267 research outputs found

    Stability of wheat germ oil obtained by supercritical carbon dioxide associated with lipase ethanolysis

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    Wheat germ oil was extracted using an environmental friendly solvent, supercritical carbon dioxide (SCCO2) at a semi-batch flow extraction process. The supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2) extraction was carried out to extract oil at temperature of 40°C and pressure of 25 MPa. Ethanolysis was performed with 1,3-regiospecific lipase at different temperatures (40 to 70°C) to produce diglycerides and monoglycerides containing fatty acid ethyl esters. For determination of stability, wheat germ oil obtained by ethanolysis reactants was characterized by measuring the acid value, peroxide value, free fatty acid contents, thiocyanate method, DPPH radical scavenging effect and rancimat test. The optimized condition of 40°C shows the highest oil stability among the various conditions.Keywords: Supercritical carbon dioxide, wheat germ oil, ethanolysis, immobilized lipases, oil stabilityAfrican Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 12(22), pp. 3570-357

    Innovation and Internationalization of Korean SMEs in the Textile and Footwear Industries

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    Innovation has been recognized as one of the factors that enhances firm internationalization, a vital route for the growth and survival of small and medium enterprises. Thus, it is important to identify antecedents of firm innovation and their impacts on SME internationalization for their long-term success. Accordingly, the present study examined a model of SME internationalization in which the causal relationships among entrepreneurial orientation, absorptive capacity, innovation (product, process, and marketing innovation), and internationalization were proposed. Analyses of 156 survey data collected from Korean SMEs exporting textiles, apparel, and footwear revealed that entrepreneurial orientation and absorptive capacity appeared to function as significant antecedents of product and process innovation. Among three dimensions of innovation, only process and marketing innovation positively affected internationalization. The study provides practical implications by asserting the importance of process and marketing innovation to increase firm internationalization

    Antigen-binding Characteristics of Circulating IgG Autoantibodies to Cytokeratin 18 Protein in Patients with Nonallergic Asthma

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    Cytokeratin 18 (CK18) protein was identified as an airway epithelial cell autoantigen associated with nonallergic asthma. Cleavage of CK18 protein by caspase-3 is a marker of early apoptosis in epithelial cells. It has been shown that the expression of active caspase-3 was increased in bronchial epithelial cells of asthmatic patients, when compared with healthy controls. To investigate the antigen-binding characteristics of IgG autoantibodies to CK18 protein in nonallergic asthma, the bindings of IgG autoantibodies to the fragments of CK18 protein cleaved by caspase-3 were analyzed by Western blot using serum samples from three patients with nonallergic asthma. Recombinant human CK18 protein was treated by caspase-3 and cleaved into N-terminal fragment (1-397 amino acids) and C-terminal fragment (398-430 amino acids). The binding capacity of IgG autoantibodies to N-terminal fragment of CK18 was maintained in one patient and reduced in other two patients. IgG autoantibodies from all three patients did not bind to C-terminal fragment of CK18. In conclusion, IgG autoantibodies to CK18 protein from patients with nonallergic asthma seems to preferentially bind to the whole molecule of CK18 protein and their antigen-binding characteristics were heterogeneous among the patients with nonallergic asthma

    CLINICAL IMPACT OF SERUM URIC ACID IN PATIENTS WITH ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION

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    Immunoglobulin G Subclass Deficiency is the Major Phenotype of Primary Immunodeficiency in a Korean Adult Cohort

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    Primary immunodeficiency disease (PID) is a rare disorder in adults. Most often, serious forms are detected during infancy or childhood. However, mild forms of PID may not be diagnosed until later in life, and some types of humoral immunodeficiency may occur in adulthood. The purpose of this study was to identify clinical features of PID in Korean adults. A retrospective study was performed on 55 adult patients who were diagnosed as PID between January 1998 and January 2009 at a single tertiary medical center in Korea. IgG subclass deficiency was the most common phenotype (67%, 37/55), followed by total IgG deficiency (20%, 11/55), IgM deficiency (7%, 4/55), common variable immunodeficiency (2%, 1/55), and X-linked agammaglobulinemia (2%, 1/55). IgG3 and IgG4 were the most affected subclasses. Upper and lower respiratory tract infections (76%) were the most frequently observed symptoms, followed by multiple site infection (11%), urinary tract infection, and colitis. Bronchial asthma, rhinitis, and several autoimmune diseases were common associated diseases. IgG and IgG subclass deficiency should be considered in adult patients presenting with recurrent upper and lower respiratory infections, particularly in those with respiratory allergies or autoimmune diseases

    Vulvar Skin Metastasis of Lung Squamous Cell Carcinoma

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    In this study, we examined a case where lung cancer metastasized to the vulvar area. A 79-year-old woman that was a heavy smoker was referred to our department with a short (two-week) history of dyspnea, and with a painful nodule on her right labium majora, which she had noticed almost three years earlier. Histopathologically, the specimen appeared as a poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma. The chest X-ray, chest computerized tomography scan, and percutaneous transthoracic needle biopsy via bronchoscopy revealed squamous cell carcinoma in the right upper lobe of the lung. Based on these clinical and histopathological findings, we concluded that her condition was skin metastasis at the right labium majora from the lung cancer, which occurs very rarely

    Condensed ECM-based nanofilms on highly permeable PET membranes for robust cell-to-cell communications with improved optical clarity

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    The properties of a semipermeable porous membrane, including pore size, pore density, and thickness, play a crucial role in creating a tissue interface in a microphysiological system (MPS) because it dictates multicellular interactions between different compartments. The small pore-sized membrane has been preferentially used in an MPS for stable cell adhesion and the formation of tissue barriers on the membrane. However, it limited the applicability of the MPS because of the hindered cell transmigration via sparse through-holes and the optical translucence caused by light scattering through pores. Thus, there remain unmet challenges to construct a compartmentalized MPS without those drawbacks. Here we report a submicrometer-thickness (similar to 500 nm) fibrous extracellular matrix (ECM) film selectively condensed on a large pore-sized track-etched (TE) membrane (10 mu m-pores) in an MPS device, which enables the generation of functional tissue barriers simultaneously achieving optical transparency, intercellular interactions, and transmigration of cells across the membrane. The condensed ECM fibers uniformly covering the surface and 10 mu m-pores of the TE membrane permitted sufficient surface areas where a monolayer of the human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived brain endothelial cells is formed in the MPS device. The functional maturation of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was proficiently achieved due to astrocytic endfeet sheathing the brain endothelial cells through 10 mu m pores of the condensed-ECM-coated TE (cECMTE) membrane. We also demonstrated the extravasation of human metastatic breast tumor cells through the human BBB on the cECMTE membrane. Thus, the cECMTE membrane integrated with an MPS can be used as a versatile platform for studying various intercellular communications and migration, mimicking the physiological barriers of an organ compartment

    Occupational Asthma Induced by the Reactive Dye Synozol Red-K 3BS

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    Various reactive dyes can elicit occupational asthma in exposed textile industry workers. To date, there has been no report of occupational asthma caused by the red dye Synozol Red-K 3BS (Red-K). Here, we report a 38-year-old male textile worker with occupational asthma and rhinitis induced by inhalation of Red-K. He showed positive responses to Red-K extract on skin-prick testing and serum specific IgE antibodies to Red-K-human serum albumin conjugate were detected using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. A bronchoprovocation test with Red-K extract resulted in significant bronchoconstriction. These findings suggest that the inhalation of the reactive dye Red-K can induce IgE-mediated occupational asthma and rhinitis in exposed workers
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