167 research outputs found

    New Cheese-Like Food Production from Soy Milk — Utility of Soy Milk Curdling Yeast

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    Soybeans are a traditional food in eastern Asia, particularly in Japan and China. They were eaten in 100 BC in China. The beans can be processed into Tofu, soy milk, fermented seasonings, soy sauce or Miso paste, and Natto and green beans. Soybeans have rich nutrition, protein lipid, and other functional substances such as isoflavones. However, soybeans are difficult to process for use as food because of tissue and cell wall hardness. Therefore, soybeans are conducted to do some treatments, e.g., boiling, steaming, roasting, crushing/grinding, and some enzyme treating, to eat soy protein easily. Soy storage proteins mainly comprise two proteins as 7S globulin composed with β-conglycinin and 11S globulin containing glycinin composed of 5 subunits. β-Conglycinin, included in 7S globulin, is composed of three subunits

    Many-Brane Extention of the Randall-Sundrum Solution

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    Recently, Randall and Sundrum proposed a static solution to Einstein's equations in five spacetime dimensions with two 3-branes located at the fixed points of S1/Z2S^1/Z_2 to solve the hierarchy problem. We extend the solution and construct static and also inflationary solutions to Einstein's equations in five spacetime dimensions, one of which is compactified on S1S^1, with any number of 3-branes whose locations are taken to be arbitrary. We discuss how the hierarchy problem can be explained in our model.Comment: PTPTeX 1.0(preprint style), 8 pages, no figures, references and typos correcte

    Chiral Polyurea with L-Lysinyl Residue Aimed for Optical Resolution

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    Novel polyurea was synthesized from lysinyl residue, L-lysine-4-nitroanilide Novel polyurea was synthesized from lysinyl residue, L-lysine-4-nitroanilide (L-Lys-4-NA) and 1,4-phenylene diisocyanate (1,4-PDI). The polyurea thus prepared gave durable self-standing membranes. The polyurea was converted into molecular recognition materials by using Z-D-Glu or Z-L-Glu as a print molecule. The Z-D-Glu molecularly imprinted membrane adsorbed the D-isomer of Glu in preference to the corresponding L-isomer and vice versa. Even though the polyurea consisted of L-lysinyl residue, both Z-D-Glu and Z-L-Glu worked as print molecules to construct molecular (chiral) recognition sites in the membrane. Those two types of molecularly imprinted membrane show chiral separation abilities, adopting a concentration gradient or an applied potential difference as a driving force for membrane transport

    Selective Hydrogenation and Transfer Hydrogenation for Post-Functional Synthesis of Trifluoromethylphenyl Diazirine Derivatives for Photoaffinity Labeling

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    Elucidation of protein functions on the basis of structure–activity relationships can reveal the mechanisms of homeostasis functions in life and is one of the greatest interests of scientists. In the human body, many proteins are activated and/or inactivated by ligands to maintain homeostasis. Understanding the mechanism of molecular interactions between small bioactive ligands and proteins is an important step in rational drug design and discovery. ! Photoaffinity labeling, which is one of the most familiar approaches for chemical biology analysis, was initiated using diazocarbonyl derivatives in 1962 (Singh et al., 1962). Many researchers have subsequently tried to establish alternative approaches for the direct identification of target proteins for the bioactive small ligands. These approaches are based on the affinity between the ligand and the target protein (Figure 1). Several reviews are published for the recent applications of photoaffinity labeling (Tomohiro et al., 2005; Hashimoto & Hatanaka, 2008). To archive photoaffinity labeling, researchers have to prepare photoaffinity labeling ligands. The native ligands must be modified by photoreactive compounds (photophores) by organic synthesi

    Regulation of NR4A nuclear receptors by p38

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    In Drosophila, the melanization reaction is an important defense mechanism against injury and invasion of microorganisms. Drosophila tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, also known as Pale) and dopa decarboxylase (Ddc), key enzymes in the dopamine synthesis pathway, underlie the melanin synthesis by providing the melanin precursors dopa and dopamine, respectively. It has been shown that expression of Drosophila TH and Ddc is induced in various physiological and pathological conditions, including bacterial challenge; however, the mechanism involved has not been fully elucidated. Here, we show that ectopic activation of p38 MAPK induces TH and Ddc expression, leading to upregulation of melanization in the Drosophila cuticle. This p38-dependent melanization was attenuated by knockdown of TH and Ddc, as well as by that of Drosophila HR38, a member of the NR4A family of nuclear receptors. In mammalian cells, p38 phosphorylated mammalian NR4As and Drosophila HR38 and potentiated these NR4As to transactivate a promoter containing NR4A-binding elements, with this transactivation being, at least in part, dependent on the phosphorylation. This suggests an evolutionarily conserved role for p38 MAPKs in the regulation of NR4As. Thus, p38-regulated gene induction through NR4As appears to function in the dopamine synthesis pathway and may be involved in immune and stress responses

    Delivering the world’s most intense muon beam

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    A new muon beam line, the muon science innovative channel, was set up at the Research Center for Nuclear Physics, Osaka University, in Osaka, Japan, using the 392 MeV proton beam impinging on a target. The production of an intense muon beam relies on the efficient capture of pions, which subsequently decay to muons, using a novel superconducting solenoid magnet system. After the pion-capture solenoid, the first 36° of the curved muon transport line was commissioned and the muon flux was measured. In order to detect muons, a target of either copper or magnesium was placed to stop muons at the end of the muon beam line. Two stations of plastic scintillators located upstream and downstream from the muon target were used to reconstruct the decay spectrum of muons. In a complementary method to detect negatively charged muons, the x-ray spectrum yielded by muonic atoms in the target was measured in a germanium detector. Measurements, at a proton beam current of 6 pA, yielded (10.4±2.7)×10^{5}  muons per watt of proton beam power (μ^{+} and μ^{-}), far in excess of other facilities. At full beam power (400 W), this implies a rate of muons of (4.2±1.1)×10^{8}  muons s^{−1}, among the highest in the world. The number of μ^{-} measured was about a factor of 10 lower, again by far the most efficient muon beam produced. The setup is a prototype for future experiments requiring a high-intensity muon beam, such as a muon collider or neutrino factory, or the search for rare muon decays which would be a signature for phenomena beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. Such a muon beam can also be used in other branches of physics, nuclear and condensed matter, as well as other areas of scientific research
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