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: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
Rec
)
58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A pool of scrapie-infected sheep brains was used to spike mixtures of porcine bone and intestine. These were processed in pilot-scale facsimiles of 12 rendering procedures that were in use within the European Union in 1991, and three that were not. Meat and bone meal, and tallow, were produced from the rendered tissues. Suspensions of all the meat and bone meal samples, and two of the tallow samples were assayed in mice for scrapie infectivity. Neither of the tallow samples had any detectable infectivity but the meat and bone meal samples were positive, except for those produced by processes involving exposure to hyperbaric steam. In addition, greaves were produced from the scrapie-spiked raw materials by an atypical low-temperature process and subjected to solvent extraction with hot
heptane
. The treated greaves were then exposed to steam to drive off residual solvent. Although the starting titre of infectivity in these greaves was low, there appeared to be no reduction in infectivity as a result of the treatments with hot
heptane
and steam. However, there was no detectable infectivity in the meat and bone meal prepared from the greaves produced by the atypical low-temperature process after it had been exposed to hyperbaric steam.
Vet
Rec
PMID:Effect of rendering procedures on the scrapie agent. 946 83
The study was designed to determine the effect on bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and scrapie agents of the solvent extraction processes used in the past by British renderers. The raw material was mouse spleen infected with either the 22A strain of scrapie agent or the 301V strain of BSE agent. Samples were exposed to hexane,
heptane
, petroleum spirit or perchlorethylene at the relevant temperatures for the appropriate times. Control samples were exposed to the same range of temperatures for the same range of times in saline. Other samples were exposed to the hot solvents, followed by treatment with dry heat at 100 degrees C for 30 minutes and steam at 100 degrees C for 30 minutes. Further samples were exposed only to the dry heat and steam cycles. No single complete process was significantly more effective than any of the others, and they all produced only slight inactivation, less than one log on average for both strains of agent. The average degree of inactivation produced by exposure to hot saline was generally comparable to that produced by exposure to the hot solvents. This was also true for the samples exposed only to dry heat and steam compared with those exposed to hot solvent before treatment with dry heat and steam, and suggests that the slight inactivation was caused by the heat rather than by the solvents. It is concluded that the solvent extraction processes used by renderers in Britain had little capacity to inactivate BSE and scrapie agents.
Vet
Rec
1998 Jul 04
PMID:Solvent extraction as an adjunct to rendering: the effect on BSE and scrapie agents of hot solvents followed by dry heat and steam. 969 25
The ultrafast dynamics of a solution in spatially restricted environments was studied by using the ultrafast transient lens (UTL) method. The UTL method is used to monitor the molecular dynamics of a solution by means of a change in the refractive index, which is advantageous for investigating the molecular dynamics of restricted systems. We investigated the photoisomerization of azobenzene derivatives in cyclodextrin nanocavities and revealed how the confinement affects the photoisomerization dynamics and yields. We also studied the relaxation dynamics of photo-excited auramine O (AuO) in a water/aerosol-OT/n-
heptane
reversed micelle. Both the perturbed properties of the included water and the interactions between AuO and the interface of the reversed micelle strongly appeared to affect the relaxation dynamics. At the same time, we observed a change in the refractive index suggesting a structural change of the micelles in the picosecond region that could not be detected by transient absorption spectroscopy. In addition, we developed the total internal reflection UTL (TIR-UTL) method to monitor the ultrafast molecular dynamics at the liquid interface. The relaxation dynamics of photoexcited AuO at the silica/water interface were observed with subpicosecond time resolution, and it was revealed that the interaction with the interface strongly inhibited the relaxation process. These results demonstrated the advantages of the UTL method for investigating the molecular dynamics of a solution in spatially restricted environments.
Chem
Rec
2004
PMID:Ultrafast dynamics of a solution in spatially restricted environments studied by photothermal spectroscopies. 1573 13