Search results for "hate"
showing 10 items of 2099 documents
Significance of pantothenate for glucose fermentation by Oenococcus oeni and for suppression of the erythritol and acetate production.
2001
The heterofermentative lactic acid bacterium Oenococcus oeni requires pantothenic acid for growth. In the presence of sufficient pantothenic acid, glucose was converted by heterolactic fermentation stoichiometrically to lactate, ethanol and CO2. Under pantothenic acid limitation, substantial amounts of erythritol, acetate and glycerol were produced by growing and resting bacteria. Production of erythritol and glycerol was required to compensate for the decreasing ethanol production and to enable the synthesis of acetate. In ribose fermentation, there were no shifts in the fermentation pattern in response to pantothenate supply. In the presence of pantothenate, growing O. oeni contained at l…
Anti-HIV-1 activity of inorganic polyphosphates.
1997
Human blood plasma, serum, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and erythrocytes contain significant amounts of inorganic polyphosphates (ranging from 53 to 116 microM, in terms of phosphate residues). Here we demonstrate that at higher concentrations linear polyphosphates display cytoprotective and antiviral activity. Sodium tetrapolyphosphate and the longer polymers, with average chain lengths of 15, 34, and 91 phosphate residues, significantly inhibited human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of cells in vitro at concentrations > or = 33.3 microg/ml (> or = 283-324 microM phosphate residues), whereas sodium tripolyphosphate was ineffective. In the tested concentration range,…
Importance of Factors H and I for the Adherence of C3b-Coated Erythrocytes to Cells
1983
Abstract The role of cell membrane-associated human factor H for the binding of cell-bound Cab to complement receptor-carrying (CR + ) cells was investigated. Pretreatment of CR + cells with antibodies to factor H inhibited the adherence of Cab-coated red cells to human tonsil lymphocytes (TL) and peripheral blood monocytes (Mo). The Cab receptor reactivity of human polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMN) was not influenced and the one of Raji lymphoblastoid cells only slightly influenced; iC3b and Cad receptor reactivity was in no case affected. When diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP) in a concentration of 0.1 mM was present during pretreatment of the CR + cells with anti H, the antibodies gained…
Transmembrane beta-barrel of staphylococcal alpha-toxin forms in sensitive but not in resistant cells.
1997
Staphylococcal α-toxin is a 293-residue, single-chain polypeptide that spontaneously assembles into a heptameric pore in target cell membranes. To identify the pore-forming domain, substitution mutants have been produced in which single cysteine residues were introduced throughout the toxin molecule. By attaching the environmentally sensitive dye acrylodan to the sulfhydryl groups, the environment of individual amino acid side chains could be probed. In liposomes, a single 23-amino acid sequence (residues 118–140) was found to move from a polar to a nonpolar environment, indicating that this sequence forms the walls of the pore. However, periodicity in side chain environmental polarity coul…
Phosphotransferase properties of human erythrocyte phosphoglycolate phosphatase.
1982
Abstract 1. 1. Human erythrocyte phosphoglycolate phosphatase (PGP) (EC 3.1.3.18) shows transferase properties. Using p -nitrophenylphosphate ( p -NPP) as substrate, methanol, at a concentration of 4.9 M. was the most efficient phosphate acceptor tested (60% phosphate transfer). 2. 2. The branched alcohols i -propanol and i -butanol accept the phosphate better than the unbranched compounds. The acceptor potency is methanol > ethanol > i -propanol > n -propanol > i -butanol > n -butanol. 3. 3. The relative transferase activity could be demonstrated to be independent of substrate concentration, pH. and the inhibitory effect of NaF at 2 and 4 mM. 4. 4. POP shows no transferase activity towards…
Properties and Structural Studies of Multi-Wall Carbon Nanotubes-Phosphate Ester Hybrids
2013
Long chain phosphate esters bearing at least one or two aryl groups have been synthesized and used for the preparation of stable multi-walled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) hybrids. The non-covalent interaction ester/MWCNT has been investigated by several techniques (SEM, UV-vis, 31P-NMR, RAMAN). The used phosphate ester derivatives demonstrated the ability to produce an excellent dispersion of MWCNT in CHCl3. The obtained dispersions showed a great stability from one to at least three weeks in the range of concentration considered. Thermal analysis showed an increase in the decomposition temperature for the hybrids with respect to pristine MWCNT.
Formation of Calcium-Deficient Hydroxyapatite via Hydrolysis of Nano-Sized Pure Α-Tricalcium Phosphate
2015
Nano-sized pure α-tricalcium phosphate (α-TCP) fabricated by a novel synthesis approach shows great potential for a faster transformation into calcium-deficient hydroxyapatite (CDHA) than conventionally prepared α-TCP. In this work, amorphous tricalcium phosphate precursors were precipitated and treated with a solvent (water or ethanol), and dried (freeze-dried and oven-dried) before heating at 775 °C. Nanosized α-TCP powders were investigated for their phase composition and crystallinity, particle shape and size, reactivity and cellular biocompatibility. Reaction with water showed faster CDHA formation for freeze-dried powder, at 6 hours, compared to ethanol treated powders, whereas a high…
Tail and Head Group Interactions in Phospholipid Monolayers
1996
Abstract The order/disorder transition of the phospholipid 1,2-dihexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and its derivatives was studied by X-ray reflection and thermodynamic measurements. We find that increasing the length of an ethylene oxide spacer (zero to three EO groups) between the phosphate group and the hydrophobic chains (i) induces a slight shift of the main transition, (ii) reduces the influence of the head groups on the chain lattice, and (iii) increases the head group length and promotes its hydration. For DH(EO)3PC in the ordered phase we find that the small phosphate groups (which are the main source of contrast in X-ray reflectivity) are homogeneously distributed within the h…
Niobium phosphates as new highly selective catalysts for the oxidative dehydrogenation of ethane
2011
Several niobium phosphate phases have been prepared, fully characterized and tested as catalysts for the selective oxidation of ethane to ethylene. Three distinct niobium phosphate catalysts were prepared, and each was comprised predominantly of a different bulk phase, namely Nb(2)P(4)O(15), NbOPO(4) and Nb(1.91)P(2.82)O(12). All of the niobium phosphate catalysts showed high selectivity towards ethylene, but the best catalyst was Nb(1.91)P(2.82)O(12), which was produced from the reduction of niobium oxide phosphate (NbOPO(4)) by hydrogen. It was particularly selective for ethylene, giving ca. 95% selectivity at 5% conversion, decreasing to ca. 90% at 15% conversion, and only produced low l…
Structural characterization of Niobium Phosphate Catalysts used for the Oxidative Dehydrogenation of Ethane to Ethylene
2011
Extended abstract of a paper presented at Microscopy and Microanalysis 2011 in Nashville, Tennessee, USA, August 7–August 11, 2011.