Results 271 to 280 of about 143,736 (285)
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Purine Compounds in Snake Venoms

Nature, 1956
Fischer and Dorfel1 identified adenosine in the venom of Bitis arietans and Dendraspis viridis in concentrations of 12 and 2.6 per cent of the dry weight respectively, and concluded it was a natural component of the fresh venom. In the venoms examined no other nucleoside was found; nucleotides were absent but traces of a guanine compound were not ...
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Neurotoxins of Animal Venoms: Snakes

Annual Review of Biochemistry, 1973
INTRODUCI’ION 235 IsoL~m~ 236 MOL~CULAa WmGnr 241 SEOU~C~ 241 CONFORMATION AND STABILITY 246 CHEMICAl., MODIFICATION 248 Disulfide bond... 248 Lysine and N-terminal amino acids 248 Arginine residue 249 Tyrosine residue 249 Tryptophan residue 249 Carboxyl group 250 Histidine residue 250 MOLECULAR SIZE AND Tox~crr~ ’ 250 RoLe ...
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Bibliography of Snake Venoms and Venomous Snakes

Copeia, 1965
Richard Shirley Scharffenberg   +2 more
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Overview of Snake Venom Chemistry

1996
Snake venom is not composed of single compounds but is a complex mixture of proteins. It is not known exactly how many proteins are present in a venom, but it probably consists of fifty to sixty components. Each protein possesses its own biological activity. A further complication is that composition and activity of a snake venom vary among the species.
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SNAKE VENOM POISONING

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1953
To the Editor: —In their article "Treatment of Snake Venom Poisoning with Cortisone and Corticotropin" ( J. A. M. A. 152 :236 [May 16] 1953), Hoback and Green reported that in two cases the bite was from a "copperhead moccasin." To avoid confusion, I believe this should be clarified. The snake involved undoubtedly was either a copperhead (Agkistrodon
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Pharmacology of Snake Venoms

Clinical Toxicology, 1970
Harold W. Puffer, Findlay E. Russell
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