(1) Apolipoproteins A-IV, A-I and E from rat high-density lipoprotein (HDL) were successfully purified by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), using a method which we have previously developed for the separation of apolipoproteins A-IV, A-I and E from human lymph chylomicrons [T. Tetaz, E. Kecorius, B. Grego and N. Fidge, J.
(2) These findings are in agreement with our recent work using isolated CNBr fragments of apoA-I (Morrison, J., Fidge, N. H., and Tozuka, M. (1991) J. Biol.
Fridge
Definition:
(n.) To rub; to fray.
Example Sentences:
(1) The three-year-old comes into the kitchen for a drink, and as Steve opens the fridge, I can see it contains nothing apart from a half-full bottle of milk.
(2) It was also chided for failing to roll out a 2011 pilot scheme to put doors on fridges in its stores.
(3) Just drink it straight away, rather than storing it in the fridge, and bear in mind "they're not as good at juicing leafy greens, so you'll need to juice more to get the same volume."
(4) The same strains were isolated from the baby warmer mattress, baby cot, suction machine bottle and wall of the fridge.
(5) He said: "A frothy pint of ale and a Snickers from the fridge."
(6) As for after emergency treatment, volunteers will help patients return home safely and make sure there is food in the fridge – relieving pressure on social care.
(7) It's the television equivalent of asking your son to draw you a picture and then pinning it to the back of the fridge because, secretly, you hate him.
(8) But there will probably always be a rump that waves away terms like "human dignity" as so much leftwing blarney; who think foreigners are fundamentally different and are worth less, who think it's important to clean behind fridges, and furthermore, that women should be doing it; who think if they're ever caught out they can call it a joke, and that their joke will be hilarious.
(9) Inside, they are fitted with modern specifications such as air conditioning, orthopaedic seats and even CD players, fridges and televisions if customers request them.
(10) We actually bought it off Gumtree ourselves.” What drew the former prime minister to this particular fridge?
(11) He talks about the people he and his regular writer Paul Laverty met while doing their research: the young lad with nothing in his fridge who hadn’t eaten properly for three days; the woman ashamed of attending food banks; the man told to queue for a casual shift at 5.30am, then sent home an hour later because he wasn’t needed.
(12) Could the typical journey of the modern pint – a week-long trek from cow to fridge via tankers, processing plants, distribution hubs and supermarkets – be replaced by a bucolic idyll of farmers milking and bottling before delivering, all within 12 hours, as Our Cow Molly does?
(13) Split or cracked door seals can allow warm air into your fridge and increase your electricity costs.
(14) A survey by Renaissance Capital found that nearly half of the country's middle class (defined as an average monthly income of $500-$600) were planning to buy fridges, freezers and other white goods, "suggesting a consumer boom is under way".
(15) Photograph: John Brunton The name of this quite magical locale is "osteria without a host", and it totally lives up to its name, with no one behind the bar, and customers trusted to serve themselves prosecco from the fridge, along with cheese, hams, boiled eggs and bread.
(16) Every fridge in the country has a bottle of milk in it,” says Nick Snelgar, a smallholder who has recently set up a micro-dairy in Salisbury.
(17) The indoor venue was a cross between a hamburger-smelling circus tent and a fridge.
(18) Fridges and freezers moved out of the flooded shop were now floating around, he added.
(19) As the months have passed, I've tailored my fridge with experimentation.
(20) Asked whether he would ever be prime minister,he said: "Of course not," adding: "The chance[s] of me being prime minister are about as big as the chances of me being locked in a disused fridge interred in a … what is it?"