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Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pempidine, and other highly active ganglion blocking agents of the polyalkylpiperidine series, were developed from tertiary alkylamines, themselves weakly active, on the hypothesis that high activity was conferred by the presence in the molecule of a sterically hindered secondary or tertiary
nitrogen
atom. Pempidine and its N-ethyl homologue (26539) resembled mecamylamine qualitatively. All three drugs blocked sympathetic and parasympathetic ganglia; this action was slow in onset and protracted. They blocked neuromuscular transmission, but only about one hundredth as powerfully as ganglionic transmission. They caused a fall in amplitude and rate of the isolated heart, and reduced coronary flow. They had local anaesthetic properties in one of four tests used. They caused
tremor
. All were well absorbed when administered orally. Pempidine was about twice as active as mecamylamine on ganglia, but only about one half to one quarter as toxic as judged by death, growth, induction of
tremor
, or cardiotoxicity. Compound 26539 was also quantitatively superior to mecamylamine in respect of these safety margins, but unlike pempidine or mecamylamine damaged the pituitary gland and testis when administered daily for several months. The mode of action of the three drugs is discussed: the results give tentative support for the hypothesis that their action is intracellular.
...
PMID:The pharmacological actions of pempidine and its ethyl homologue. 1361 59
PRESENTING FEATURES: A 70-year-old African American man was admitted with a history of fever, chills, and malaise of several days' duration. His past medical history was notable for end-stage renal disease requiring hemodialysis, coronary artery disease, and aortic stenosis requiring a bioprosthetic aortic valve replacement. On the day of admission, the patient was noted to have a
shaking
chill while undergoing dialysis through his catheter and was admitted to the hospital. He complained of pain at the catheter insertion site, shortness of breath, and dyspnea on exertion, but denied chest pain. On physical examination, the patient had a temperature of 100.4 degrees F, with a heart rate of 64 beats per minute, blood pressure of 127/72 mm Hg, and an oxygen saturation of 97% on room air. He was a mildly obese man in no apparent distress. He had shotty cervical lymphadenopathy and a right subclavian dialysis catheter in place, with erythema and pus at the entry site. His jugular venous pressure was 10 cm H(2)O. Lung examination showed bibasilar rales. Heart sounds were normal, with no rub or gallop. He had a 2/6 systolic ejection murmur best heart at the left sternal border as well as a 3/6 holosystolic murmur at the apex that radiated to his left axilla. Examination of the abdomen and extremities was unremarkable. The patient's neurological examination was unremarkable, and he was alert and oriented to person, place, and time. Laboratory studies showed an elevated white blood cell count of 16,700 cells/microL. His blood urea
nitrogen
level was 43 mg/dL and his serum creatinine level was 4.9 mg/dL. Multiple blood cultures grew methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. An admission, chest radiograph showed no infiltrate. An admission electrocardiogram showed normal sinus rhythm with first degree atrioventricular block, left anterior fascicular block, and left ventricular hypertrophy. shows rhythm strips from lead II electrocardiograms 5 months before admission (top), on admission (middle) and 5 days after admission (bottom). What is the diagnosis?
...
PMID:Cases from the Osler Medical Service at Johns Hopkins University. 1514 15
The rate of adsorption of two azo and four anthraquinone anionic dyes on Eichhornia Crassipes (E.C.) has been studied. Raw E.C. and three aminated derivatives of E.C. with different
nitrogen
percent were used as dye adsorbents. The parameters studied include the amount of substrate,
shaking
time, chemical structure, concentration of dyestuff and pH of dyeing bath. Simple kinetic adsorption models of dynamics and adsorption parameters for the Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms were determined. A higher
nitrogen
percent of aminated E.C. showed a higher adsorption capacity than other derivatives. The kinetic adsorption models indicate that the decolourization was complete in a relatively short time (10 min) and the reaction taking place is of the first order. The equilibrium data fit well with the Freundlich model of adsorption for the six dyes. Only dye IV (C.I.A Acid Blue 25) conform both Freundlich and Langmuir adsorption isotherms.
...
PMID:Removal of azo and anthraquinone dyes from aqueous solutions by Eichhornia Crassipes. 1526 34
The influence of feedstock amino acids, salt, carbon and
nitrogen
sources on glutathione production by Saccharomyces cerevisiae FF-8 was investigated. Glucose, yeast extract, KH2PO4, and L-cysteine were found to be suitable feedstock. Highest glutathione production was obtained after cultivation with
shaking
for 72 h in a medium containing glucose 3.0% (w/v), yeast extract 3.0%, KH2PO4 0.06% and L-cysteine 0.06%. The glutathione concentration achieved using this medium increased 2.27-fold to 204 mg/l compared to YM basal medium.
...
PMID:Optimal fermentation conditions for enhanced glutathione production by Saccharomyces cerevisiae FF-8. 1535 93
In early attempts to isolate palm oil-utilising bacteria from palm oil mill effluent (POME), diluted liquid samples of POME were spread on agar containing POME as primary nutrient. 45 purified colonies were screened for intracellular lipids by staining with Sudan Black B. Of these, 10 isolates were positively stained. The latter were grown in a
nitrogen
-limiting medium with palm olein (a triglyceride) or saponified palm olein (salts of fatty acids) as carbon source. None of the isolates grew in the palm olein medium but all grew well in the saponified palm olein medium. Of the latter however, only one isolate was positively stained with Nile Blue A, indicating the presence of PHA. This method did not successfully generate bacterial isolates which could metabolise palm olein to produce PHA. An enrichment technique was therefore developed whereby a selective medium was designed. The latter comprised minerals and palm olein (1% w/v) as sole carbon source to which POME (2.5% v/v) was added as the source of bacteria. The culture was incubated with
shaking
at 30 degrees C for 4 weeks. Out of seven isolates obtained from the selective medium, two isolates, FLP1 and FLP2, could utilise palm olein for growth and production of the homopolyester, poly(3-hydroxybutyrate). FLP1 is gram-negative and is identified (BIOLOG) to have 80% similarity to Burkholderia cepacia. When grown with propionate or valerate, FLP1 produced a copolyester, poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate).
...
PMID:Isolation of palm oil-utilising, polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA)-producing bacteria by an enrichment technique. 1573 9
Laccase production by the white-rot fungus Trametes gallica was studied, using twelve different media under static or
shaking
condition. The results indicated that organic
nitrogen
sources such as tryptone and peptone strongly improved laccase production. The application of an amino acid mixture and a lignin preparation also increased the formation of laccase, which was not observed in the presence of potato extract. Native polyacryl amide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) followed by laccase activity staining using guaiacol as the substrate was performed to analyze the laccase isozyme patterns under the different culture conditions employed. Zymograms revealed a total of twenty different laccase activity bands that appeared in individual patterns, dependent on the respective culture condition applied. This indicates that both the medium composition and the mode of incubation (static or
shaking
) influenced the laccase isozyme gene expression. This was the first time to report so many laccase isozymes in a fungus. Native PAGE with silver staining showed that laccases were the main protein productions in several media providing a potentially convenient way in purifying laccases from T. gallica.
...
PMID:Influence of culture conditions on laccase production and isozyme patterns in the white-rot fungus Trametes gallica. 1590 92
The effect of growth and fermentation conditions on the production of catalase by T. aurantiacus WSH 03-01 was investigated in
shaking
flasks. Catalase activity reached 1594 u/mL when the culture was grown on a complex carbon source containing 20 g/L dextrin and 1% (V/V) ethanol, which was 23% higher than the sum produced on 20 g/L dextrin and 1% (V/V) ethanol, respectively. It was concluded that dextrin might act as a major carbon source in the complex, while ethanol was rather a stimulator than a carbon source. The stimulation effect of ethanol on catalase production was postulated to be two aspects; catalase-dependent alcohol metabolism is activated by acute alcohol, thus more catalase need to be synthesized for that use, named direct induction. As for indirect induction, which may result from little amount of H2O2 generation in process of NADH regeneration in respiratory chain. Peptone was shown to be a favorable
nitrogen
source for catalase production and its optimum concentration was found to be 10 g/L. Catalase production by T. aurantiacus WSH 03-01 was further improved by optimizing the initial pH, volume of medium in flasks as well as the concentration of external H2O2. Under the optimum culture conditions, the activity of catalase reached 2762 u/mL, which was nearly 6.8 times higher than that of the initiate conditions. Furthermore, the potential application of this novel catalase in the treatment of textile bleaching effluents was evaluated. Thermo-and alkaline stability of this catalase was compared with the commercial available catalases produced from bovine and Aspergillus niger. The crude enzyme from T. aurantiacus WSH 03-01 showed stronger stabilities at (70 degrees C, 80 degrees C, 90 degrees C) and (pH 9.0, pH 10.0, pH 11.0) than the other two types of catalases, indicating a great application potential in the clean production process of textile industry.
...
PMID:[Thermo-alkali-stable catalase from Thermoascus aurantiacus and its potential use in textile bleaching process]. 1597 17
The psychrotrophs SYP-A2-3 producing the cold-adapted protease has been isolated from the bacterial samples collected from the No. 1 Glacier of China and identified as Bacillus cereus according to its morphological and physiochemical characteristics and 16s rDNA gene sequence analysis. It could grow between 0 degree C and 38 degrees C while its optimal growth temperature was 25 degrees C and the optimal temperature for its protease production was 15 degrees C. The cold-adapted protease was identified as neutral metallo-protease, the molecular weight was 34.2 kD shown by SDS-PAGE, the optimal pH and temperature for activity was 7.0-8.5 and 42 degrees C, respectively. Various fermentation conditions of its protease production were also investigated. The results showed that casein was the best
nitrogen
source while glucose and starch were suitable carbon source for its protease production. The initial pH of fermentation broth ranged from 6.5 to 7.0 was optimal. Under optimized conditions, the protease activity produced by SYP-A2-3 could reach 3800 U/mL and 4800 U/mL conducted in
shaking
flask and 5 L stirred jar experiment, respectively.
...
PMID:[Identification of psychrotrophs SYP-A2-3 producing cold-adapted protease from the No. 1 Glacier of China and study on its fermentation conditions]. 1598 72
C. albicans is an opportunistic fungus causing life-threatening systemic infections particularly in immunocompromised individuals. The organism is a commensal in humans and grows either aerobically, e.g., the oral cavity, or anaerobically, e.g., the gut. We studied anaerobic growth of C. albicans in a defined yeast
nitrogen
base dextrose medium after adaptation and subculturing in an anaerobic chamber. At 37 degrees C in suspension culture, much slower growth was observed anaerobically with a generation time of 248 min compared to 98 min for aerobic growth. Although the organism grew well on solid medium,
shaking
increased the growth rate in suspension culture at 37 degrees C. Growth was enhanced at acidic pH compared to neutral or alkaline pH. Cells grown anaerobically produced hyphae, but did not produce biofilm on plastic surface or denture acrylic under either static conditions or with mild
shaking
, conditions that support aerobic biofilm formation.
...
PMID:Anaerobic growth of Candida albicans does not support biofilm formation under similar conditions used for aerobic biofilm. 1599 Oct 52
Aspergillus parasiticus was found to produce a bioflocculant with high flocculating activity for Kaolin suspension and water-soluble dyes. Results showed that the carbon and
nitrogen
sources favorable for the production of the bioflocculant were corn starch and peptone, and an optimal condition of 28 degrees C, initial pH 5-6 and
shaking
speed of 150 rpm. The highest flocculating efficiency achieved for Kaolin suspension was 98.1%, after 72 h cultivation. The bioflocculant was mainly composed of sugar (76.3%) and protein (21.6%), and an average molecular weight of 3.2x10(5) Da. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra showed that amino, amide and hydroxyl groups were present in the bioflocculant molecules. The bioflocculant was effective in flocculating some soluble anionic dyes in aqueous solution, in particular Reactive Blue 4 and Acid Yellow 25 with a decolorization efficiency of 92.4 and 92.9%, respectively. The decolorization efficiency was dependent on the flocculant dosage and solution pH. XPS result shows that the amine groups in the bioflocculant were protonated at pH 5, and thus the positive bioflocculant was attracted to the negatively charged dye molecules. The amino and amide groups in the bioflocculant molecule are believed to play an important role in flocculation from the viewpoint of electrostatic interaction.
...
PMID:Production of a bioflocculant by Aspergillus parasiticus and its application in dye removal. 1608 70
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