scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Low protein

About: Low protein is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 8139 publications have been published within this topic receiving 213225 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There were significant correlations between increase in the dissociation rate constant, decrease in binding constant and increase in magnitude of conformational change, and the association rate constant did not correlate with any property of the actin-myosin complex.
Abstract: The rates of formation and dissociation of actin-subfragment 1 and actin-heavy mero-myosin complexes were measured by using light-scatter and the change in fluorescence of N-iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulpho-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine (IAEDANS)-labelled acting as probes. Association rate measurements were made at low protein concentration, where the transients approximated to single exponentials with rate constants proportional to the concentration of reactant in excess. Dissociation rate measurements were made by displacing IAEDANS-actin from myosin with excess native actin and by a salt jump. The second-order rate constant of association for actin-subfragment 1 was 3 x 10(6) M-1 . s-1 in 60 mM-KCl at 13 degree C. It was decreased 10-fold in 500 mM-KCl and in 50% (v/v) glycol. It was decreased 6-fold when MgADP or Mg[beta gamma-imido]ATP bound to myosin. The dissociation rate constant was 0.012 s-1 in 60 mM-KCl at 13 degree C. It was increased 4-fold by 500 mM-KCl, 25-fold by 50% glycol, 8-fold by MgADP binding and 170-fold by Mg[beta gamma-imido]ATP binding. Ea for association was 70 kJ . mol-1 and for dissociation 35 kJ . mol-1. Heavy meromyosin associated at twice the rate observed for subfragment 1 and dissociated at less than one-twentieth of the rate for subfragment 1 (60 mM-KCl, 25 degree C), but when Mg[beta gamma-imido]ATP bound actin-heavy meromyosin dissociated at one-half the rate for subfragment 1. There were significant correlations between increase in the dissociation rate constant, decrease in binding constant and increase in magnitude of conformational change. The association rate constant did not correlate with any property of the actin-myosin complex.

70 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, Amaranthus cruentus seeds were isolated by different alkaline treatments and combinations of low alkaline steeping and protease treatments, and the properties of amaranth starch isolated by alkaline and low-alkaline-protease treatments were analyzed and compared.
Abstract: Starch was isolated from Amaranthus cruentus seeds by different alkaline treatments and combinations of low alkaline steeping and protease treatments. For low alkaline-protease treatments, amaranth seeds were steeped in a NaOH solution (0.05%, pH 12) for 22 hr to loosen the protein matrix and ground. The pH of the ground slurry was adjusted to 7.5 and subjected to a protease (from Aspergillus sojae) treatment. The slurry was incubated with 1 or 0.5% of the protease (based on total amount of seeds) for 2 hr at 37°C and 50 rpm. The starch was then isolated by screening and centrifugation. This method produced starch with a low protein content (≤0.2%) and a high recovery (≈80%). Amaranth starch isolated by alkaline treatments were also studied by using various concentrations of NaOH steeping solutions and with or without alkaline solution during grinding and washing. The properties of amaranth starch isolated by alkaline and low alkaline-protease treatments were analyzed and compared. The properties...

70 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The pharmacokinetics of ceftriaxone in an animal species with binding characteristics similar to man (baboon), appear to be non-linear when based on total drug concentration and linear whenbased on the free drug concentration.
Abstract: 1. The plasma protein binding characteristics of ceftriaxone, a new cephalosporin antibiotic, were determined in human, baboon, rabbit, dog and rat plasma. 2. The protein binding of ceftriaxone was similar and concentration-dependent in human, baboon, rabbit and rat plasma, being highly bound (90-95%) at low concentrations (less than 100 micrograms/ml) but considerably less bound (approx. 60%) at high concentrations (greater than 400 micrograms/ml). Binding in dog plasma was also concentration-dependent but much lower (approx. 25%) at lower concentrations (30 micrograms/ml) and virtually unbound (2%) at high concentrations (1 mg/ml) over a similar concentration range. 3. Binding of ceftriaxone to human plasma involved two sites: a high affinity-low capacity (saturable) site and a low affinity-high capacity site. Binding to dog plasma apparently was at a single, high affinity-low capacity site. 4. The pharmacokinetics of ceftriaxone in an animal species with binding characteristics similar to man (baboon), appear to be non-linear when based on total drug concentration and linear when based on the free drug concentration. In the dog, pharmacokinetic parameters did not change appreciably if calculated from total or free drug concentrations, due to the low protein binding.

69 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: McAllister et al. as discussed by the authors used a farm scale computer model, which includes a mechanistic cow model, to model a typical pasture-based New Zealand dairy farm as the baseline farm.

69 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings show that physiological processes regulate the composition of the different components of the adult body, and Diet effects occur as differences in overall body size and in relative allocation to these components.
Abstract: Fitness depends not only on resource uptake but also on the allocation of these resources to various life history functions. This study explores the life-history consequences of larval diet in terms not only of larval performance but also of adult body composition and reproductive traits in the forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria Hubner). Caterpillars were reared on their preferred tree host, trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides), or on one of three artificial foods: high protein:low carbohydrate, equal protein-to-carbohydrate ratio or low protein:high carbohydrate. Survivorship, larval development rate and adult body size were lowest on the carbohydrate-biased diet and similar on the protein-biased and equal-ratio diets. Fecundity increased with body size but did not otherwise differ between diets. Moths reared on the carbohydrate-biased diet allocated a lower proportion of their mass to the ovaries and more to somatic growth whereas those on equal-ratio and protein-biased diets allocated more to reproductive tissue and less to somatic tissue. These differences in allocation to reproduction arose from differences in the size of eggs, an index of offspring quality. No differences were found in lipid and protein content of female ovaries, accessory glands or somatic tissue, or of the whole body of male moths. The findings show that physiological processes regulate the composition of the different components of the adult body. Diet effects occur as differences in overall body size and in relative allocation to these components. Although lepidopterans can, to a large extent, compensate post-ingestively for nutritionally deficient diets, investment in reproduction vs somatic growth depends on the nutrients available.

69 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Fatty acid
74.5K papers, 2.2M citations
85% related
Calcium
78.5K papers, 2.2M citations
82% related
Amino acid
124.9K papers, 4M citations
81% related
Adipose tissue
54.6K papers, 2.5M citations
79% related
Gene expression
113.3K papers, 5.5M citations
78% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20227
2021298
2020300
2019278
2018308
2017306