain-transfer polymerizationIonic polymerizationAlkylBulletin des Sociétés Chimiques Belges
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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…

chemistry.chemical_compoundAntioxidantSH-SY5YLinaloolChemistryCell growthmedicine.medical_treatmentmedicineCitrus PectinPharmacologyNeuroprotectionNaringinIn vitro
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The Number of Active Sites for the Polymerization of Ethylene, Propylene and Butene-1 by Ziegler-Natta Catalyst

1975

chemistry.chemical_compoundChain-growth polymerizationPolymerizationChemistryPolymer chemistryEthylene propylene rubberZiegler–Natta catalystButene
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Virazole (Ribavirin) a Cytostatic Agent

1978

Virazole (1-β-D-ribofuranosyl-1,2,4-triazole-3carboxamide,ribavirin) is a synthetic triazol nucleoside with a broad spectrum of antiviral activity. But virazole affects the metabolism not only of virus infected cells. Virazole strongly inhibits the cell proliferation of mouse lymphoma cells (L 5178y), which were not infected with DNA- or RNA-viruses. Starting with 3 × 103 cells/ml and an incubation period of 72 hr, the drug reduces the cell proliferation to 50% (= ED50 concentration) in a concentration of 4,7 μM.

chemistry.chemical_compoundChemistryCell growthRibavirinMetabolismNucleosideMolecular biologySalicylic acidVirusDNAIncubation period
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