What's the difference between betaine and degeneracy?

Betaine


Definition:

  • (n.) A nitrogenous base, C5H11NO2, produced artificially, and also occurring naturally in beet-root molasses and its residues, from which it is extracted as a white crystalline substance; -- called also lycine and oxyneurine. It has a sweetish taste.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Two functions of these have been proposed: 1) that they are compatible osmolytes which regulate cell volume (against high external NaCl) without inhibiting proteins and 2) that methylamines (GPC and betaine) are counteracting osmolytes which stabilize proteins against perturbation from high renal urea.
  • (2) In superfused precontracted strips of rabbit aorta, methylene blue (MeB) or pyocyanin (Pyo, 1-hydroxy-5-methyl phenazinum betaine) at concentrations of 1-10 microM inhibited relaxations induced by endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), glyceryl trinitrate (GTN), S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP) or 3-morpholino-sydnonimine (SIN-1).
  • (3) Despite significant increases in the hepatic levels of betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase and methyltetrahydrofolate-homocysteine methyltransferase, flow through these reactions remains relatively constant.
  • (4) In the chemically defined medium, acetylcholine, N,N-dimethylethanolamine, and lecithin could replace choline to get normal cell division and cell morphology of C. botulinum type E. Choline could not be replaced by ethanolamine, N-methylethanolamine, or betaine.
  • (5) Chronic elevation of plasma homocysteine is associated with increased atherogenesis and thrombosis, and can be lowered by betaine (N,N,N-trimethylglycine) treatment which is thought to stimulate activity of the enzyme betaine:homocysteine methyltransferase.
  • (6) Renal medullary cells contain high concentrations of "compatible" organic osmolytes, such as myo-inositol, betaine, sorbitol, and glycero-phosphorylcholine.
  • (7) Betaine uptake increased when the osmolality was raised with NaCl or mannitol, but not with urea.
  • (8) The surface activity of a new potent antimicrobial mixture (C31G) of alkyl betaines and alkyl amine oxides were evaluated in order to determine the relationship between its antimicrobial effectiveness and physical properties.
  • (9) The results of a study on the interaction between cobalt(II) bovine carbonic anhydrase and the alpha-amino acids L(+) and D(-)alanine, glycine and betaine are reported.
  • (10) The effect of equimolar doses of glycine (G) and some related amino acids: beta-alanine (A), taurine (T) and betaine (B) on the strychnine syndrome was tested by administering them (intrathecal route) along with strychnine.
  • (11) The accumulation of either betaine or proline reduces the cytoplasmic amounts of K+, glutamate, trehalose, and MOPS (the major cytoplasmic osmolytes accumulated in the absence of osmoprotectants), so that at this external osmolarity the total amount of cytoplasmic solutes is essentially the same in the presence or absence of either osmoprotectant.
  • (12) Choline, the hydrolytic product of succinyl choline, is oxidized to betaine aldehyde by choline oxidase (EC 1.1.99.1), a rat liver mitochondrial preparation; this is coupled to the reduction of cytochrome c which is measured at 550 nm.
  • (13) Following transfer from 920 to 460 mosmol kg-1, Na+, Cl- and proline betaine leave the cells while intracellular K+ is conserved.
  • (14) 13C labeling studies with Methanogenium cariaci suggested that the betaine which accumulated inside the cells was not synthesized de novo but was transported in from the medium.
  • (15) Betaine showed a threshold for maximum effect at a concentration of 2 to 5 mM.
  • (16) The accumulation of glycine betaine to a high internal concentration by Escherichia coli cells in high osmolarity medium restores, within 1 h, a subnormal growth rate.
  • (17) Foetal heart, lung and kidney tissues also incorporated radiolabelled betaine.
  • (18) Substitution of the hydroxyl group in choline greatly diminished the inhibitory effect; fluorocholine, thiocholine, betaine, and betaine aldehyde showed little or no inhibition.
  • (19) In those receiving betaine, methionine concentrations were proportional to the dose administered and S-adenosylmethionine concentrations were near normal.
  • (20) Considering both the protective effect of glycine betaine (GB) on enteric bacteria grown at high osmolarity and the possible presence of GB in marine sediments, we have analyzed the survival, in nutrient-free seawater, of Escherichia coli cells incubated in sediments supplemented with GB or not supplemented and measured the efficiency of GB uptake systems and the expression of proP and proU genes in both seawater and sediments.

Degeneracy


Definition:

  • (a.) The act of becoming degenerate; a growing worse.
  • (a.) The state of having become degenerate; decline in good qualities; deterioration; meanness.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Although the assignment of this dodecadeoxynucleotide may be completed without deuteriation, several NOEs must be assigned indirectly because of degeneracies in the chemical shift of the purine H8 protons.
  • (2) We show that, even in T cells with this MHC restriction degeneracy, the TCR expressed in the two strains are different.
  • (3) The results suggest that the formation of IgG immune complexes during an immune response may result in stimulation of idiotypically related clones thus resulting in degeneracy of the immune response.
  • (4) The functional "degeneracy" of amino acids is described as increasing the interdependence of general functions.
  • (5) Among amino acid codons with fourfold degeneracy, there is a bias favoring pyrimidines over purines.
  • (6) The first observation was that a T cell clone with specificity for the 306-324 peptide of influenza hemagglutinin (HA), and raised from a DR1 responder, exhibited apparent degeneracy of major histocompatibility complex restriction when cultured with peptide in the presence of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) expressing a wide variety of structurally unrelated DR types.
  • (7) This appears particularly important given our current awareness of the degeneracy displayed by certain DNA sequences in terms of their in vitro ability to separately bind to more than one (sometimes several) species of protein factor present in a nuclear extract.
  • (8) Collectively, this study discerns a degeneracy in the VH4 genes that can encode the Lc1 CRI, indicating the term "supratypic cross-reactive idiotype" may best describe the specificity of the Lc1 mAb.
  • (9) By this means, ambiguities in the assignment of NOEs that arise from chemical shift overlap and degeneracy are completely removed.
  • (10) The use of this model may permit a reduction of the mRNA sequence degeneracy and therefore be helpful in the synthesis of cDNA probes or for the prediction of restriction endonuclease sites.
  • (11) The results indicate that vitamin A deficiency decrease cell proliferation without degeneracy.
  • (12) The degree of degeneracy of the codons for an amino acid is correlated with their guanine-cytosine content.
  • (13) Parity violation lifts only the degeneracy of enantiomers of truly chiral systems, the true enantiomers (i.e.
  • (14) Unfortunately, the degeneracy of the code means that there will be ambiguity in the nucleotide assignments in a third or more of the positions.
  • (15) Independent degeneracy of periplasmic bodies was occasionally observed.
  • (16) A 26 bp DNA probe has been constructed with minimal degeneracy to the protein sequence for Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin.
  • (17) The code gives greater protection (by both degeneracy and guaninecytosine content of codons) to those amino acids that appear more frequently in proteins.
  • (18) We find that replacing nonpolar residues in the core by polar residues is generally destabilizing, that surface sites are less sensitive than core sites, that some mutations increase the degeneracy of native states, and that overall it is most probable that a mutation will be neutral, having no effect on the native structure.
  • (19) We have exploited a portion of this region because of the minimal translational codon degeneracy of the conserved residues.
  • (20) However, the acceptable degeneracy of the signal for glycosomal targeting in trypanosomes is considerably greater than that for peroxisomal targeting in mammals, with particularly relaxed requirements in the penultimate position.

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