5 research outputs found

    Binary Systems with Acetamide

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    The system acetamide - propionamide was investigated by the freezing point method. The solubility curve obtained showed a eutectic at approximately 0.5 mol. fraction. The experimentally determined solubility curve corresponds well with the ideal solubility calculated from the ideal equation

    The GPI biosynthetic pathway as a therapeutic target for African sleeping sickness

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    AbstractAfrican sleeping sickness is a debilitating and often fatal disease caused by tsetse fly transmitted African trypanosomes. These extracellular protozoan parasites survive in the human bloodstream by virtue of a dense cell surface coat made of variant surface glycoprotein. The parasites have a repertoire of several hundred immunologically distinct variant surface glycoproteins and they evade the host immune response by antigenic variation. All variant surface glycoproteins are anchored to the plasma membrane via glycosylphosphatidylinositol membrane anchors and compounds that inhibit the assembly or transfer of these anchors could have trypanocidal potential. This article compares glycosylphosphatidylinositol biosynthesis in African trypanosomes and mammalian cells and identifies several steps that could be targets for the development of parasite-specific therapeutic agents

    The complex structures of arabinogalactan-proteins and the journey towards understanding function

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    The original publication can be found at www.springerlink.comArabinogalactan-proteins (AGPs) are a family of complex proteoglycans found in all higher plants. Although the precise function(s) of any single AGP is unknown, they are implicated in diverse developmental roles such as differentiation, cell-cell recognition, embryogenesis and programmed cell death. DNA sequencing projects have made possible the identification of the genes encoding a large number of putative AGP protein backbones. In contrast, our understanding of how AGPs undergo extensive post-translational modification is poor and it is important to understand these processes since they are likely to be critical for AGP function. Genes believed to be responsible for post-translational modification of an AGP protein backbone, include prolyl hydroxylases, glycosyl transferases, proteases and glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchor synthesising enzymes. Here we examine models for proteoglycan function in animals and yeast to highlight possible strategies for determining the function(s) of individual AGPs in plants.Yolanda Gaspar, Kim L. Johnson, James A. McKenna, Antony Bacic and Carolyn J. Schult
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