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Institution

Animal Research Institute

About: Animal Research Institute is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Babesia bovis. The organization has 1512 authors who have published 2109 publications receiving 55683 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ewes marked between one and five days after treatment and having a decrease in plasma progesterone were considered to have responded to the treatment, and differences due to dose were significant with the two higher doses being more effective.

30 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of a 3D QSAR study of the binding of methylene lactams to recombinant ecdysone receptor protein suggest that this class of ligands is indeed recognised by a single conformation of the EcR binding pocket.

29 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: This chapter discusses the endogenous control of estrus and ovulation in sheep, cattle, and swine.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the endogenous control of estrus and ovulation in sheep, cattle, and swine. For the continuance of the species, sexual receptivity and ovulation are two essential physiological events in the life of the adult female mammal. Of necessity, these events must generally be mutually interrelated and interdependent, and usually occur within a few hours of each other. Among those species regarded as being spontaneous ovulators, the rat and the human have perhaps received most attention; the former as a consequence of its availability in most laboratories, and the latter for obvious reasons. The extent of the basic knowledge, in certain areas of reproduction in domestic species—for example, the sheep—is rapidly catching up with what is known about the rat and the human. This has come about as a consequence of (1) economic pressures to make livestock production more efficient and (2) the realization not only that domestic animals make useful experimental animals, but also that comparative studies can lead to a better understanding of reproductive processes. The terms estrus and onset of estrus have often been loosely used without specifying whether they were being defined in terms of the histological state of the uterus or vagina, or in terms of sexual behavior.

29 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, B. subtilis protease, trypsin and pepsin were used to improve the dispersibility of rapeseed, soy and sunflower protein isolates.
Abstract: Surfactant and proteinase treatments were used to improve the dispersibility of rapeseed, soy and sunflower protein isolates. Of the different surfactants tested, only the anionic surfactants, i.e. sodium and potassium salts of myristic, oleic and linoleic acids and sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) were effective for solubilizing rapeseed protein prepared from commercial oil-extracted meals. The solubilization was more effective at higher reaction pH and temperature. Addition of sodium hexametaphosphate enhanced the solubilization effect of SDS which was, however, annulled during storage. Potassium linoleate at a level of 8–10% of protein increased the dispersibility from 55% to over 90% when the mixture was treated at 65°C, pH 10 for 15 min or at 22°C, pH 12 for 5 min. This latter temperature had to be increased, however, to 32–42°C to obtain stable dispersibility during storage. Enzymatic treatment of rapeseed protein with B. subtilis protease, trypsin and pepsin were effective while bromelain, papain and α-chymotrypsin were ineffective. However, due to high salt content of the treated protein isolates resulting from neutralization after reaction at pH 2, the pepsin treatment was impractical. The subtilis protease and pepsin treated protein isolates after drying retained high dispersibility at all storage temperatures of -20, 4, 22 and 37°C, whereas the control as well as the SDS, oleate and linoleate treated protein isolates slowly decreased in dispersibility during storage; the surfactant treated protein isolates still maintained 80–90% dispersibility after storage at 22°C for 6 months compared to 55–65% for the untreated protein isolates. Solubilization effects of palmitate and myristate were about the same as that of oleate and linoleate. The protein suspensions resuspended from isoelectric precipitates showed almost perfect dispersibilities, 92–100%, when the supernatants from centrifugation of the protein suspensions were spray dried or freeze dried. This implies that the isoelectric precipitation reaction, rather than the drying process, is considered a critical factor of low dispersibility of the protein isolates, especially for rapeseed protein.

29 citations


Authors

Showing all 1512 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Peter C. Doherty10151640162
Iain J. Clarke7448322163
Raymond C. Boston6345415839
David J. Hampson6037312933
Paul H Hemsworth5928711301
Morris Schnitzer5714116120
Ian A. Clark5618310674
Frank R. Dunshea5550311292
Nicola Senesi5324511588
David W. Pethick503488970
Peter J. Walker491536979
Hume Field4813510346
Steven P. Djordjevic472096871
John R. Pluske463049264
Michael P. Ward464198093
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202110
20207
20197
201814
20178
201610