53 research outputs found
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The small-scale manufacture of compound animal feed (ODNRI Bulletin No. 9)
This bulletin supersedes TDRI report G67 The small-scale manufacture of compound animal feed, which was first published in 1971. lt retains a similar format to G67, but the text has been extensively revised and expanded in the light of numerous enquiries dealt with by ODNRI on all aspects of feed production in the intervening years. lt is hoped that it will act as a technical and investment guide for those interested in initiating the production of compound animal feeds, as well as acting as a useful reference report for those already actively operating in this field. Chapter 1 describes the economic background to the industry; theoretical aspects of animal nutrition are dealt with in Chapter 2; these are related to the properties of the various raw materials used in feed production in Chapter 3. Chapter 4 describes the manufacturing process and examines the physical requirements for setting up plants at various scales of output, and Chapter 5 develops cost and return models for the plants described
The Canine Papillomavirus and Gamma HPV E7 Proteins Use an Alternative Domain to Bind and Destabilize the Retinoblastoma Protein
The high-risk HPV E6 and E7 proteins cooperate to immortalize primary human cervical cells and the E7 protein can independently transform fibroblasts in vitro, primarily due to its ability to associate with and degrade the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein, pRb. The binding of E7 to pRb is mediated by a conserved Leu-X-Cys-X-Glu (LXCXE) motif in the conserved region 2 (CR2) of E7 and this domain is both necessary and sufficient for E7/pRb association. In the current study, we report that the E7 protein of the malignancy-associated canine papillomavirus type 2 encodes an E7 protein that has serine substituted for cysteine in the LXCXE motif. In HPV, this substitution in E7 abrogates pRb binding and degradation. However, despite variation at this critical site, the canine papillomavirus E7 protein still bound and degraded pRb. Even complete deletion of the LXSXE domain of canine E7 failed to interfere with binding to pRb in vitro and in vivo. Rather, the dominant binding site for pRb mapped to the C-terminal domain of canine E7. Finally, while the CR1 and CR2 domains of HPV E7 are sufficient for degradation of pRb, the C-terminal region of canine E7 was also required for pRb degradation. Screening of HPV genome sequences revealed that the LXSXE motif of the canine E7 protein was also present in the gamma HPVs and we demonstrate that the gamma HPV-4 E7 protein also binds pRb in a similar way. It appears, therefore, that the type 2 canine PV and gamma-type HPVs not only share similar properties with respect to tissue specificity and association with immunosuppression, but also the mechanism by which their E7 proteins interact with pRb
Steroidal sapogenins from leaves of cordyline species
The steroidal sapogenins obtained by hydrolysis of the saponins found in the leaves of eight species of Cordyline have been studied. With the exception of C. terminalis var. petiolaris, the extracts of all species yielded 1,3-dihydroxy sapogenins, which were usually the predominant compounds. C. terminalis var. petiolaris differed from all the other species examined, not only because of its lack of dihydroxy sapogenins, but also because it yielded the 5β-spirostanes, sarsasapogenin and smilagenin. The extracts of all seven other species contained only 5α-sapogenins. Compounds detected were 3-epf-tigogenin, 3-epf-neotigogenin, tigogenin, neotigogenin, diosgenin, yamogenin, cannigenin, cordylagenin, brisbagenin, ruscogenin and 255-ruscogenin
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Evaluation of the ability of different concentrations of aqueous acetone, aqueous methanol and aqueous acetone: Methanol (1∶1) to extract aflatoxin from naturally contaminated maize
A conventional TLC tank was compared with a specially designed continuous linear development chamber for the ether development phase of the quantitation of aflatoxins by bi-directional High Performance Thin Layer Chromatography (HPTLC). No significant difference was detected in the precision of the method. However, the continuous linear development chamber afforded greater accuracy in aflatoxin determination and required only half the development time and a small fraction of the solvent used in the conventional TLC tank. The ability of different concentrations of aqueous acetone, aqueous methanol and aqueous acetone: methanol (1∶1) to extract aflatoxin from naturally contaminated maize was assessed. With each system, the amount of aflatoxin extracted increased as the ratio of organic solvent: water progressed from 50∶50 to 80∶20 and then decreased or remained constant when the composition of the extraction solvent was altered to 90∶10. 80% aqueous acetone was found to extract 27% more aflatoxin than the corresponding aqueous methanol with the mixed solvent system extracting an intermediate amount of toxin. Clean-up of 80% aqueous acetone extracts of maize by elution through phenol (PH) bonded-phase cartridges resulted in poor aflatoxin retention when the proportion of acetone in 5 ml aliquots of extract was greater than 70%. This could be increased to 100% retention by the addition of an equal quantity of methanol prior to dilution with 1% aqueous acetic acid and elution through the cartridge
Crabbogenin, 1β-hydroxycrabbogenin, strictagenin and pompeygenin, four new steroidal sapogenins from cordyline stricta leaves
From the leaves of Cordyline stricia Endl. four new steroidal sapogenins crabbogenin {5α-spirost-25(27)-en-3α-ol}, 1β-hydroxycrabbogenin, strictagenin {(20S, 22S, 25S)-5α-furostan-22, 25-epoxy-1β, 3α, 26-triol} and pompeygenin {(25S)-5α-spirostane-1β, 3α-25-triol} have been isolated and their structures determined by chemical and spectroscopic methods
Brisbagenin and brisbenone, two new spirostanes from Cordyline species
From the leaves of Cordyline cannifolia R.Br., a new steroidal sapogenin diol has been isolated, to which the trivial name brisbagenin has been given. Mass spectral, infra-red and nuclear magnetic resonance data of brisbagenin and its acetylated derivatives showed. the sapogenin to be 1β, 3β-dihydroxy-5α, 25α-spirostane. Jones oxidation of brisbagenin-1-acetate yielded 5α,25α-spirost-1-en-3-one. A compound, identical to this synthetic material was isolated from the leaves of an undescribed Cordyline species, but the product was considered to be an artefact produced during its isolation
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