Results 291 to 300 of about 856,435 (321)
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Serum albumin

Hepatology, 1969
The liver manufactures albumin at a massive rate and decreases production in times of environmental, nutritional, toxic and trauma stress. Osmotic pressure is a basic evolutionary regulatory factor, and hormonal control over albumin production has been demonstrated.
M A, Rothschild   +2 more
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Albumin Redhill, a human albumin variant

Clinica Chimica Acta, 1984
Albumin Redhill, a variant human albumin with the same C-terminal amino acid as albumin A but with arginine at the N-terminus has been isolated by chromatofocusing from the sera of an English family. Albumin Redhill appears to contain two sites of mutation in its protein chain and is probably a proalbumin.
Sally Brand   +2 more
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Microheterogeneity of albumin

Clinica Chimica Acta, 1963
Abstract Very pure preparations of human serum albumin prepared by preparative electrophoresis or ethanol fractionation were subjected to Chromatographic analysis on modified cellulose and individual Chromatographic fractions were analysed by immunoelectrophoresis or electrophoresis on agar gel.
T. Bednařík, J. Kočí, J. Rejnek
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Haeme binding to albumin and equilibria in the albumin-ferrihaemoglobin and albumin-haemopexin systems

International Journal of Biochemistry, 1980
Abstract 1. 1. The interaction of albumin with haeme was studied by measuring the absorption spectra in the Soret region. Albumin was confirmed to have one strong binding center besides some weaker ones; from the latters haeme can be removed by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE cellulose thus forming an equimolar haeme-albumin complex, 2. 2.
Z. Vodräzka, Z. Hrkal, I. Kalousek
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Albumin Naskapi: A New Variant of Serum Albumin

Science, 1966
An apparently new variant of human serum albumin, albumin Naskapi, has been found in high frequency in the Naskapi Indians of Quebec and, in lower frequency, in other North American Indians. The family and population data of the albumin are consistent with its inheritance as a simple autosomal trait controlled by a gene designated
B. S. Blumberg, Liisa Melartin
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Differences between Urinary Albumin and Serum Albumin

Nature, 1962
IN the work reported here, the molecular size and the peptide patterns of the albumins found in normal urine were compared with those of serum albumin.
Ezio Merler   +3 more
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Binding Properties of Glycosylated Albumin and Acetaldehyde Albumin

Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 1985
Glucose and acetaldehyde react covalently with albumin to form the post‐translationally modified group of proteins, the glycosylated albumins and the acetaldehyde albumins, respectively. This study contrasts the binding ability of a major acetaldehyde albumin fraction synthesized in vitro with glycosylated albumin.
Alex F. Robertson   +3 more
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Albumin and Glycated Albumin

1995
Serum albumin is a single polypeptide chain protein of 66 000 Da molecular weight without associated carbohydrate. Glycation of albumin can be induced by prolonged exposure to elevated blood glucose levels, analogous to the induction of glycated haemoglobin.
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The distribution of albumin precursor protein and albumin in liver

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1976
Abstract Two different proteins precipitable with antiserum to albumin exist in liver. One is albumin, the other is precursor albumin. Liver cells in suspension contain mainly precursor, but secrete only albumin. In subcellular fractions isolated from liver homogenate, 95.3% of anti-albumin precipitable protein in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, 51 ...
Kaylene Edwards   +4 more
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Albumin Polymorphism (Albumin Naskapi) in Eskimos and Navajos

Nature, 1968
WE have described two polymorphic variants of serum albumin (Fig. 1). Of these, albumin Naskapi the electrophoretic mobility of which is greater than that of the usual albumin (albumin A) is relatively common in several North American Indian tribes. It has been identified in sera from Indians of the Naskapi, Montagnais, Sioux, Northern Athabascan and ...
Liisa Melartin   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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