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Query: DrugBank:APRD00080 (
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21,685
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of several dehydration treatments on the synaptonemal complex (SC), histone solubility in 2.0 M NaCl, and histone-DNA interaction in unfixed rat spermatocytes were evaluated.
Freeze
substitution with ethanol or dehydration with polyethylene glygol resulted in loss of the SC, preservation of histone solubility and DNA-histone salt linkages. Dehydration with ethylene gylcol or hexylene glycol resulted in preservation of SC with a clear delineation of attachment of the chromatin fibrils to the lateral elements, but a loss of histone solubility and histone-DNA linkages. Dehydration to a fifty percent concentration with glycerol with completion of dehydration with ethylene glycol had the same effect but also resulted in an even distribution of chromatin fibrils. Dehydration with glycerol alone resulted in clumping of chromatin and loss of SC structure, histone solubility and histone-DNA linkages. Partial dehydration to a fifty percent concentration with these three solvents followed by freeze substitution with ethanol resulted in the loss of SC structure and histone solubility but the preservation of histone-DNA linkages. It is likely that these nonaqueous solvents affected the histone hydrophobic groups and thereby altered histone conformation and interactions. These alterations, depending on the treatment used, resulted in the loss or preservation of SC, histone solubility and histone-DNA interactions thereby indicating that the hydrophobic interactions of the histones are crucial for the preservation of these feature of meiotic chromosomes. These results also demonstrate that neither does the preservation of the histone-DNA salt linkages suffice for the preservation of the SC nor does their disruption necessarily result in its loss. The
lysine
-rich histones, particularly that one unique to meiotic cells, may through their interactions play a crucial role in SC structure.
...
PMID:Cytochemical and ultrastructural studies on the synaptonemal complex of rat spermatocytes. 32 69
Freeze
-fracture combined with quantitative electron microscopy of the intact human erythrocyte (RBC) and ghost revealed significant differences in their intramembranous particle coefficients. External (E) fracture-faces of unfixed ghost membranes were found to contain 40% fewer particles than those of intact unfixed RBC. The particle distribution of the intact RBC membrane depended on the use of glutaraldehyde fixation and glycerol cryoprotection. Whereas glutaraldehyde- and glycerol-treated cells disclosed 70% fewer E-face particles than did intact unfixed cells, poly-L-
lysine
-treated, intact, unfixed RBC showed no such differences. Treatment with a combination of poly-L-
lysine
and glutaraldehyde, however, increased the amount of E-face particles while reducing those of the protoplasmic (P) face. The poly-L-
lysine
effect varied with its concentration and was unaffected by previous application of neuraminidase. Nor did the lectin phytohemagglutinin induce particle rearrangement in intact cells. Our data demonstrate that the processes of glutaraldehyde fixation and glycerol cryoprotection modify the RBC membrane by decreasing the number of E-face particles present. In addition, the combination of poly-L-
lysine
and glutaraldehyde alters the affinity of some particles for one half of the membrane, suggesting that in freeze-fractured RBC, chemical bonds formed at the extracellular surface of the membrane can influence particle partitioning.
...
PMID:Intramembranous particle distribution in human erythrocytes: effects of lysis, glutaraldehyde, and poly-L-lysine. 41 58
The growth rates of young chicks were varied from 0 to 10% per day by manipulation of the adequacy of the amino acid and energy supply. The rates of protein synthesis in the white breast (pectoralis thoracica) muscle and the dark leg (gastrocnemius and peronaeus longus) muscles were estimated by feeding l-[U-(14)C]tyrosine in amino acid/agar-gel diets (;dietary infusion'). This treatment rapidly and consistently produced an isotopic equilibrium in the expired CO(2) and in the free tyrosine of plasma and the muscles. Wholebody protein synthesis in 2-week-old chicks was estimated from the tyrosine flux and was 6.4g/day per 100g body wt. In 1-week-old chicks the rate of protein synthesis was more rapid in the breast muscles than in the leg muscles, but decreased until the rates were similar in 2-week-old birds. Synthesis was also more rapid in fast-growing
Rock
Cornish broilers than in medium-slow-growing New HampshirexSingle Comb White Leghorn chicks. No or barely significant decrease in the high rates of protein synthesis, in the protein/RNA ratio and in the activity of RNA for protein synthesis occurred in non- or slow-growing chicks fed on diets deficient in
lysine
, total nitrogen or energy. Thus the machinery of protein synthesis in the young chick seems to be relatively insensitive to dietary manipulation. In the leg muscles, there was a small but significant correlation between the fractional rate of growth and protein synthesis. A decrease in the fractional rate of degradation, however, appeared to account for much of the accumulation of muscle protein in rapidly growing birds. In addition, the rapid accumulation of breast-muscle protein in rapidly growing chicks appeared to be achieved almost entirely by a marked decrease in the fractional rate of degradation.
...
PMID:Growth and muscle protein turnover in the chick. 74 59
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-fracture studies have shown a network of intramembrane fibrils in the tight junctions of epithelia. A direct correlation between the number of fibrils and junctional permeability has been suggested by previous studies. However, we have made two groups of observations showing that junctional permeability is not univocally related to the complexity of the network revealed by freeze-fracture. (i) The tight junctions of the rabbit ileum mucosa are permeable to lanthanum, although they have a complex network of fibrils resembling the junctions of toad urinary bladder, which are impermeable to lanthanum. (ii) The tight junctions of the toad urinary bladder are normally of low permeability; however, when the luminal solution is made hypertonic with
lysine
, junctional permeability markedly increases and lanthanum permeates through the tight junctions. In freeze-fracture replicas, no differences between the fibrils of control and
lysine
-treated bladders were found. Our results indicate that junctional permeability is controlled not only by the complexity of the fibrilar network, but that some features of the junctions or the fibrils themselves, not yet revealed by electron microscopy, play a central role in regulating epithelial permeability.
...
PMID:Structure of tight junctions in epithelia with different permeability. 81 96
1. The digestibilities of protein and amino acids have been estimated by two different techniques: the analysis of faeces (conventional method) and the analysis of ileal contents (ileal technique). 2.
Freeze
-dried muscle protein was found by both techniques to be almost completely digested. After autoclaving, the digestibility for the same protein was estimated by the conventional and ileal techniques to be 0.65 and 0.57 respectively. 3. Unmodified lactalbumin was found by both techniques to have digestibility of about 0.90. Propionylation of the lactalbumin reduced digestibility to 0.82 and 0.79 as indicated by faecal analysis and ileal content analysis respectively. 4. In general, the digestibilities of individual amino acids in any one protein sample were rather uniform, and reflected over-all protein digestibility. For each amino acid, digestibility, as determined by both methods, was lower for the modified protein than for the corresponding control protein: estimates based on ileal content analyses were consistently lower than those obtained by conventional analyses. The ileal technique was considered to be both more convenient and meaningful. 5. From the results obtained by the ileal technique it appears that reduced digestibility is an adequate explanation for the reduction found in nutritional value of the autoclaved protein. In contrast, for the propionylated protein, reduced digestibility of
lysine
is only a partial explanation of the low availability of this amino acid as estimated by chick growth assay. 6. In our experiments we found that the type of dietary protein used did influence the amino acid composition of the ileal contents. This was most marked with the least-digestible protein. These findings do not support the views of Nasset (1962).
...
PMID:Mechanisms of heat damage in proteins. 6. The digestibility of individual amino acids in heated and propionylated proteins. 117 1
The present study was designed to investigate the effects of aging on preferential sites of glucose adduct formation on type I collagen chains. Two CNBr peptides, one from each type of chain in the type I tropocollagen molecule, were investigated in detail: alpha 1(I)CB3 and alpha 2CB3-5. Together these peptides comprise approximately 25% of the total tropocollagen molecule. The CNBr peptides were purified from rat tail tendon, obtained from animals aged 6, 18, and 36 months, by ion exchange chromatography, gel filtration, and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).
Sugar
adducts were radiolabeled by reduction with NaB3H4. Glycated tryptic peptides were prepared from tryptic digests of alpha 2CB3-5 and alpha 1(I)CB3 by boronate affinity chromatography and HPLC. Peptides were identified by sequencing and by compositional analysis. Preferential sites of glycation were observed in both CB3 and alpha 2CB3-5. Of the 5
lysine
residues in CB3, Lys-434 was the favored glycation site. Of the 18
lysine
residues and 1 hydroxylysine residue in alpha 2CB3-5, 3 residues (Lys-453, Lys-479, and Lys-924) contained more than 80% of the glucose adducts on the peptide. Preferential glycation sites were highly conserved with aging. In collagen that had been glycated in vitro, the relative distribution of glucose adducts in old animals differed from that of young animals. In vitro experiments suggest that primary structure is the major determinant of preferential glycation sites but that higher order structure may influence the relative distribution of glucose adducts among these preferred sites.
...
PMID:Nonenzymatic glycation of type I collagen. The effects of aging on preferential glycation sites. 144 70
In an experiment with chickens breed differences were established in accumulation of 14C-
lysine
, methionine and glycine, as well as intra-line differences in glycine accumulation in intestinal epitheliocytes from Plymouth
Rock
chickens. Differences were found in both methionine and glycine accumulation, between B line and four-line hybrids as well. Methionine accumulation in epitheliocytes from the small intestine of male chickens was higher than in female chickens from A line, higher than accumulation of tryptophane in both A and C lines and accumulation of glucose in D line. In male chickens of four-line hybrid, glycine accumulation was higher than in females.
...
PMID:Accumulation of amino acids and glucose in isolated epitheliocytes from the small intestine of chickens depending on both breed and sex. 288 49
Heat shock induces a dose-dependent increase in the fraction of Chinese hamster ovary cells that stain the fluorescent membrane probe N-epsilon-dansyl-L-
lysine
(DL). Dansyl
lysine
has previously been shown to select for cholesterol-free membrane domains in phospholipid liposomes. We found that the fraction of cells excluding DL could be closely correlated to cell survival as assayed by 37 degrees C incubation following heat treatment. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting indicated that essentially all of the DL-staining cells were nonviable.
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fracture electron microscopy of sorted cells showed that all the cells that stained with DL also had highly suggested intramembranous particle (IMP) aggregation while DL-excluding cells did not. Furthermore, IMP aggregation was shown to occur immediately after heat shock and to precede DL staining. Treatment with other membrane-active agents such as ethanol, amphotericin B, filipin, procaine, and lidocaine (i) induced DL staining that was closely correlated to survival, (ii) induced dramatic cytotoxic sensitization when combined with heat, and (iii) induced aggregated IMPs at relevant cytotoxic concentrations. Several nonmembrane-active agents were examined; none induced DL staining, dramatic cytotoxic sensitization, or IMP aggregation. These results raise the possibility that heat shock inactivates mammalian cells primarily via nonspecific aggregation and denaturation of membrane proteins resulting in a lateral phase separation of membrane components, including the generation of phospholipid domains.
...
PMID:Correlation of mammalian cell killing by heat shock to intramembranous particle aggregation and lateral phase separation using fluorescence-activated cell sorting. 312 Feb 36
A procedure is described for identifying members of the family Enterobacteriaceae isolated from clinical specimens. The methods are based on primary differentiation of the various groups of bacteria by the use of Kligler Iron Agar and
lysine
-iron-agar. For identification of Salmonella, Shigella, and Arizona group organisms from stools, Triple
Sugar
Iron Agar and
lysine
-iron-agar are employed. The usefulness of this schema for diagnostic bacteriology laboratories is discussed. It is not intended to replace methods used in reference or research laboratories.
...
PMID:Biochemical differentiation of the Enterobacteriaceae with the aid of lysine-iron-agar. 533 86
Freeze
-dried haemoglobin samples protected during the desiccation by sucrose, arginine aspartate,
lysine
aspartate, sodium-zinc EDTA and Ficoll 70 have been stored under air at 4 degrees C for 15 months. The analysis showed that sufficient concentrations of sucrose and of the amino-acid salts prevent the oxidation of haemoglobin and maintain its functional properties. Relationships between the concentrations of these compounds and the methaemoglobin levels before and after storage were calculated. They define theoretical concentration points where methaemoglobin would not be found after storage. Sucrose is slightly more effective than the amino-acid, but oppositely, EDTA and Ficoll 70 do not allow prolonged storage of freeze-dried haemoglobin.
...
PMID:Stability and functional properties of haemoglobin freeze-dried in the presence of four protective substances after prolonged storage: dose-effect relationships. 613 60
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