Search results for "response"

showing 10 items of 4136 documents

Single-pump heart-cutting two-dimensional liquid chromatography applied to the determination of fatty alcohol ethoxylates.

2014

Abstract A setup for heart-cutting bi-dimensional liquid chromatography (LC–LC), constructed with a chromatograph provided with a single pump, an auxiliary 6-port 2-position valve (V 6/2 ) and a column selector valve (V CS ), is described. The possible ways of connecting the two valves for LC–LC, namely with V 6/2 first followed by V CS and vice versa, are compared. The possibility of using the setups for preconcentration followed by the backwards transfer of the preconcentrated solutes to the detector or to a second column is also shown. The V 6/2 -first configuration for LC–LC was applied to the characterization of industrial fatty alcohol ethoxylates (FAEs) using UV–vis detection. For th…

chemistry.chemical_classificationResponse factorChromatographySeries (mathematics)ElutionOrganic ChemistryAnalytical chemistryFatty alcoholWaterGeneral MedicineBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundHydrocarbonchemistryDimension (vector space)Phase (matter)Gradient elutionFatty AlcoholsChromatography LiquidJournal of chromatography. A
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Conditioned taste aversion in rats for a threonine-deficient diet

2000

Rats avoid a diet that is deficient in one or more essential amino acids (EAAs). This phenomenon is thought to involve the development of a "learned aversion" for the sensory properties or spatial placement associated with the deficient diet. The dietary self-selection technique has been widely used to show this avoidance of the deficient diet. Because avoidance does not necessarily imply taste aversion, we used the Taste Reactivity Test initially created by Grill and Norgren (1978) to analyze the affective reactivity pattern of rats that ingested a threonine-deficient diet. The results showed that there was an increase in the aversive responses when ingesting the threonine-deficient (Thr-D…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTastemedicine.medical_specialtyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySensory systemBehavioral NeuroscienceEndocrinologySatiety ResponsechemistryInternal medicinemedicineTaste aversionConditioningPalatabilityFood scienceThreoninePsychologyEssential amino acidPhysiology & Behavior
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Copper Proteins with Dinuclear Active SitesBased in part on the article Copper Proteins with Dinuclear Active Sites by Konrad Lerch which appeared in…

2006

Copper proteins with dinuclear active sites comprise proteins with different structures and functions. The phenoloxidase, tyrosinase, and catecholoxidase are responsible for browning by starting the synthesis of melanin. These enzymes are involved in the primary immune response in invertebrates, plants, fungi as well as in the sclerotization of arthropods. The respiratory proteins hemocyanins are responsible for oxygen transport in some arthropods and molluscs. However, they can be converted to enzymes exhibiting phenoloxidase activity. Based on X-ray structures of hemocyanins and a catecholoxidase, large parts of folding motifs are very similar although the sequence identities are far belo…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyCopper proteinChemistryStereochemistryTyrosinasemedicine.medical_treatmentOxygen transportHemocyaninbiology.organism_classificationMelaninEnzymeBiochemistryPrimary immune responseBotanymedicineArthropod
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Effect of protein/essential amino acids and resistance training on skeletal muscle hypertrophy: A case for whey protein

2010

Abstract Regardless of age or gender, resistance training or provision of adequate amounts of dietary protein (PRO) or essential amino acids (EAA) can increase muscle protein synthesis (MPS) in healthy adults. Combined PRO or EAA ingestion proximal to resistance training, however, can augment the post-exercise MPS response and has been shown to elicit a greater anabolic effect than exercise plus carbohydrate. Unfortunately, chronic/adaptive response data comparing the effects of different protein sources is limited. A growing body of evidence does, however, suggest that dairy PRO, and whey in particular may: 1) stimulate the greatest rise in MPS, 2) result in greater muscle cross-sectional …

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyWhey proteinNutrition and Dieteticsbusiness.industryEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismResistance trainingMedicine (miscellaneous)Skeletal musclelcsh:TX341-641ReviewClinical nutritionAdaptive responseCarbohydrateAmino acidlcsh:Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseasesEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryInternal medicinemedicineIngestionbusinesslcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supplylcsh:RC620-627Nutrition & Metabolism
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Identification of Gip as a novel phage-encoded gyrase inhibitor protein featuring a broad activity profile

2021

AbstractBacteriophages represent a powerful source for the identification of novel antimicrobial proteins. In this study, a screening of small cytoplasmic proteins encoded by the CGP3 prophage of Corynebacterium glutamicum, resulted in the identification of the novel gyrase-inhibiting protein Cg1978 (Gip), which shows a direct interaction with the gyrase subunit A (GyrA). In vitro supercoiling assays further suggest a stabilization of the cleavage complex by Gip. Overproduction of Gip in C. glutamicum resulted in a severe growth defect as well as an induction of the SOS response. The cells adapted to gip overexpression by increasing expression levels of gyrAB and by reducing topA expression…

chemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistrychemistryProtein subunitmedicineDNA supercoilSOS responsemedicine.disease_causeDNA gyraseEscherichia coliProphageDNACorynebacterium glutamicum
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Evidence of an interplay between ER stress/UPR and mitochondria in human hepatic cells treated with the antiretroviral drug Efavirenz

2013

chemistry.chemical_compoundEfavirenzchemistrybusiness.industryPhysiology (medical)Hepatic stellate cellUnfolded protein responseMedicineAntiretroviral drugPharmacologyMitochondrionbusinessBiochemistryFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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Is ER stress induced in human hepatoma cells treated with the antiretroviral drug Efavirenz mitochondria-related?

2012

chemistry.chemical_compoundEfavirenzchemistrybusiness.industryPhysiology (medical)Unfolded protein responseMedicineAntiretroviral drugMitochondrionPharmacologybusinessBiochemistryFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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Social body odors

2013

Clef UT: 000324010400049; National audience

chemosensory cuesmother breastresponse[ SCCO.PSYC ] Cognitive science/Psychologymothers breast[SDV.AEN] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutritionpheromonefemalechemosensory cueovulation[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology[SCCO.PSYC] Cognitive science/Psychologywomanresponseswomenhumanhumanspheromonespreference[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionpreferencesComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSattraction
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Phenazine antibiotics produced by fluorescent pseudomonads contribute to natural soil suppressiveness to Fusarium wilt

2009

Natural disease-suppressive soils provide an untapped resource for the discovery of novel beneficial microorganisms and traits. For most suppressive soils, however, the consortia of microorganisms and mechanisms involved in pathogen control are unknown. To date, soil suppressiveness to Fusarium wilt disease has been ascribed to carbon and iron competition between pathogenic Fusarium oxysporum and resident non-pathogenic F. oxysporum and fluorescent pseudomonads. In this study, the role of bacterial antibiosis in Fusarium wilt suppressiveness was assessed by comparing the densities, diversity and activity of fluorescent Pseudomonas species producing 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol (DAPG) (phlD+) …

chlororaphis pcl1391Antifungal AgentsDISEASE SUPRESSIVE SOILMicroorganismColony Count Microbialdose-response relationshipsFLUORESCENT PSEUDOMONADSblack root-rotPlant Rootsgraminis var triticiFusariumSolanum lycopersicumFlaxCluster AnalysisFUSARIUM WILTPathogenPhylogenySoil Microbiologymedia_commonEcologyEPS-2genotypic diversityfood and beveragesBiodiversitygenetic diversityFusarium wilt[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyPHENAZINE ANTIBIOTICSPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthDNA BacterialGenotypemedia_common.quotation_subject2PhloroglucinolBiologyMicrobiologyCompetition (biology)MicrobiologyPseudomonasAntibiosisBotanyFusarium oxysporumEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbiological-controlAntibiosisbiology.organism_classificationLaboratorium voor PhytopathologieLaboratory of Phytopathology24-diacetylphloroglucinol-producing pseudomonasoxysporum fo47PhenazinesBeneficial organismAntagonism4-diacetylphloroglucinol-producing pseudomonasnonpathogenic fusarium
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SART and Individual Trial Mistake Thresholds: Predictive Model for Mobility Decline

2021

The Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) has been used to measure neurocognitive functions in older adults. However, simplified average features of this complex dataset may result in loss of primary information and fail to express associations between test performance and clinically meaningful outcomes. Here, we describe a new method to visualise individual trial (raw) information obtained from the SART test, vis-à-vis age, and groups based on mobility status in a large population-based study of ageing in Ireland. A thresholding method, based on the individual trial number of mistakes, was employed to better visualise poorer SART performances, and was statistically validated with bin…

cognitionAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyHealth (social science)timed up-and-goLogistic regressionArticlerepeated measuresTrial numberPhysical medicine and rehabilitationCovariatefallsthresholdMedicineCognitive declineSARTsustained attention to response taskbusiness.industrymobility declineRC952-954.6Repeated measures designCognitionTest (assessment)multimodal visualizationGeriatricsGeriatrics and GerontologybusinessGerontologyNeurocognitiveGeriatrics
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