949 resultados para Sugar esters
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Black flies are opportunistic sugar-feeders. They take sugar meals from Homopteran honeydew secretions or plant nectars, depending on availability. Homopteran honeydew secretions contain both simple and complex carbohydrates while plant nectars contain primarily simple carbohydrates. In order to determine whether honeydew secretions offer more energy than plant nectars to their insect visitors a study of wild-caught black flies was undertaken in Algonquin Provincial Park, Canada during the spring of 1 998 and 1 999. It was hypothesized that female black flies maintained on honeydew sugars will survive longer, produce more eggs and have a greater parasite vectoring potential than those maintained on artificial nectar or distilled water. Results demonstrated that: (1) host-seeking female Prosimulimfuscum/mixtum and Simulium venustum maintained on artificial honeydew did not survive longer than those maintained on artificial nectar when fed ad libitum; (2) fiiUy engorged S. venustum and Simulium rugglesi maintained on artificial honeydew did not produce more eggs than those maintained on artificial nectar when fed ad libitum; and (3) S. rugglesi did not have a greater vectoring potential of Leucocytozoon simondi when maintained on artificial honeydew as opposed to artificial nectar when fed ad libitum. However, all flies maintained on the two sugars (artificial honeydew and artificial nectar) survived longer, produce more eggs and had greater vectoring potential than those maintained on distilled water alone.
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The sugar beet cyst nematode, Heterodera schachtii, is a major agricultural pest. The disruption of the mating behaviour of this plant parasite in the field may provide a means of biological control, and a subsequent increase in crop yield. The H. schachtii female sex pheromone, which attracts homospecific males, was collected in an aqueous medium and isolated using high performance liquid chromatography. Characterization of the male-attractive material revealed that it was heat stable and water soluble. The aqueous medium conditioned by female H. schachtii was found to be biologically active and stimulated male behaviour in a concentration dependent manner. The activity of the crude pheromone was specific to males of H. schachtii and did not attract second stage juveniles. Results indicated that vanillic acid, a putative nematode pheromone, is not an active component of the H. schachtii sex pheromone. Male H. schachtii exhibited stylet thrusting, a poorly understood behaviour of the male, upon exposure to the female sex pheromone. This behaviour appeared to be associated with mate-finding and was used as a novel indicator of biological activity in bioassays. Serotonin, thought to be involved in the neural control of copulatory behaviour in nematodes, stimulated stylet thrusting. However, the relationship between stylet thrusting induced by the sex pheromone and stylet thrusting induced by serotonin is not clear. Extracellular electrical activity was recorded fi-om the anterior region of H. schachtii males during stylet thrusting, and appeared to be associated with this behaviour. The isolation of the female sex pheromone of H. schachtii may, ultimately, lead to the structural identification and synthesis of the active substance for use in a novel biological control strategy.
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Although much research has been conducted on blood-meal acquisition in adult female black flies (Diptera: Simuliidae), the same cannot be said for sugarmeals. Both sexes feed on sugar which provides energy for flight and it has been commonly held that nectar is the major carbohydrate source. This thesis addresses the question of whether a non-floral carbohydrate source, specifically homopteran honeydew, is ingested by male and female black flies. Black flies reared in the laboratory have been observed to readily ingest freshly excreted and older (dry) honeydew when presented with honeydew coated tamarack branches. Field work was conducted in Algonquin Park, Ontario in the spring and summer of 1993. Three separate studies were designed to test whether homopteran honeydew is an important carbohydrate source for black flies and whether flies from different habitats utilize different sugar sources. The sugars melezitose and / or stachyose are known to occur in a variety of homopteran honeydews and therefore were used as indicators of honeydew feeding by black flies. In the first study, black flies were collected with insect nets from a stand of Larix larcina heavily infested with honeydew - producing homopterans (Adelges lariciatus). Six black fly species were captured: Simulium venustum, S. rostra tum, S. vittatum, Stegopterna mutata, S. aureum and S. quebecense. Samples of honeydew and individual black flies were tested using thin layer chromatography (T. L. C.) with fructose, glucose, sucrose, turanose, melezitose, raffinose and stachyose as standards. All sugars except turanose and melezitose were found in the adelgid honeydew samples. Since the sugar melezitose was absent from ~ honeydew samples, stachyose was used to indicate that black flies were feeding from this particular honeydew source. Of the 201 black flies tested, 194 contained sugars which occurred in 16 combinations. Stachyose combinations excluding melezitose, present in 45.9 % of flies, were used to indicate that black flies had been feeding on the adelgid honeydew. In the second study, black flies were collected in the morning and evening on 8 collection dates, using a vehicle mounted insect net. The crops and midguts of 10 male and 10 female Simulium venustum were dissected on each sample date. In total the gut contents of 320 individual flies were analysed by T. L. C. The sugars identified from these flies were present in the following proportions: fructose (100.0%), glucose (100.0%), sucrose/turanose (50.4%), melezitose (30.3%), raffinose (18.8%) and stachyose (8.7%). These sugars occurred in fourteen different combinations. It is argued that the presence of melezitose and / or stachyose indicates that black flies had fed on homopteran honeydew. Significantly more female flies (40.0%) than male flies (27.5%) had fed on honeydew. In the third study, adult black flies were sampled by sweep netting vegetation in four habitats in the morning and evening on 8 collection dates. The habitats are as follows: (1) Davies Bog, (2) Abandoned Air Field (dominated by blueberries, Vaccinium spp.), (3) Deciduous Habitat and (4) Coniferous Habitat. Sugars in the crops and midguts of female flies were tested by T. L. C. and, for S. venustum, it was found that significantly fewer flies (18.8%) from the Air Field contained honeydew than from the other three sites (Davies Bog, 34.4%; Deciduous Habitat, 36.2%; Coniferous Habitat, 25.0%). Of the 1287 black flies tested individually by T. L. C. 441 (34.3%) contained melezitose and / or stachyose sugars indicating that this proportion of the population were feeding from Homopteran honeydew. It is therefore clear that floral (nectar) sugars are not the only source of carbohydrates available to black flies.
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A study was undertaken' to determine the applicability of gas liquid chromatography to the simultaneous analysis of sugars and sugar phosphates from biological samples. A new method of silylation involving dimethylsulfoxide, hexamethyldisilazane, trimethylchlorosilane and cyclohexane (1:0.2:0.1:1) which rapidly silylated sugars and sugar phosphates was developed. Subsequent chromatography on a 5% SE-52 column gave good resolution of the sugar and sugar phosphate samples. Sugar phosphates decomposed during chromatography and were lost at the 7 x 10-3 ~mole level. Acidic ethanol extraction of yeast samples revealed background contamination from the yeast sample, the culture medium and the silylation reagents which would further limit the level of detection obtainable with the glc for sugars in biological samples to the 3 x 10-4 ~mole level.
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A sugar permit for Col. F. McCordick ending July 18, 1918. The permit is issued July 3, 1918.
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Receipt from W.J. and J. McCalla, St. Catharines for sugar, March 3, 1888.
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Les cyclopropanes sont des motifs d’une grande importance puisqu’ils sont présents dans plusieurs molécules biologiquement actives en plus d’être de puissants intermédiaires dans la synthèse de molécules complexes. Au cours de cet ouvrage, nous avons développé une nouvelle méthode générale pour la synthèse d’ylures d’iodonium de malonates, soit d’importants précurseurs d’esters cyclopropane-1,1-dicarboxyliques. Ainsi, à l’aide de ces ylures, une méthode très efficace pour la synthèse d’esters cyclopropane-1,1-dicarboxyliques racémiques a été développée. Des travaux ont aussi été entrepris pour la synthèse énantiosélective de ces composés. Par ailleurs, les esters cyclopropane-1,1-dicarboxyliques ont été utilisés dans le développement de deux nouvelles méthodologies, soit dans une réaction de cycloaddition (3+3) avec des imines d’azométhines et dans la formation d’allènes par l’addition-1,7 de cuprates. Nous avons aussi poursuivi l’étude synthétique du cylindrocyclophane F impliquant l’utilisation de cyclopropanes pour le contrôle des centres chiraux. Ainsi l’addition-1,5 d’un cuprate sur un ester cyclopropane-1,1-dicarboxylique a été utilisée comme l’une des étapes clés de notre synthèse. L’autre centre chiral a pu être contrôlé par l’hydrogénolyse sélective d’un cyclopropylméthanol. Ces études ont, par ailleurs, mené au développement d’une nouvelle réaction d’arylcyclopropanation énantiosélective utilisant des carbénoïdes de zinc générés in situ à partir de réactifs diazoïques. Cette méthode permet d’accéder très efficacement aux cyclopropanes 1,2,3-substitués. De plus, nous avons développé la première réaction de Simmons-Smith catalytique en zinc menant à un produit énantioenrichi.
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Introduction : Le dalcetrapib, inhibiteur de la glycoprotéine hydrophobe de transfert des esters de cholestérol (CETP), a été étudié dans le cadre de l’essai clinique de phase II dal-PLAQUE2 (DP2). L’objectif principal est d’étudier l’effet du dalcetrapib après 1 an de traitement sur la structure et la fonction des HDL dans une sous-population de la cohorte DP2. Méthode : Les sujets de la cohorte DP2 ayant une série de mesures de cIMT et des échantillons de plasma et sérum au baseline et à 1 an de traitement furent sélectionnés (379 sujets: 193 du groupe placebo (PCB) et 186 du groupe dalcetrapib (DAL)). Des données biochimiques prédéterminées, le profil des concentrations et tailles des sous-classes de HDL et LDL en résonance magnétique nucléaire (RMN) et 2 mesures de capacité d’efflux de cholestérol (CEC) du sérum ont été explorées. Les données statistiques furent obtenues en comparant les changements à un an à partir du « baseline » avec un ANOVA ou ANCOVA. La procédure normalisée de fonctionnement d’essai d’efflux de cholestérol permet de calculer l’efflux fractionnel (en %) de 3H-cholestérol des lignées cellulaires BHK-ABCA1 (fibroblastes) et J774 (macrophages, voie ABCA1) et HepG2 (hépatocytes, voie SR-BI), vers les échantillons sériques de la cohorte DP2. Résultats : Pour la biochimie plasmatique, un effet combiné des changements d’activité de CETP dans les 2 groupes a causé une réduction de 30% dans le groupe DAL. Après 1 an de traitement dans le groupe DAL, la valeur de HDL-C a augmenté de 35,5% (p < 0,001) et l’apoA-I a augmenté de 14,0% (p < 0,001). Au profil RMN, dans le groupe DAL après 1 an de traitement, il y a augmentation de la taille des HDL-P (5,2%; p < 0,001), des grosses particules HDL (68,7%; p < 0,001) et des grosses particules LDL (37,5%; p < 0,01). Les petites particules HDL sont diminuées (-9,1%; p < 0,001). Il n’y a aucune différence significative de mesure de cIMT entre les deux groupes après 1 an de traitement. Pour la CEC, il y a augmentation significative par la voie du SR-BI et une augmentation via la voie ABCA1 dans le groupe DAL après 1 an de traitement. Conclusion : Après un an de traitement au dalcetrapib, on note une hausse de HDL-C, des résultats plutôt neutres au niveau du profil lipidique par RMN et une CEC augmentée mais trop faible pour affecter la valeur de cIMT chez les échantillons testés.
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The present study indicate the scope for the utilization of the marine fungus Aspergillus awamori Nagazawa BTMFW 032 for extracellular lipase production employing submerged fermentation. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report on lipase production by a marine fungus employing statistical modeling towards industrial production. The characterization of purified lipase produced by A. awamori showed stability in organic solvents, oxidizing agent and reducing agents, I,3-regiospecificity and hydrolytic activity. These properties make this lipase an ideal candidate for biocatalysis in organic media for the production of novel compounds such as biodiesel and sugar fatty esters. 91.4 % reduction in oil and grease content in ayurvedic oil by the treatment of A. awamori lipase indicates that there is a scope for this enzyme in the treatment of oil effluents and bioremediation. There is ample scope for further research on the biochemistry of the enzyme, structure elucidation and enzyme engineering towards a wide range of further applications, besides enriching scientific knowledge on marine enzymes.
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