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1.
J Agric Food Chem ; 47(1): 217-20, 1999 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10563875

ABSTRACT

A method has been developed for the determination of ethanol in canned salmon using automated headspace sampling in conjunction with analysis by gas chromatography. The thermal process for the commercial sterilization of canned salmon is shown to provide an effective extraction of the ethanol so that the fluid removed from the can may be used as the analytical sample with minimal preparation prior to analysis. Ethanol content is measured directly, without the need for an internal standard, by either GC/MS or GC/FID. The headspace autoanalyzer allows for a rapid determination of ethanol with greater reproducibility than could be obtained with manual injection systems. The GC/MS technique can also provide an advantage in that simultaneous single ion monitoring of the two major ethanol ions provides additional protection from interferences. To assess the applicability of this technique to other substrates, Atlantic sea scallop meats were also successfully analyzed by this technique.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, Gas/methods , Ethanol/analysis , Fish Products/analysis , Animals , Automation , Salmon
2.
J Med Chem ; 39(26): 5100-9, 1996 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8978841

ABSTRACT

Oligonucleotides containing 2'-O-aminopropyl-substituted RNA have been synthesized. The 2'-O-(aminopropyl)adenosine (APA), 2'-O-(aminopropyl)cytidine (APC), 2'-O-(aminopropyl)-guanosine (APG), and 2'-O-(aminopropyl)uridine (APU) have been prepared in high yield from the ribonucleoside, protected, and incorporated into an oligonucleotide using conventional phosphoramidite chemistry. Molecular dynamics studies of a dinucleotide in water demonstrates that a short alkylamine located off the 2'-oxygen of ribonucleotides alters the sugar pucker of the nucleoside but does not form a tight ion pair with the proximate phosphate. A 5-mer with the sequence ACTUC has been characterized using NMR. As predicted from the modeling results, the sugar pucker of the APU moiety is shifted toward a C3'-endo geometry. In addition, the primary amine rotates freely and is not bound electrostatically to any phosphate group, as evidenced by the different sign of the NOE between sugar proton resonances and the signals from the propylamine chain. Incorporation of aminopropyl nucleoside residues into point-substituted and fully modified oligomers does not decrease the affinity for complementary RNA compared to 2'-O-alkyl substituents of the same length. However, two APU residues placed at the 3'-terminus of an oligomer gives a 100-fold increase in resistance to exonuclease degradation, which is greater than observed for phosphorothioate oligomers. These structural and biophysical characteristics make the 2'-O-aminopropyl group a leading choice for incorporation into antisense therapeutics. A 20-mer phosphorothioate oligonucleotide capped with two phosphodiester aminopropyl nucleotides targeted against C-raf mRNA has been transfected into cells via electroporation. This oligonucleotide has 5-10-fold greater activity than the control phosphorothioate for reducing the abundance of C-raf mRNA and protein.


Subject(s)
Exonucleases/metabolism , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/pharmacology , Ribonucleotides/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Models, Molecular , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-raf
3.
J Dev Physiol ; 11(3): 159-69, 1989 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2681387

ABSTRACT

The effects of insulin, prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and uptake inhibitors on unidirectional D-glucose influx at brush border (maternal) and basal (fetal) sides of the guinea-pig syncytotrophoblast were investigated in the intact, perfused guinea-pig placenta by rapid, paired-tracer dilution. Experiments were performed in either an in situ preparation artificially perfused through the umbilical vessels (intact maternal circulation) or in the fully isolated dually-perfused placenta in which both interfaces were studied simultaneously. Kinetic characterization of unidirectional D-glucose influx gave apparent Km values (mean +/- SEM) at maternal and fetal sides of 70 +/- 6 and 87 +/- 16 mM respectively; corresponding Vmax values were 53 +/- 3 and 82 +/- 6 mumol min-1g-1. At the fetal side (singly-perfused placenta) cytochalasin B (50 microM), ethylidene-D-glucose (100 mM) and PGE1 (1 microM) partially inhibited D-glucose uptake whereas cortisol (50 microM) and progesterone (100 microM) had no effect. Abolition of the sodium gradient across the fetal interface did not modulate the kinetics of influx. In the presence of 150 mu units ml-1 insulin (dually-perfused placenta), unidirectional uptake into the trophoblast and transplacental D-[3H]glucose transfer were unaltered. In contrast, prostaglandin E1 (1 microM) markedly reduced the Km and Vmax for D-glucose at both interfaces and the inhibitory effect was reflected in a reduction in specific transplacental D-glucose transfer. Further experiments showed that the isolated placenta releases prostaglandins (PGE; PGF2 alpha) into both circulations. Bilateral insulin perfusion did not affect either lactate release by the placenta or rapid metabolism of D-[14C]glucose to [3H]lactate (usually less than 10% effluent [14C]lactate in 5 min). An asymmetric degradation of exogenous insulin was observed in the dually-perfused placenta: uterine venous samples contained 24 +/- 7 microunits ml-1 immunoreactive insulin when compared to the arterial concentration (151 +/- 3 microU ml-1 perfusate) while no change was measureable in the fetal circulation within the same time period (152 +/- 5 microU ml-1). This asymmetry was confirmed in experiments employing [125I]insulin. These results demonstrate that glucose transport in the intact guinea-pig placenta occurs by a sodium-independent, cytochalasin B-inhibitable system which is insulin-insensitive. Prostaglandin E1 appeared to be a potent transport inhibitor which suggests that prostaglandins may be involved in the 'down' regulation of placental glucose transport in vivo.


Subject(s)
Alprostadil/pharmacology , Glucose/metabolism , Insulin/pharmacology , Placenta/metabolism , Animals , Biological Transport/drug effects , Cytochalasin B/pharmacology , Female , Glucose/analogs & derivatives , Glucose/pharmacology , Guinea Pigs , Hydrocortisone/pharmacology , Insulin/metabolism , Kinetics , Placenta/drug effects , Pregnancy , Progesterone/pharmacology
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