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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (Brown)
12,436 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The biphasic nature of the time course of the action of staphylococcal nuclease on thymus nucleohistone was confirmed by studying the hydrolysis of this nucleoprotein at various enzyme concentrations. The transition from the rapid first to the sluggish second phase of the time course was particularly distinct at the highest enzyme concentrations. The rapid initial phase of the hydrolysis curve leveled off sharply when between 60 and 65 per cent of the total TNH phosphorus had been converted to acid-soluble phosphorus compounds. The insoluble complexes of TNH with protamines were found to be very resistant against the action of staphylococcal nuclease. The time course of the action of staphylococcal nuclease on a commercial nucleoprotamine of salmon testicles was found to become very sluggish when between 35 and 40 per cent of its total phosphorus had been converted to acid-soluble phosphorus compounds. When nucleoprotamines prepared in the laboratory from the secreted sperm cell suspension of Brown Brook Trout were digested with staphylococcal nuclease, only between 15 and 20 per cent of the total phosphorus were cleaved to acid-soluble phosphorus compounds during the rapid phase of the nuclease action. The respective values for the phosphorus fractions available for magnesium-binding and those susceptible to the rapid cleavage by staphylococcal nuclease were found to be very similar.
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PMID:The action of staphylococcal nuclease (EC-number 3. 1. 4. 7.) on thymus nucleohistone (TNH) and on some nucleoprotamines. 112 11

The effect of age on phosphate incorporation into phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PIP), phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) and phosphatidic acid (PA) was studied. Lysed crude synaptosomal fractions of different brain regions of 3-month-old and 32-month-old Brown Norway rats were used. The brain regions tested were the hippocampus, frontal cortex, occipital/parietal cortex, entorhinal/pyriformal cortex, striatum/septum, thalamus and hypothalamus. The individual specific phosphorylating activities were unevenly distributed within the brain of Brown Norway rats. Strikingly, the distribution of phosphate incorporation into PIP2 was opposite from that of phosphate incorporation into PA. Phosphate incorporation into PA decreased (-15%) with age in almost all brain regions tested, whereas phosphate incorporation into PIP2 decreased with age only in the frontal cortex (-20%) and in the hypothalamus (-8%). The effects of age may reflect a deterioration of phosphoinositide metabolism, with its function in signal transduction coupled to receptors via G-proteins, in the brain regions involved. In addition, there was an age related decrease in protein content and total phospholipid phosphorus content of lysed crude synaptosomal preparations of all brain regions. The high correlation between the changes in these parameters may be indicative of a decrease in the number or size of synaptosomes with age in the brain regions involved.
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PMID:Brain phosphatidic acid and polyphosphoinositide formation in a broken cell preparation: regional distribution and the effect of age. 133 99

Monitoring human cardiac allograft rejection is currently accomplished by endomyocardial biopsy. Available noninvasive methods for identifying rejection have lacked the necessary sensitivity or specificity, or both, for routine clinical application. In vivo phosphorus-31 (P-31) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has been used for monitoring phosphorus metabolism in both animal models and humans. In the present study this technique was employed as a noninvasive means to assess the bioenergetic processes that occur during cardiac allograft rejection in a rat model. Brown Norway rat hearts were transplanted subcutaneously into the anterior region of the neck of Lewis rat recipients (allografts). Control isografts employed Lewis donors and recipients. Phosphocreatine to inorganic phosphate (PCr/Pi), phosphocreatine to beta-adenosine triphosphate (PCr/ATP beta), beta-adenosine triphosphate to inorganic phosphate (ATP beta/Pi) ratios and pH of the transplanted hearts were monitored using surface coil P-31 NMR spectroscopy (at 4.7 tesla) daily for 7 days. To allow recovery from the compromise induced by the surgical procedure, the measurements obtained on day 2 were taken as a baseline. PCr/Pi was unchanged or increased in the isografts but decreased continually in allografts, with the difference becoming significant by day 4 when compared with levels in day 2 allografts (p less than 0.005) and by day 3 when compared with levels in the isograft group (p less than 0.05). PCr/ATP beta in isografts did not change throughout the study; however, allografts demonstrated a significant decrease as early as day 3 (p less than 0.01), although a significant difference between isografts and allografts did not become manifest until day 4 (p less than 0.005).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Monitoring the bioenergetics of cardiac allograft rejection using in vivo P-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. 355 75

The effects of magnesium, spermine, and temperature on the conformation of Escherichia coli tRNAPhe have been examined by proton and phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. In the low-field proton NMR spectra we have characterized two slowly interconverting conformations of this tRNA at low magnesium ion concentrations. The relative proportion of the conformers is ion dependent but not ion specific. Magnesium affects protons in all the stems of tRNA while spermine effects are localized near the s4U-8-A-14 and G-15-C-48 tertiary bonds. The effects seen in the proton NMR spectra are compared and correlated with those observed in the phosphorus spectra to give assignments of some of the resolved signals from the phosphate groups. The phosphorus spectra are compared with those of yeast tRNAPhe [Gorenstein, D. G., Goldfield, E. M., Chen, R., Kovar, K., & Luxon, B. A. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 2141; Salemink, P. J. M., Reijerse, E. J., Mollevanger, L., & Hilbers, C. W. (1981) Eur. J. Biochem. 115, 635], and the ion effects are discussed with reference to the magnesium and spermine sites found in the crystal structures of yeast tRNAPhe [Holbrook, S. R., Sussman, J. L., Warrant, R. W., Church, G. M., & Kim, S.-H. (1977) Nucleic Acids Res. 4, 2811; Quigley, G. J., Teeter, M. M., & Rich, A. (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 75, 64; Jack, A., Ladner, J. E., Rhodes, D., Brown, R. S., & Klug, A. (1977) J. Mol. Biol. 111, 315].
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PMID:NMR studies of ion binding to Escherichia coli tRNAPhe. 390 84

Two hundred twenty four dairy cattle (6 mo to second calving) representing four breeds (169 Holstein, 24 Guernsey, 19 Jersey, 12 Brown Swiss) were used to determine effects of age, temperature-season, and breed on blood characteristics. A total of 1183 blood samples were collected by jugular venipuncture in the middle of each temperature-season. Covariate age affected blood profile except for hemoglobin, oxyhemoglobin, glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase, and albumin. Temperature-season increased or decreased all measures except enzyme creatine phosphokinase, total creatine phosphokinase, calcium and phosphorus. Years differed for all measures except hemoglobin and oxyhemoglobin. Except for enzyme creatine phosphokinase, total creatine phosphokinase, and phosphorus, breeds differed in other measures. There were interactions between temperature-season and year, temperature-season and breed, and year and breed. Differences among temperature-seasons were not consistent from year to year. Breed differences were not consistent from temperature-season to temperature-season for calcium or protein-bound iodine. Breed differences were not consistent from year to year for glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, total protein, albumin, or calcium.
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PMID:Effects of age, temperature-season, and breed on blood characteristics of dairy cattle. 726 21

Disorders of calcium, phosphorus and magnesium homeostasis in ruminants provide natural models for the study of the physiology and pathophysiology of these minerals. The knowledge that can be acquired with a better understanding of the pathogenesis of these diseases could give useful clues in the puzzle of human osteoporosis. In the present study, the case of parturient paresis of dairy cows is reexamined with a newly developed technique for the measurements of serum ionized magnesium concentrations (Mg2+). The concentrations of total magnesium (Mgtot), ionized calcium (Ca2+), total calcium (Catot), and inorganic phosphate (Pi) were also determined in the sera of seventeen 3- to 16-year-old Brown Swiss and crossed Simmental/Red Holstein cows during the periparturient period. In each animal, a transient increase of Mg2+ and Mgtot serum concentrations was observed in association with the transient decrease after parturition of Ca2+, Catot and Pi serum concentrations. On average, throughout the study, serum Mg2+ concentrations were 68.5% of those of Mgtot whereas serum Ca2+ concentrations were 52% of those of Catot. The possible mechanisms involved in the transient increase of Mg2+ and Mgtot serum concentrations are discussed and the relevance of this data for osteoporosis is outlined.
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PMID:Postparturient hypocalcemia of dairy cows: a model for the study of the interdependence of Ca, Pi, and Mg homeostasis. 857 48

1. Two experiments were carried out to examine whether the adverse effects on laying hen performance of treating cottonseed meal (CSM) with crystalline ferrous sulphate heptahydrate (FSH) to prevent brown yolk discolouration, was a consequence of iron reducing the availability of dietary phosphorus. Two batches of CSM, with different free gossypol and cyclopropenoid fatty acid contents, were treated with FSH at a 4:1 weight ratio of iron to free gossypol, and incorporated into diets at 300 g/kg with or without supplementation with sodium dihydrogen phosphate (SHP), and fed to hens. 2. FSH treatment of CSM reduced food intake and egg production. Although performance was improved by supplementing the FSH-treated CSM diets with SHP, it was still poorer than that achieved by hens fed a non-CSM control diet. 3. Brown yolk discolouration was prevented by treatment of CSM with FSH. Additional phosphorus did not produce any significant effects on brown colour development in yolks, indicating that the bioavailable gossypol content of the diets had not been altered; however, chemical analyses showed an apparent increase in the free gossypol content of the diets with the inclusion of SHP, suggesting that the assay gives misleading results.
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PMID:Effects on dietary phosphorus of treating cottonseed meal with crystalline ferrous sulphate for the prevention of brown yolk discolouration. 877 49

1. The relationship between plasma inorganic phosphorus measured at the end of the dark period and the weight of the next egg shell produced was investigated in 30 Hisex Brown hens. 2. Hens received an adequate conventional layers' diet and the lighting pattern was conventional (17 L: 7 D). Observations were made early (31 to 40 weeks) and late (62 to 68 weeks of age) in the laying period. 3. Eggs were classified by position in the clutch sequence and significant negative correlations were found between shell weights of early eggs in the sequence and plasma phosphate at the end of the dark period. 4. No significant trends were found in plasma total calcium. 5. No significant differences were found in bone compositions of birds producing consistently more or less than average shell weight during the laying period. 6. The negative correlations between plasma phosphate and shell weight are consistent with the observations of Sauveur and Mongin (1983) and show that impairment of shell deposition is associated with skeletal mobilisation as indicated by increase in plasma phosphate. This is consistent with the observations on bone composition and indicates that selection for shell quality will tend to select birds which are not dependent on excessive skeletal mobilisation during shell formation.
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PMID:Egg-shell deposition and blood plasma inorganic phosphorus concentration in individual laying hens. 883 40

1. A modern hybrid strain of laying hen (Hisex) was fed from point of lay to 68 weeks on a control diet and diets containing oystershell, fluoride, 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol, ascorbic acid, a lower concentration of phosphorus and a combination of a lower concentration of crude protein and higher concentration of vitamin K. Hens from a much older strain (Brown Leghorn J-line) were fed on the control diet. 2. Plasma variables were measured during lay. End-of-lay trabecular and medullary bone volumes in the proximal tarsometatarsus and free thoracic vertebra were measured by histomorphometry. 3. The majority of Hisex hens were considered to be osteoporotic by the end of lay. In contrast, none of the J-line were osteoporotic. 4. None of the nutritional treatments affected trabecular bone volumes. Medullary bone volumes were increased significantly by feeding oystershell or fluoride. 5. There was no phenotypic correlation between egg production and trabecular bone volume in the Hisex hens. 6. The experiment provided evidence that osteoporosis in laying hens, as assessed by trabecular bone volumes, is not caused by calcium deficiency and could not be prevented by any of the nutritional treatments studied.
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PMID:Studies on effects of nutritional factors on bone structure and osteoporosis in laying hens. 934 52

This study was conducted to determine the effects of Korean soybean paste (doen-jang [dwen-jahng]) (at concentrations of 0.5, 1, and 5%) on the toxicity of 500 ppb of aflatoxin in the diets of 60 laying hens (Isa Brown) divided into five groups and treated from week 15 to week 67. The aflatoxin-treated hens exhibited many deleterious effects, including reduced body weight; increased relative organ weights; decreased egg production; aflatoxin accumulation in eggs; decreased serum calcium, phosphorus, and alanino amonotransferase (ALT) levels; increased serum gammaglutamil transferase and lactic dehydrogenase levels; and, most significantly, severely altered cell foci and sinusoid dilatation in the liver, relative to control hens. The feeding of 1% soybean paste to hens reduced the adverse effects of aflatoxin on body weight, relative organ weights, egg production, and aflatoxin accumulation in eggs and improved serum calcium and ALT levels and the histopathological lesions of the liver. The feeding of 5% soybean paste to hens resulted in higher levels of the same types of improvements, especially with regard to the histopathological findings for the liver. On the basis of these results, it was suggested that a diet including 5% (and in some cases only 1%) Korean soybean paste protected laying hens and their eggs from the major deleterious effects of 500 microg of aflatoxin per kg of diet and from aflatoxin accumulation. These results indicate that dietary supplementation with Korean soybean paste reduces aflatoxin toxicity in laying hens that ultimately produce human foods such as eggs and poultry.
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PMID:Reduction of aflatoxins by Korean soybean paste and its effect on cytotoxicity and reproductive toxicity--Part 3. Inhibitory effects of Korean soybean paste (doen-jang) on aflatoxin toxicity in laying hens and aflatoxin accumulation in their eggs. 1274 98


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