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Lateral discrimination

The use of lateral discrimination to enhance complex stability can be accomplished by incorporating ring variations such as appropriate podando appendages. Additional complex stabilization... [Pg.943]

Varying the side groups X in 27b affects both the stability and selectivity of the complexes (lateral discrimination), and allows the receptor-substrate interactions in biological systems to be modelled, for instance, the interaction between nicotinamide and tryptophan [2.109b]. One may attach to 27b amino acid residues (leading to parallel peptides [2.109] as in 27c), nucleic acid bases or nucleosides, saccharides, etc. The structural features of 27 and its remarkable binding properties make it an attractive unit for the construction of macropolycyclic multisite receptors, molecular catalysts, and carriers for membrane transport. Such extensions require sepa-... [Pg.27]

Limpus and Walter, 1980). If chemical imprinting to the natal beach occurs, it surely must be the most extreme case of imprinting in the animal kingdom. The hatchling would have to learn chemical cues available perinatally during a few days or weeks at most, and as an adult (15-35 years later) discriminate these cues for the first time from many others. [Pg.346]

Residual Current Even in the absence of analyte, a small current inevitably flows through an electrochemical cell. This current, which is called the residual current, consists of two components a faradaic current due to the oxidation or reduction of trace impurities, and the charging current. Methods for discriminating between the faradaic current due to the analyte and the residual current are discussed later in this chapter. [Pg.513]

The ground fault current may be detected through three or four CTs, one in each phase and the fourth in the neutral circuit (Figures 21.5(a) and (b)). Through the neutral to discriminate the fault, as discussed later. [Pg.688]

Reflected Electron Energy-Loss Spectroscopy (REELS) has elemental sensitivities on the order of a few tenths of a percent, phase discrimination at the few-percent level, operator controllable depth resolution from several nm to 0.07 nm, and a lateral resolution as low as 100 nm. [Pg.324]

The elucidation of the X-ray structure of chymotrypsin (Ref. 1) and in a later stage of subtilisin (Ref. 2) revealed an active site with three crucial groups (Fig. 7.1)-the active serine, a neighboring histidine, and a buried aspartic acid. These three residues are frequently called the catalytic triad, and are designated here as Aspc Hisc Serc (where c indicates a catalytic residue). The identification of the location of the active-site groups and intense biochemical studies led to several mechanistic proposals for the action of serine proteases (see, for example, Refs. 1 and 2). However, it appears that without some way of translating the structural information to reaction-potential surfaces it is hard to discriminate between different alternative mechanisms. Thus it is instructive to use the procedure introduced in previous chapters and to examine the feasibility of different... [Pg.171]

At its most fundamental level, the circadian cycle rests on the influence of so-called clock genes . These genes have been studied most extensively in insects but they have also been found in humans. Their protein products enter the cell nucleus and regulate their own transcription. This feedback process is linked to exposure to light and so it is not surprising that visual inputs are important for maintenance of circadian rhythms. However, it is not the reception of specific visual information, transmitted in the optic nerve to the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) and visual cortex (i.e. visual discrimination), that is responsible for the rhythm but the more simple, almost subconscious, reception of light. [Pg.478]

The most common method of isolation and sample cleanup involves contacting a filtered aqueous solution with an appropriate immiscible organic solvent in a. aboratory separatory funnel of appropriate size. Some specific examples are discussed later. With multicomponent samples a single solvent or solvent mixture is unlikely to extract all components equally causing discrimination. Ihis discrimination may be useful if the solvent discriminates against the extraction of solutes that are not of interest in the analysis. [Pg.385]

Later in intra-uterine life, the human infant is susceptible to early chemical prompting, but again the affector route is not known with certainty. Neonatal discrimination in favour of familiar (maternal) amniotic fluid is demonstrable, suggesting that the foetus already has active chemosensory capacities (Schaal, 1998). Smell and taste are operative in the near full-term foetus since it shows detection of about 120 mg/day maternal intake of anethole (as anise condiments) within a few days before parturition this exposure induced subsequent preferential responses by babies to anethole (Schaal et ai, 2000). The human neonate is not likely to have its organ as a fully functioning chemosensor,... [Pg.85]

The lateral diverticulum cells in semi-terrestrial species such as toads can still detect a wide range of amino acids, comparable to the properties of fish neuroepithelium. Both water-soluble and volatile odourants are discriminated by the olfactory neurones of the Clawed toad (Xenopus) (Iida and Kashiwayanagi, 1999). When single olfactory neurones were tested with acidic, neutral and basic amino acids, over 50% of the receptors gave some excitatory response. [Pg.106]

Fig. 2.3.8 Lower GARField profiles of a human skin sample sandwiched between two glass slides, recorded immediately after the sample was floated onto the first slide and again approximately 90 min later. Upper increasing the pulse gap T from 150 to 500 ps increases mobility contrast and allows discrimination between the stratum comeum (right) and viable epidermis (left). Again two profiles are shown, recorded approximately 90 min apart. Fig. 2.3.8 Lower GARField profiles of a human skin sample sandwiched between two glass slides, recorded immediately after the sample was floated onto the first slide and again approximately 90 min later. Upper increasing the pulse gap T from 150 to 500 ps increases mobility contrast and allows discrimination between the stratum comeum (right) and viable epidermis (left). Again two profiles are shown, recorded approximately 90 min apart.
Before entering the forest, we would advise you to step back a moment and pause for thought. What information do you require Is it just a case of an aid to an assignment question, or do you need to discriminate between two or more possible structures It is important to select the right tool for the job, as some of the experiments we will consider later on can take a significant time to acquire. Doing so will enable you to work more efficiently and have greater confidence in your handiwork. [Pg.111]

In a later work, Stokes established the relationship between the intensity of fluorescence and the concentration, pointing out that the emission intensity depended on the concentration of the sample (analyte), but that attenuation of the signal occurred at higher concentrations as well as in the presence of foreign substances. He actually was the first to propose, in 1864, the application of fluorescence as an analytical tool, based on its sensitivity, on the occasion of a conference given previously in the Chemical Society and the Royal Institution, and entitled On the Application of the Optical Properties to the Detection and Discrimination of Organic Substances [5],... [Pg.6]

NMR. Proton NMR is obviously likely to give an enormous range of signals from a typical confectionery product. An NMR instrument to analyse water in foods has to be a low-resolution instrument, whether of the original continuous form or of the later pulsed type. The aim is to discriminate between the protons in water and those in other molecules. Fortunately, this is not too difficult. [Pg.21]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.182 , Pg.183 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.182 , Pg.785 ]




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