(n.) Cane sugar; sucrose; also, in general, any one of the group of which saccharose, or sucrose proper, is the type. See Sucrose.
Example Sentences:
(1) Saccharose did not alter mechanical or electrical characteristics.
(2) Production of radioactive CO2 from 14C-fructose administered intraperitoneally was studied in 18 male Wistar rats given food containing saccharose with calorific value of 0-56%.
(3) The energy contribution to the body is clearly smaller from lactitol than from saccharose, certainly due to the effect of lactitol on digestion, and probably also due to the effect on the utilization of ME.
(4) Nine (18%) had lactose malabsorption, associated in two (4%) with saccharose malabsorption and in one (2%) with cow's milk protein intolerance.
(5) 14C-radioactivity increased in the total lipid of serum and epididymal adipose tissue, in liver phospholipids and mostly in liver neutral lipids with the saccharose-supplemented diet but not with invert sugar-supplemented diet.
(6) Xylitol may be used as a sweetening agent in few cases only, since it appears to be physiologically not so well tolerated as saccharose.
(7) The rate of the spontaneously beating hearts did not change after urea or saccharose treatment.
(8) The feature distinguishing the effect produced by the ration with saccharose, as compared with that containing starch, was an accelerated etherification of cholesterol in the blood.
(9) Similar fragments of sponge were implanted in a group of control animals who received the vehicle (saccharose syrup) only, also by the oral route.
(10) Under the influence of a cariogenic saccharose-casein diet and the simultaneous induction of experimental caries, the intensity of the migration of the labelled amino acids from the odontoblasts to the predentine increases during the first and second stages of caries, which must be interpreted as an increase of the protein-synthetizing function of the odontoblasts associated with an intensification of dentinogenesis.
(11) One-hundred-fifty days after inoculation the animals were allocated into 4 groups: Group I (control), divided into subgroup L (fed lactose for 4 weeks) and subgroup S (fed saccharose for 4 weeks); Group II (inoculated), divided into subgroup L (fed lactose for 4 weeks) and subgroup S (fed saccharose for 4 weeks); Group III (control), divided into subgroup L-S (fed lactose for 4 weeks and saccharose for the following 4 weeks) and subgroup S (fed saccharose for 8 weeks); and Group IV (inoculated), divided into subgroup L-S (fed lactose for 4 weeks and saccharose for the following 4 weeks) and subgroup S (fed saccharose for 8 weeks).
(12) The synthesis of amylolytic enzymes by Pichia burtonii strain CBS 6141 requires the presence of etarch, maltose, and saccharose.
(13) The average value while chewing the sponge which had absorbed 1 M saccharose was significantly lower in the subjects who obtained a relatively large average value during distilled water sponge-chewing, whereas it was significantly greater in those who obtained a relatively small average value while chewing the sponge which had absorbed distilled water.
(14) After feeding saccharose once more the increase of the accumulation capacity is in the distal intestinal part higher than in the two other intestinal parts.
(15) A strain of Byssochlamys nivea cultivated in a liquid medium (Saccharose: 50 g: NaNo3: 2 g; KH2PO4: 1 g; KCL: 0.5 g; MgSO4, 7H2O: 0.5 g; water to 1000 ml) produces, at 24 degrees C, an antibiotic substance which appears after several days of growth (10-12 days).
(16) By means of the Warburg technique, whether and to what extent microorganisms of the human plaque can metabolize xylitol under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions was studied, and the results were compared with those for saccharose.
(17) The histiocytic nature of the atypical cells was primarily documented by intense activity of NaF-inhibitable non-specific esterase, of acid phosphatase and of beta-glucuronidase as demonstrated in cryostat sections of formaldehyde-saccharose-fixed fresh biopsy specimens and by the detection of alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and lysozyme antigens, in that order of constancy (immunohistochemical examination of formaldehyde-fixed paraffin sections, using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method).
(18) These vibrios proved to be typical representatives of Vibrio genus and were distinctly differentiated by species according to the following signs: saccharose splitting, growth in peptone water with 10% NaCl solution, and acetylmethylcarbinol production.
(19) L-hapten preparations obtained in the course of our investigations have been found to contain two O-specific antigens detected by immunoelectrophoresis and immunodiffusion, as well as by sedimentation in saccharose gradient, where they form peaks corresponding to 4.3 S and 10.8 S. This polysaccharide O-antigen is supposed to be capable of interaction with ribosomal particles and suitable for use as a component of ribosomal dysentery vaccines.
(20) Glucose, saccharose, albumin and methyl linolate were found not to be involved in the KBrO3 reaction, but reduced glutathione and also ferric ions participated to produce DMPO-OH.
Sucrose
Definition:
(n.) A common variety of sugar found in the juices of many plants, as the sugar cane, sorghum, sugar maple, beet root, etc. It is extracted as a sweet, white crystalline substance which is valuable as a food product, and, being antiputrescent, is largely used in the preservation of fruit. Called also saccharose, cane sugar, etc. By extension, any one of the class of isomeric substances (as lactose, maltose, etc.) of which sucrose proper is the type.
Example Sentences:
(1) Size analysis of the solubilized IgA IP employing sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation, indicated that these were heterogeneous, with a size generally larger than 19 S.
(2) Histone mRNA, labeled with 32P or 3H-methionine during the S phase of partially synchronized HeLa cells, was isolated from the polyribosomes and purified as a "9S" component by sucrose gradient sedimentation.
(3) Subsequent isoelectric focusing in sucrose revealed an isoelectric point of 9.0-9.2.
(4) Crossed immunoelectrophoresis and sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation of the patient's plasma showed his prothrombin to be qualitatively indistinguishable from normal prothrombin by these techniques.
(5) Substitution of NaCl in the extracellular medium by sucrose, LiCl, or Na2SO4 had no effect on glutamate stimulation of [3H]dopamine release; however, release was inhibited when NaCl was replaced by choline chloride or N-methyl-D-glucamine HCl.
(6) Media made hyperosmotic with sucrose increase the frequency of spontaneously released quanta of transmitter, or miniature excitatory postsynaptic potentials (MEPSPs).
(7) Furthermore, the effect of immunization was examined in monkeys previously given fluoride in their diet and which had developed a low incidence of dental caries when offered a human type of diet containing about 15 per cent sucrose.
(8) Cultures of Streptococcus mutans HS-6, OMZ-176, Ingbritt C, 6715-wt13, and pooled human plaque were grown in trypticase soy media with or without 1% sucrose.
(9) Neutral sucrose density sedimentation patterns indicate that neutron-induced double strand-breaks sometimes occur in clusters of more than 100 in the same phage and that the effeciency with which double strand-breaks form is about 50 times that of gamma-induced double strand-breaks.
(10) [14C]Sucrose biliary clearance increased in treated animals, suggesting an increased permeability of the biliary system to sucrose.
(11) Partially purified VLPs were found to sediment at 183S in sucrose gradients and to cross-react with antibody in acute phase sera from geographically isolated cases of ET-NANBH.
(12) The results suggest that in sodium-depleted rats denervation natriuresis can be ascribed neither to strain differences nor to the high sucrose content of the low-sodium diet.
(13) We measured the steady-state volumes of distribution for radioactive chloride, sucrose, and albumin in the lung of six anesthetized, spen-thorax sheep.
(14) Here we compare this revised technique to the classical sucrose density centrifugation procedure.
(15) These extracts were used to purify transcriptionally active 2-microns minichromosomes in a sucrose gradient.
(16) The concentration dependences of response of frog tongue to D-fructose, D-glucose, and sucrose were almost the same, D-galactose, however, elicited a much larger response in comparison with the other sugars in the whole range of concentrations examined.
(17) Similarly at ) degrees glutamine is confined to the simultaneously determined sucrose or mannitol spaces...
(18) Mononucleosomes obtained from labeled cells were fractionated by rate zonal sedimentation through a sucrose gradient in heavy water (Senshu et al.
(19) Sympathetic nervous system function was blocked in developing male SHR by treating pups from days 0 to 14 with: (1) guanethidine, (2) combined alpha- and beta-receptor antagonists (prazosin and timolol), or (3) vehicle (5% sucrose).
(20) The method is based upon osmotic swelling, sonication and centrifugation in sucrose.