What's the difference between cetin and cutin?

Cetin


Definition:

  • (n.) A white, waxy substance, forming the essential part of spermaceti.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Cetin Topcuotlu, a 54-year old former Taekwondo champion who worked as a coach for the Turkish national team, was shot three times – once in the back of his head, once in his hip and once in his belly.
  • (2) Afterwards 25 strains are inoculated by a Multinoculator (Cetin, Bs.
  • (3) The nine victims Cengiz Alquyz, 42 Four gunshot wounds: back of head, right side of face, back, left leg Ibrahim Bilgen, 60 Four gunshot wounds: right chest, back, right hip, right temple Cegdet Kiliclar, 38 One gunshot wound: middle of forehead Furkan Dogan, 19 Five gunshot wounds: nose, back, back of head, left leg, left ankle Sahri Yaldiz Four gunshot wounds: left chest, left leg, right leg twice Aliheyder Bengi, 39 Six gunshot wounds: left chest, belly, right arm, right leg, left hand twice Cetin Topcuoglu, 54 Three gunshot wounds: back of head, left side, right belly Cengiz Songur, 47 One gunshot wound: front of neck Necdet Yildirim, 32 Two gunshot wounds: right shoulder, left back
  • (4) Nilufer Cetin, a Turkish activist, and her baby boy hid in a bathroom below deck as stun grenades, live ammunition and teargas exploded above them.

Cutin


Definition:

  • (n.) The substance which, added to the material of a cell wall, makes it waterproof, as in cork.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Using tritiated apple cutin as substrate, the two cutinases showed similar substrate concentration dependence, protein concentration dependence, time course profiles, and pH dependence profiles with optimum near 10.0.
  • (2) Using unlabeled cutin, the rate of dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid release from apple fruit cutin by cutinase I was determined to be 4.4 mumol per min per mg.
  • (3) 7) capable of degrading cutin, the insoluble lipid-polyester matrix covering the surface of plants, and hydrolysing triglycerides.
  • (4) Both mRNA and protein were inducible by cutin hydrolysate, while hypovirulence agents suppressed the level of mRNA and the enzyme.
  • (5) Transformants with a disrupted CUT1 gene failed to produce a cutin-inducible esterase that is normally detected by activity staining on non-denaturing polyacrylamide gels.
  • (6) The seed coat of almond (Prunus amygdalus Batsch) contains up to 30% procyanidins with different degrees of polymerisation and, in addition, fatty oils, lignin, polysaccharides and cutin.
  • (7) omega-Hydroxy fatty acids were more effective in inducing cutinase than any of the other more polar acids of cutin.
  • (8) A radial immunodiffusion assay for cutinase was developed, and the induction of cutinase by cutin hydrolysate was confirmed by this direct assay.
  • (9) Thus, the high resistance of plant cuticles to transport of 2,4-D can be attributed to both low diffusion and partition coefficients in the transport-limiting layer made up of cutin and soluble lipids which are densely packed and highly ordered.
  • (10) Induction of cutinase by cutin or hydrolyzed cutin after growth on glucose medium was similarly reduced.
  • (11) The mutant possessed an 80 to 90% reduction in cutinase activity when grown for 3 to 5 days on acetate- or cutin-containing medium.
  • (12) Thin-layer chromatographic analysis of the products released from labeled apple fruit cutin showed that the extracellular enzyme released all classes of cutin monomers.
  • (13) However, unlike the previously studied fungal systems, cutin hydrolysate did not induce cutinase.
  • (14) From a physiological point of view, peroxygenase and this newly described epoxide hydrolase could be responsible, in vivo, for the biosynthesis of a class of oxygenated fatty acid compounds known to be involved in cutin monomers production and in plant defense mechanisms.
  • (15) Hygromycin-resistant transformants of F. solani pisi generated by electroporation were assayed for CAT activity inducible by cutin hydrolysate and for glucose repression of this induction.
  • (16) These results suggest that cutin monomer causes phosphorylation of a transcription factor that binds to the -225 to -360 segment of the cutinase gene and enhances transcription of this gene.
  • (17) Non-denaturing polyacrylamide gels stained for esterase activity show a single major band among intracellular and extracellular proteins from cutin-grown cultures that is not present among intracellular and extracellular proteins prepared from glucose-grown or carbon-starved cultures.
  • (18) The gene is expressed when cutin is the sole carbon source but not when the carbon source is cutin and glucose together or glucose alone.
  • (19) This demonstrates that permeance is determined by the soluble cuticular lipids associated with the cutin, rather than by cutin alone.
  • (20) The properties of the homogeneous cutinase I, cutinase II, and the nonspecific esterase isolated from the extracellular fluid of cutin-grown Fusarium solani F. pisi (R.E.

Words possibly related to "cetin"

Words possibly related to "cutin"