What's the difference between aromatic and cumene?

Aromatic


Definition:

  • (a.) Alt. of Aromatical
  • (n.) A plant, drug, or medicine, characterized by a fragrant smell, and usually by a warm, pungent taste, as ginger, cinnamon, spices.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In granulosa cells containing full aromatase activity, treatment with cortisol and dexamethasone did not inhibit aromatization of androstenedione to estrogens whereas two known aromatase inhibitors (dihydrotestosterone and 4-androstene-3, 6, 17-trione) were effective.
  • (2) The chemical shift changes observed on the binding of trimethoprim to dihydrofolate reductase are interpreted in terms of the ring-current shift contributions from the two aromatic rings of trimethoprim and from that of phenylalanine-30.
  • (3) Enzyme-inhibiting ability for individual alkylphenols can be estimated based on the quantitative structure-activity relationship developed by Dewhirst (1980) and is a function of the free hydroxyl group, electron-donating ring substituents, and hydrophobic aromatic ring substituents.
  • (4) N-heterocyclic aromatics are environmentally important carcinogenic pollutants produced by incomplete combustion of organic material.
  • (5) Deviations from isotropic motion observed for the non-aromatic moieties are discussed.
  • (6) Aromatic adducts present in the digest that were resistant to nuclease P1 were thus 32P-labelled while unmodified nucleotides were not.
  • (7) The possible occupational cause of the disease, as more solvents in the mud have the structure of aromatic hydrocarbons is discussed.
  • (8) Interaction between aromatic diamidines (pentamidine, propamidine, and stilbamidine) and nucleic acids were studied to elucidate the mechanism underlying renal toxicity included by pentamidine in patients.
  • (9) The D-Phe peptides, which are cleaved especially rapidly by thrombin in water, have structures (in deuterated DMSO) in which the aromatic ring of the D-Phe residue is folded back over the Val or Pip residue.
  • (10) Results of enzyme immunoassay also showed that dipeptides composed of two aromatic amino acids were more inhibitory than dipeptides of which one residue was aromatic amino acid.
  • (11) The enzyme has a significant preference for substrates with a P1 Phe over those with the other aromatic amino acids Tyr and Trp.
  • (12) Their absorption spectra are at sufficiently long wavelength to be unobscured by cellular chromophores such as nucleotides and aromatic amin acids.
  • (13) As experimental findings indicated inhibitory action of aromatic retinoid on microtubule polymerisation and collagen metabolism of mesenchymal cells, we decided to treat 5 patients suffering from progressive systemic sclerosis as well as 3 patients with Sharp's syndrome with aromatic retinoid (Tigason).
  • (14) The results also demonstrated that there was not any apparent correlation between the receptor-binding avidities and in vitro monooxygenase enzyme-induction potencies for the most active polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons.
  • (15) The complexes are produced by attachment of a carbon of the butenolide ring to an aromatic carbon of the nitro compound with formation of a charge-delocalized cyclohexadienate anion.
  • (16) Aromatization of [3H]androstenedione and [3H]19-hydroxyandrostenedione to [3H]estrone has been demonstrated to occur in one to two week old primary monolayer cultures of fetal rat hypothalamus.
  • (17) Both main-stream and side-stream cigarette smoke condensates and some fractions, containing water-soluble bases, water-insoluble bases, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, were found to induce AHH activity in lung and liver, the lung being induced to the greatest extent.
  • (18) The greater frequency of dysovulation in obese women, notably those who put on weight rapidly, is accompanied by numerous hormonal changes, including reduced sex hormone-binding globulin, increased ovarian and adrenal androgen production, increased peripheral aromatization of androgens to oestrogens, and altered gonadotropin pulsatile secretion.
  • (19) R-(+)-Nicotine is a substrate Km = 1.42 X 10(-5)M for an SAM-dependent guinea pig lung aromatic azaheterocycle N-methyltransferase, whereas S-(-)-nicotine acts as a competitive inhibitor (Ki = 6.25 X 10(-5)M) of the N-methylation of its antipode.
  • (20) In the group of patients with the hyperkinetic form the most significant changes were seen for valine, methionine, serine, alanine and cystine, while as the spectrum of aminoacids of the aromatic line is practically unchanged.

Cumene


Definition:

  • (n.) A colorless oily hydrocarbon, C6H5.C3H7, obtained by the distillation of cuminic acid; -- called also cumol.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Depending on the ligand, the inhibition profiles of these two iso-enzymes when measured with either the peroxidase substrate, cumene hydroperoxide or the standard GSH S-transferase substrate 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene were found to be either very similar (sulphobromophthalein) or markedly different (rose Bengal and acrolein).
  • (2) After exposure to cumene hydroperoxide, formation of high molecular weight protein, presumably through cross-linking of lower molecular weight protein, was stimulated in splenocytes as well as in erythrocyte ghosts.
  • (3) Mercaptosuccinate (10 microM) inhibits the enzyme competitively (Ki = 7 microM) when cumene hydroperoxide is substrate, and uncompetitively (Ki = 10 microM) when H2O2 is substrate.
  • (4) Hydrogen peroxide, cumene hydroperoxide, and linoleic acid hydroperoxide were effective as substrates.
  • (5) We have demonstrated that the nitroxyl free radical form of the carcinogen N-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene (OH-AAF) is an obligatory intermediate in the cumene hydroperoxide-hematin-induced oxidative activation of this carcinogen into 2-nitrosofluorene and N-acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene.
  • (6) Cumene hydroperoxide (230 microM)-induced fall of the membrane potential takes place only in Ca2(+)-loaded mitochondria.
  • (7) The chemicals studied were: bleomycin, t-butyl hydroperoxide, chromium trioxide, cumene hydroperoxide, formaldehyde, glyoxal, glutaraldehyde, hydrogen peroxide, paraquat, and phenylhydrazine.
  • (8) In contrast, the liver microsomes from corn oil- or phenobarbital-pretreated rats catalyzed the NADPH- or cumene hydroperoxide-sustained 4-hydroxylation of biphenyl, but the rates of 2-hydroxylation or ethoxyresorufin deethylation were negligible.
  • (9) The parent compound, alpha-(phenylselenenyl)acetophenone (PSAP), increased the rate of reaction of glutathione with H2O2, tert-butylhydroperoxide, cumene hydroperoxide, linoleic acid hydroperoxide and dilinoleyl lecithin hydroperoxide by 7.0, 25.1, 34.1, 19.1 and 8.4-fold, respectively, as assessed by the oxidized glutathione (GSSG) reductase enzyme assay.
  • (10) NaIO4 was by far the most effective hydroxylating agent followed by cumene hydroperoxide, NADPH, NaClO2, pregnenolone 17alpha-hydroperoxide, tert-butyl hydroperoxide, and linoleic acid hydroperoxide.
  • (11) Trolox C and chlorpromazine almost completely prevented the cumene hydroperoxide induced alpha-HBDH release.
  • (12) Liver showed higher GSH-peroxidase activity with cumene-OOH than with H2O2 as substrate, whereas lung, skeletal muscle and skin presented similar GSH-peroxidase activities with both substrates.
  • (13) Its activity was tested with the following potential substrates in addition to CDNB: 1,2-dichloro-4-nitrobenzene, p-nitrobenzyl chloride, trans-4-phenylbut-3-en-2-one, 1,2-epoxy-3-(p-nitrophenoxy)propane, ethacrynic acid, menaphthyl sulphate, cumene hydroperoxide, linoleic acid hydroperoxide and 4-hydroxynon-2-enal.
  • (14) To this end, lung membranes (containing both beta 1- and beta 2-adrenoceptors) and intact erythrocytes (containing a homogeneous beta 2-adrenoceptor population) were pretreated with cumene hydroperoxide (lung membranes with 0.1 mM and erythrocytes with 1 mM) and Fe2+ (1 X 10(-5) M) for 60 min which resulted in extensive lipid peroxidation measured as malondialdehyde formation.
  • (15) In the presence of glycylglycylhistidine (GlyGlyHis), however, Ni2+ generated cumene peroxyl (ROO.)
  • (16) Reaction of DNA with OPP or a hydroxylated metabolite of OPP, phenylhydroquinone, in the presence of microsomes and NADPH or cumene hydroperoxide showed four major adducts.
  • (17) This phenomenon was also observed when the cumene hydroperoxide sensitivity of P-450 IIB1 and IA1 was studied in an isosafrole pretreated rat liver microsomal system.
  • (18) The effect of cumene hydroperoxide (CHP) in microsomal metabolism of benzo [a]pyrene (BP) was studied using liver microsomes from mature male Wistar rats induced with phenobarbital (PB), 3-methylcholanthrene (MC), Aroclor 1254 or olive oil (uninduced).
  • (19) Cumene hydroperoxide (40 microM) induced a three-fold increase in HMS in both HUVEC and HUAEC, while fibroblasts exhibited an increase of 83%.
  • (20) Addition of 1 microM alpha-tocopherol also increased the amount of cumene hydroperoxide tolerated to 50 microM.

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