Results 251 to 260 of about 270,080 (298)
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Tryptophan and Suicide

Psychological Reports, 1997
A measure of tryptophan intake in 30 nations was not associated with their 1980 suicide or homicide rates.
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Tryptophan and Atherosclerosis

1996
The association between hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis in humans is widely accepted (Goldstein and Brown, 1977; Steinberg, 1983; Nordoy and Goodnight, 1990). Some studies (Muldoon et al., 1990) have shown that a decrease in serum cholesterol in middle-aged subjects by diet, drugs or both, leads to a significant reduction of the incidence of ...
Baldo Enzi G   +4 more
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The regulation of tryptophan pyrrolase activity by tryptophan

Advances in Enzyme Regulation, 1966
Abstract Tryptophan pyrrolase accumulates in the livers of hydrocortisone-treated rats as the inactive apoenzyme. Treatment with tryptophan activates the apoenzyme by conjugating it with hematin and permitting its conversion to the active, reduced holoenzyme form of tryptophan pyrrolase.
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The hydroxylation of tryptophan

Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1992
Products of the chemical hydroxylation of tryptophan by Fenton and Udenfriend reactions are similar to those obtained by ionizing radiation. When tryptophan is exposed to either of these systems, a mixture of four hydroxytryptophans, oxindole-3-alanine, and N-formylkynurenine is formed.
Z, Maskos, J D, Rush, W H, Koppenol
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Pain and tryptophan

Journal of Neurosurgery, 1980
✓ Tryptophan, the precursor for serotonin, was given to five patients with recurrent pain and diminished sensory deficits following rhizotomy and cordotomy. Their sensory deficits for both touch and pinprick reexpanded to the maximum extent initially recorded after their operative procedures. Their pain was again relieved. No clear understanding of the
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Free Tryptophan in Plasma and Brain Tryptophan Metabolism

Nature, 1972
SYNTHESIS in the brain of the putative transmitter 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT) is influenced by the concentration of tryptophan; the rate limiting step in 5HT synthesis is the hydroxylation of tryptophan1 by tryptophan hydroxylase, which is normally unsaturated with substrate2.
P J, Knott, G, Curzon
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Activation of the Ah Receptor by Tryptophan and Tryptophan Metabolites

Biochemistry, 1998
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a ligand-dependent transcription factor that mediates many of the biological and toxicological actions of a variety of hydrophobic natural and synthetic chemicals, including the environmental contaminant 2,3,7, 8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD, dioxin). A variety of indole-containing chemicals, such as indole-3-
Heath-Pagliuso, S.   +6 more
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Detection of Tryptophan to Tryptophan Energy Transfer in Proteins

The Protein Journal, 2004
Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) studies usually involve observation of intensity or lifetime changes in the donor or acceptor molecule and usually these donor and acceptor molecules differ (heterotransfer). The use of polarization to monitor FRET is far less common, although it was one of the first methods utilized. In 1960, Weber demonstrated
Pierre D J, Moens   +2 more
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On the emission of tryptophan

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1960
Abstract Tryptophan possesses two sets of emissions, each one of which has one short-lived emission and one long-lived emission. The excitation by π-π absorption at 280 mμ gives u.v. fluorescence and blue phosphorescence under certain conditions, e.g. frozen in an aqueous solution containing glucose or methanol.
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Tryptophan uptake and tryptophan oxygenase activity in mice

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1970
Abstract Groups of mice were injected intraperitoneally with L-tryptophan, 1 mg/gm body weight, and maintained at room temperature (22° C) or exposed to acute heat stress (36° C). In the heat-stressed animals, plasma tryptophan levels were lower at each time interval studied when compared with room temperature controls; however, both hepatic ...
R P, Francesconi, M, Mager
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