Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0085631 (
agitation
)
12,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intracerebroventricular administration of 10--20 microgram of steroid-O-sulfates induced hypermotility,
agitation
, salivation, EEG abnormalities, stereotypies, wet dog shakes and seizures. Equivalent effects resulted from 30--200 microgram morphine sulfate (H2SO4 salt), 50 microgram EGTA or 300--400 microgram of sodium sulfate or phosphate, but not chloride,
nitrate
or acetate. Non-steroid sulfates, steroid glucuronides and steroid phosphates were inactive. Naloxone, previously found to antagonize the excitatory effects of androsterone sulfate, failed to antagonize those of cortisol sulfate, sodium sulfate or EGTA. These findings suggest a role for extracellular calcium ions and for sulfate derived from circulating steroids in central responses to opiates.
...
PMID:Opiate-like excitatory effects of steroid sulfates and calcium-complexing agents given cerebroventricularly. 21 60
A simple and rapid procedure to make yeast cells permeable by agitating with toluene-ethanol, (TE) 1:4, v/v was developed. The permeated cells retained their ability to catalyze certain enzyme reactions. Temperature and duration of
agitation
during TE treatment played an important role in retention of the catalytic potential of permeated cells. The in situ assay using permeated cell preparations was more sensitive even in the absence of added cofactors than in the vitro assay in detecting assimilatory nitrate reductase (NAD(P)H:
nitrate
oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.2) (NAR) activity in Candida utilis. Using in situ assay technique, different mechanisms regulating the biosynthesis of NAR in C. utilis were investigated. Nitrogen starvation did not lead to derepression of NAR.
NO3
-ions were absolutely essential for induction and maintenance of high levels of NAR activity. Cells grown on ammonium
nitrate
possessed relatively lower levels of NAR. Kinetics of NAR induction were followed as a function of time and inducer concentration. The influence of various cations on the induction of NAR by
nitrate
was investigated. A wide range of D-amino acids induced NAR synthesis. Of 22 L-amino acids tested only phenylalanine induced significant levels of NAR. Various intermediates of the pathway of
nitrate
reduction influenced the rate of NAR induction. There was a rapid disappearance of in vivo activity of the enzyme of induced yeast cells on nitrogen starvation, and the rate of loss was accelerated by the presence of NH4+.
...
PMID:Regulatory properties of yeast nitrate reductase in situ. 94 16
Good yields of pyocin are obtained when Pseudomonas aeruginosa is grown in Trypticase soy broth (without glucose) (BBL) plus 1% potassium
nitrate
. As a result, pyocin production for routine epidemiological typing can be done in screw-cap tubes, without mechanical
agitation
or mitomycin C induction.
...
PMID:Simplified method for producing pyocins from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 419 34
The characteristics of an unclassified Mycobacterium sp. isolated from three patients with Crohn's disease are presented. The organism is extremely fastidious and mycobactin dependent and may require up to 18 months of incubation for primary isolation. Colony morphology is rough. Characteristics are unlike those of any presently defined species. The isolates produced postive niacin, catalase, and 2-week arylsulfatase reactions and were susceptible to neotetrazolium chloride (1:40,000), streptomycin (2 micrograms/ml), and rifampin (0.25 micrograms/ml). Chromogenicity,
nitrate
reduction, quantitative catalase, Tween hydrolysis, urease, tellurite reduction, pyrazinamidase, and 3-day arylsulfatase tests were negative, and the isolates were resistant to thiophene-2-carboxylic acid hydrazide (10 micrograms/ml) and isoniazid (10 micrograms/ml). Optimum growth in broth was determined to be in 7H9 medium with Dubos oleic albumin complex, Tween 80, and mycobactin J at 37 degrees C without CO2 or
agitation
and in low medium depth. This Mycobacterium sp. may be a subspecies or biovariant of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis, or it may represent a new species of Mycobacterium. It is suggested that this Mycobacterium sp. may play an etiological role in some cases of Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Characteristics of an unclassified Mycobacterium species isolated from patients with Crohn's disease. 651 78
Pentachlorophenol (PCP) dechlorination by a methanogenic consortium was observed when glucose, formate, lactate, or yeast extract was present in the mineral medium as a secondary carbon source. Acetate was not a good substrate to sustain dechlorination. The consortium was able to dechlorinate the different monochlorophenols, although the chlorine in position ortho and meta was removed more readily than in para position. Dechlorination was most efficient at 37 degrees C. At 45 degrees C, the first PCP dechlorination steps were very rapid, but 3,5-dichlorophenol (3,5-DCP) was not further dechlorinated. At 15 and 4 degrees C, dechlorination was very slow. The dechlorination of PCP to 3-chlorophenol (3-CP) was still observed after the consortium had been subjected to heat treatment (80 degrees C, 60 min), suggesting that spore-forming bacteria were responsible. The dechlorinating activity of the consortium was significantly reduced by the presence of hydrogen, 2-bromoethanosulfonic acid (BESA), or sulfate but not of
nitrate
. The dechlorination of 3-CP was completely inhibited by heat treatment or the presence of BESA, suggesting that a syntrophic microorganism would be involved. Vigorous
agitation
of the consortium stopped the dechlorination, but the presence of DEAE-Sephacel acting as a support was very efficient in restoring the activity, suggesting that association between certain members of the consortium was important.
...
PMID:Study of the reductive dechlorination of pentachlorophenol by a methanogenic consortium. 859 Apr 1
A bacterial strain isolated from Danish immersion curing brine, Moraxella phenylpyruvica 0100, and a commercial meat starter culture, Staphylococcus xylosus DD34, were tested for their ability to form characteristic volatile compounds in minimal medium with the added amino acid L-leucine or L-phenylalanine under different environmental conditions (pH 5.5 and 6.0; 0 and 210 ppm
nitrate
; pre-incubation with and without
agitation
) and compared with respect to their ability to form volatile compounds in cured meat extracts and vacuum-packed cured meat cuts. The characteristic cured meat aroma precursors/compounds 3-methylbutanal and 3-methylbutanol were found to be formed in cured meat extracts and vacuum-packed cured meat cuts inoculated with M. phenylpyruvica. These volatiles are most probably formed by metabolic conversion of the amino acid L-leucine by M. phenylpyruvica, as they were also produced in minimal media with added L-leucine inoculated with this organism. The characteristic L-phenylalanine derived compound, benzaldehyde, formed by M. phenylpyruvica in minimal medium in the presence of
nitrate
(210 ppm), was not produced in any noticeable amount in cured meat extracts or vacuum-packed cured meat inoculated with M. phenylpyruvica. In contrast, benzacetaldehyde, which has been described as a possible metabolic product of the microbial conversion of L-phenylalanine, was found to be a characteristic volatile compound formed in cured meat extracts and vacuum-packed cured meat inoculated with M. phenylpyruvica, indicating an alternative metabolic pathway for L-phenylalanine by this organism in a cured meat environment. Even though S. xylosus was able to form volatile compounds characteristic of cured meats (3-methylbutanal, 3-methylbutanol) in minimal media with added L-leucine, this bacterial strain seemed not to be able to produce these characteristic volatiles in the studied cured meat systems. The present data imply that M. phenylpyruvica, in particular, is a potential meat starter for ensuring superior flavour development in cured meat.
...
PMID:Formation of amino acid (L-leucine, L-phenylalanine) derived volatile flavour compounds by Moraxella phenylpyruvica and Staphylococcus xylosus in cured meat model systems. 970 3
A novel thermophilic, microaerophilic, facultatively chemolithoheterotrophic bacterium designated strain TR(T) was isolated from a sample of a deep-sea hydrothermal chimney collected at the Rainbow vent field on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (36 degrees 14'N). Gram-negative, non-spore-forming, non-motile rods occurred singly or in pairs. The organism grew in the temperature range 37-80 degrees C with an optimum at 70 degrees C and at pH 5.5-8.4 with an optimum around 6.7. The NaCl range for growth was 10-50 g l(-1) with an optimum of 30 g l(-1). Strain TR(T) grew chemoorganoheterotrophically with carbohydrates, proteinaceous substrates, organic acids and alcohols using oxygen or
nitrate
as electron acceptors. The isolate was able to grow at oxygen concentrations from 0.5 to 21%. Oxygen concentrations that promoted fastest growth ranged from 4 to 8% under
agitation
. The novel isolate was able to grow lithoheterotrophically with molecular hydrogen as the energy source. The G + C content of the genomic DNA was 68.4 mol%. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rDNA sequence placed strain TR(T) within the phylum Deinococcus-Thermus of the Bacteria. On the basis of phenotypic and phylogenetic data, it is proposed that this isolate should be described as a member of a novel species of a new genus as Vulcanithermus mediatlanticus gen. nov., sp. nov. The type strain is TR(T) (= DSM 14978T = VKM B-2292T = JCM 11956T).
...
PMID:Vulcanithermus mediatlanticus gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel member of the family Thermaceae from a deep-sea hot vent. 1289 42
Injection of high-dose of morphine into the spinal lumbar intrathecal (i.t.) space of rats elicits a nociceptive behavioural syndrome characterized by periodic bouts of spontaneous
agitation
and severe vocalization. The induced behavioural response such as vocalization and
agitation
was observed dose-dependently by i.t. administration of morphine (125-500 nmol). Pretreatment with naloxone (s.c. and i.t.), an opioid receptor antagonist, failed to reverse the morphine-induced behavioural response. The excitatory effect of morphine was inhibited dose-dependently by pretreatment with 3-((+)2-carboxy-piperazin-4-yl)-propyl-1-phosphonic acid (CPP), a competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist and MK-801, a non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonist. The non-selective nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) inhibited dose-dependently the behavioural response to high-dose i.t. morphine (500 nmol), whereas D-NAME was without affecting the response to high-dose i.t. morphine. In the present study, we measured NO metabolites (nitrite/
nitrate
) in the extracellular fluid of rat dorsal spinal cord using in vivo microdialysis. The i.t. injection of morphine (500 nmol) evoked significant increases in NO metabolites and glutamate from the spinal cord. Not only NO metabolites but also glutamate released by high-dose morphine were reduced significantly by pretreatment with L-NAME (400 nmol). Pretreatment with CPP and MK-801 showed a significant reduction of the NO metabolites and glutamate levels elevated by high-dose i.t. morphine. These results suggest that the excitatory action of high-dose i.t. morphine may be mediated by an NMDA-NO cascade in the spinal cord.
...
PMID:The role of spinal nitric oxide and glutamate in nociceptive behaviour evoked by high-dose intrathecal morphine in rats. 1465 10
The bacteriophage elution procedure described further after adsorption to acetate-
nitrate
cellulose membrane filters allows better recovery of phages concentrated from 1l of water than elution procedures used previously. The improvement is due to the combined effect of the eluent (3% (w/v) beef extract, 3% (v/v) Tween 80, 0.5M NaCl, pH 9.0) and the application of ultrasound instead of
agitation
or swirling. Average recovery of somatic coliphages, 82 +/- 7%, was the greatest, and that of phages infecting Bacteroides fragilis, 56 +/- 8%, the lowest, with intermediate values for F-specific and F-specific RNA bacteriophages. Thus, the method allowed recovery of over 56% for all the phages suggested as surrogate indicators. The method was then validated according to an International Standardisation Organisation validation standard procedure and implemented in routine laboratories, which obtained reproducible results.
...
PMID:Standardised evaluation of the performance of a simple membrane filtration-elution method to concentrate bacteriophages from drinking water. 1501 56
Leaching and
agitation
experiments with soil organic horizons showed that nitrogen pollutant concentration, temperature, contact time and neutral soluble salts influence the fate of enhanced ammonium and
nitrate
inputs to the soil and the leaching of inorganic and organic nitrogen. Soils investigated included L, F and H horizons under Sitka spruce, the L and F horizons under Scots pine and Japanese larch and L and O horizons under Calluna. Effects attributable to species were also observed. The results are discussed in the light of their relevance to being incorporated into models of the effects of excess nitrogen inputs to forest soils, and in view of current concern that forest ecosystems in areas of high nitrogen deposition may become nitrogen saturated.
...
PMID:Factors influencing nitrogen retention in forest soils. 1509 11
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>