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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A tissue uptake experiment was conducted to determine the bioavailability of rumen bacterial Selenium (Se) in mice. The donor animal was wether fed a diet containing 0.2 mg Se/kg dietary dry matter (DM). Ruminal fluid was collected 2 h postprandially. Bacterial-rich precipitate was obtained by differential centrifugation of the ruminal fluids. This was later freeze-dried and mixed in the diet to be used in feeding the mice experiment. Thirty growing female mice with a body wt (mean +/- SD) of 21.4 +/- 0.74 g were housed in plastic cages (5 mice/cage) and allotted equally to three dietary treatments. Diet 1 and Diet 2 were formulated based on AIN-76, except that no Se supplementation in the form of selenite was made in the former. In Diet 3, rumen bacterial matter was 20% of the diet, which gave an equivalent of 0.1 mg Se/kg dietary DM. The other two diets, Diet 1 and Diet 2, had an Se content of 0.025 and 0.1 mg/kg dietary DM, respectively. A 7-d feeding commenced after 7 d of acclimatization of the semipurified diet. Results showed that those mice fed an Se- (selenite) supplemented diet (Diet 2) had higher (P < 0.05) tissue Se concentrations than those mice fed the other two diets. No statistical differences were observed on various tissue Se concentrations between Diet 1 and Diet 3, although the latter diet had higher values. Kidney and liver had the highest Se concentrations compared to the other tissues. This study concludes that bacterial Se collected from the rumen of wether is not fully available for absorption in the intestine of the mice.
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PMID:Bioavailability of rumen bacterial selenium in mice using tissue uptake technique. 940 36

The trace element nutrient selenium (Se) has been shown to possess cancer-preventive activity in both animal models and humans, but the mechanisms by which this occurs remain to be elucidated. Because angiogenesis is obligatory for the genesis and growth of solid cancers, we investigated, in the study presented here, the hypothesis that Se may exert its cancer-preventive activity, at least in part, by inhibiting cancer-associated angiogenesis. The effects of chemopreventive levels of Se on the intra-tumoral microvessel density and the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor in 1-methyl-1-nitrosourea-induced rat mammary carcinomas and on the proliferation and survival and matrix metalloproteinase activity of human umbilical vein endothelial cells in vitro were examined. Increased Se intake as Se-enriched garlic, sodium selenite, or Se-methylselenocysteine led to a significant reduction of intra-tumoral microvessel density in mammary carcinomas, irrespective of the manner by which Se was provided: continuous exposure (7-wk feeding) with a chemoprevention protocol or acute bolus exposure (3 d) after carcinomas had established. Compared with the untreated controls, significantly lower levels of vascular endothelial growth factor expression were observed in a sizeable proportion of the Se-treated carcinomas. In contrast to the mammary carcinomas, the microvessel density of the uninvolved mammary glands was not altered by Se treatment. In cell culture, direct exposure of human umbilical vein endothelial cells to Se induced cell death predominantly through apoptosis, decreased the gelatinolytic activities of matrix metalloproteinase-2, or both. These results indicate a potential for Se metabolites to inhibit key attributes (proliferation, survival, and matrix degradation) of endothelial cells critical for angiogenic sprouting. Therefore, inhibition of angiogenesis associated with cancer may be a novel mechanism for the anticancer activity of Se in vivo, and multiple mechanisms are probably involved in mediating the anti-angiogenic activity.
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PMID:Selenium-induced inhibition of angiogenesis in mammary cancer at chemopreventive levels of intake. 1056 99

The reaction of [(Me(3)Si)(2)N](2)S with equimolar amounts of SCl(2) and SO(2)Cl(2) produces S(4)N(4) in a good yield. The new chalcogen nitride 1,5-Se(2)S(2)N(4) has been prepared in high yield by two different reactions: (a) from [(Me(3)Si)(2)N](2)S and SeCl(4) and (b) from [(Me(3)Si)(2)N](2)Se with equimolar amounts of SCl(2) and SO(2)Cl(2). 1,5-Se(2)S(2)N(4) has a cage structure similar to those of S(4)N(4) and Se(4)N(4). The crystal structure is disordered with site occupation factors ca. 50% for selenium in each chalcogen atom position. The 12 eV EI mass spectrum shows Se(2)SN(2)(+) as the fragment with highest mass. Both the (14)N and (77)Se NMR spectra show a single resonance (-238 and 1418 ppm, respectively). These data rule out the possibility that the crystalline sample is a solid solution of S(4)N(4) and Se(4)N(4) and imply the presence of 1,5-Se(2)S(2)N(4). This deduction was further verified by Raman spectroscopy and vibrational analysis.
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PMID:Preparation, X-ray Structure, and Spectroscopic Characterization of 1,5-Se(2)S(2)N(4). 1167 Oct 87

Successful treatment of one Grade IlI and two Grade IV pressure sores on two female Macaca fascicularis, subsequent to a T11 hemilaminectomy and left spinal cord hemisection, was achieved through a combined strategy of wound care, diet, and husbandry. Wound care consisted of early and thorough debridement of all necrotic tissue, initial twice daily cleaning with an iodine scrub and application of a multi-ingredient ointment. Tissue hydrolyzer, a drying agent, vitamin E, ground selenium, and topical antibiotics were applied to the wound during the respective 45- and 46-day courses of treatment. Oral antibiotics were administered; vitamins C and E, and selenium were increased in the diet. No infection occurred and both animals recovered fully to complete the study. Importantly, pressure sores in subsequent study animals were prevented by post-operative padding of the perch with towel-covered foam and placement of a wheelchair cushion on the floor of the cage.
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PMID:Multi-tiered treatment of pressure sores in two cynomologous macaques (Macaca fascicularis). 1199 Feb 44

Forty-eight Wistar rats were treated for 3 weeks with water containing 0.7% ethylene-glycol and divided into four groups. The first group, used as control, has received sodium chloride at 1 ml/100 g BW daily. The second group was intraperitoneally injected with selenium at 10 micrograms/d per 100 g BW as NaSeO3 for 3 weeks. The third group was intraperitoneally administered with 15 mg Vit E/d per 100 g BW as alpha-tocopherol acetate for 3 weeks. The last group was simultaneously administered vitamin E and Se at the same doses and periods as the precedent groups. One day before the end of the treatment, each animal was placed in a metabolic cage for collection of 24 h urine samples and determination of urinary creatinin, urea, calcium, magnesium, phosphate and oxalate levels. Immediately thereafter, all the rats were anesthetized and aortic blood was collected to determine the same parameters as in urine. The kidneys were also removed to determine calcium oxalate deposits, dry weight and to conduct a histological examination. Our results showed decreased ionic product and increased magnesium fractional reabsorption in the group receiving only selenium and in the group receiving selenium in combination with vitamin E, in comparison with the control animals. In view of the knowledge concerning the same protective action of Vit E and selenium, regardless of tubular membrane alteration, the absence of any inhibitory effect of Vit E on calcium oxalate formation suggests that selenium, like other minerals, could be stuck onto the crystal surface and would inhibit induction of new crystals, growth and aggregation.
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PMID:Effects of intraperitoneally administered vitamin E and selenium on calcium oxalate renal stone formation: experimental study in rat. 1274 Nov 89

Zinc selenide nanoparticles (ZnSe NPs) were synthesized in the cavity of the cage-shaped protein apoferritin by designing a slow chemical reaction system, which employs tetraaminezinc ion and selenourea. The chemical synthesis of ZnSe NPs was realized in a spatially selective manner from an aqueous solution, and ZnSe cores were formed in almost all apoferritin cavities with little bulk precipitation. Three factors are found to be important for ZnSe NP synthesis in the apoferritin cavity: (1) the threefold channel, which selectively introduces zinc ion into the apoferritin cavity, (2) the apoferritin internal potential, which favors zinc ion accumulation in the cavity, and (3) the nucleation site, which nucleates ZnSe inside the cavity. The characterization of the synthesized ZnSe NPs by X-ray powder diffraction and energy-dispersive spectrometry revealed that the synthesized NPs are a collection of cubic ZnSe polycrystals. It was shown that the 500 degrees C heat treatment for 1 h under nitrogen gas transformed the polycrystalline ZnSe core into a single crystal, and single-crystal ZnSe NPs free of protein were obtained.
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PMID:Fabrication of ZnSe nanoparticles in the apoferritin cavity by designing a slow chemical reaction system. 1612 19

Zinc selenide, cadmium sulfide, and cadmium selenide clusters were produced by direct laser ablation and analyzed in a time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The positive-ion mass spectra indicated that clusters composed of six and thirteen monomer units were ultrastable in all cases. The geometries and energies of the neutral and positively charged M(n)X(n) clusters up to n = 16 were obtained computationally at the B3LYP level of theory using the SKBJ basis set for the metal atoms and the SKBJ(d,2df) basis set for the chalcogen atoms. Small neutral and positive clusters (n = 1-4) have planar geometries, neutral three-dimensional clusters have the geometry of closed-cage polyhedra, and cationic three-dimensional clusters have structures with a pair of two-coordinated atoms. Physical properties of the clusters as a function of size are reported. The relative stability of the positive stoichiometric clusters provides a thermodynamic explanation for the relative stability observed experimentally from the laser-ablation mass spectrometry.
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PMID:Experimental and computational study of small (N = 1-16) stoichiometric zinc and cadmium chalcogenide clusters. 1648 Feb 97

A newly synthesized open-cage fullerene containing selenium in the rim of the 13-membered-ring orifice allows milder conditions for hydrogen insertion, and the rate for hydrogen release is ca. three times faster than its sulfur analogue.
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PMID:Fine tuning of the orifice size of an open-cage fullerene by placing selenium in the rim: insertion/release of molecular hydrogen. 1735 82

We synthesize monodisperse selenium (Se) colloidal rods, and the suspensions exhibit the smectic phase at a particle volume fraction (phi) of 0.28. Side-by-side rod clustering occurs at phi > 0.04. Cluster-size distributions and persistence times are determined for various phi. In dense suspensions (phi > 0.1), individual rods reveal characteristic fundamental motions, e.g., reptation and synchronized rotation. Mean-square displacements of the rods suggest a cage trapping and escape. Estimated translational and rotational diffusion coefficients show a large difference from predictions by computer simulations.
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PMID:Direct observation of Brownian dynamics of hard colloidal nanorods. 1791 52

This study determined the selenium (Se) bioavailability from Se-enriched garlic and cabbage using broiler chickens. Se-enriched garlic (18.5 mg of Se/kg) and cabbage (101.5 mg of Se/kg) were produced by soil enrichment using selenate. Conventional and Se-enriched garlic and cabbage were dried, ground, and added to broiler chick diets. Ninety-six broiler chickens at 1 day of age were assigned to four dietary treatments: NC (cabbage + garlic), PC (cabbage + garlic + selenomethionine, 0.5 mg of Se/kg of diet), GS (cabbage + Se-enriched garlic, 0.5 mg of Se/kg of diet), and CS (garlic + Se-enriched cabbage, 0.5 mg of Se/kg of diet), with six replicates per treatment and four birds per cage. Birds were fed the experimental diets for 4 weeks and slaughtered to obtain blood and tissues: white (breast) muscle, dark (thigh) muscle, liver, and feathers. All excreta were collected weekly, dried, and ground for Se analysis. Bird weight gain and feed intake were measured weekly. Total Se content and glutathione peroxidase (GPX) activity in liver and plasma were measured. Total liver Se content of the PC birds (0.876 mg of Se/kg) was the highest (P < .05). The CS (0.693 mg of Se/kg) and GS (0.627 mg of Se/kg) birds had higher (P < .05) total liver Se than the NC birds (0.514 mg of Se/kg). Plasma GPX activity of the PC birds was highest (P < .05), and that of CS and GS birds was higher (P < .05) than the NC birds. Liver GPX activity of the PC birds was higher (P < .05) than all other treatments. Bioavailability of Se to broiler chickens was not different (P > .05) among PC (65.2%), CS (61.2%), and GS (70.7%) birds. This study indicates that the Se from Se-enriched garlic and cabbage is highly bioavailable and can potentially be beneficial in enhancing Se status and GPX activity.
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PMID:Selenium-enriched garlic and cabbage as a dietary selenium source for broilers. 1905 61


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