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Danica Mislovičová

Researcher at Slovak Academy of Sciences

Publications -  64
Citations -  1566

Danica Mislovičová is an academic researcher from Slovak Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Concanavalin A & Mannan. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 64 publications receiving 1505 citations. Previous affiliations of Danica Mislovičová include Institute of Chemistry, Slovak Academy of Sciences.

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Soluble chromogenic substrates for the assay of endo-1,4-beta-xylanases and endo-1,4-beta-glucanases

TL;DR: New soluble chromogenic substrates were prepared for specific and rapid assays of endo-1,4-beta-xylanases and endo -1, 4- beta-glucanases, advantageous for rapid analyses of large amount of samples and also permit evaluation of the activities of both enzymes in the presence of exo-Beta-glycanases and beta-glycosidases.
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Lectinomics II. A highway to biomedical/clinical diagnostics.

TL;DR: The technology is still in its infancy, but already shows promise as an efficient tool to decipher the enormous complexity of the glycocode that influences physiological status of the cell and is predicted by using recombinant and artificial lectins that will render production of lectin microarrays cost-effective and more affordable.
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Sensitive detection of endo-1,4-β-glucanases and endo-1,4-β-xylanases in gels

TL;DR: The high sensitivity of the detection is achieved by selective removal of depolymerized dyed substrates from the agar replicas by solvents which neither solubilize nor precipitate the original nondegraded dyed polysaccharides present in the agAR gel.
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Lectinomics I. Relevance of exogenous plant lectins in biomedical diagnostics

TL;DR: Broad information is presented on the lectinomics field, illustrating that lectin diagnostics might become practical alternative to antibody-based diagnostic products, and the rising trend of lectin utilization in biomedical diagnostics may initiate a development of innovative methods based on better analytical technologies.
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Antioxidant and antimutagenic activity of mannan neoglycoconjugates: Mannan–human serum albumine and mannan–penicillin G acylase

TL;DR: It is suggested that different mechanisms may be involved in their protective effect--antioxidant activity in the case of ofloxacin-induced DNA damage and direct adsorption of AO on mannan conjugates as possible mechanisms of protection, based on spectrophotometric measurements.