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chapt06HOv2.ppt
chapt06HOv2.ppt

... reactions or redox reactions •  Substance that loses electrons is oxidized •  Substance that gains electrons is reduced •  Electron-proton pair, or Transfer of electrons ...
Cellular respiration
Cellular respiration

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Bio II Elodea Lab: Photosynthesis and Cellular
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... Coenzymes are reduced: three ____________and one _________ are produced._________ATP is produced. For every glucose molecule split during glycolysis, two acetyl fragments are produced. Therefore it takes _____turns of the cycle to complete the oxidation of glucose. Reduced coenzymes produced by the ...
Cellular Respiration
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... GO annotation: precise annotation of protein forms in PomBase ChEBI: Move protein terms to PRO Dendritic Cell Ontology: Define cell types based on +/- protein types [PMID:19243617] Annotation Ontology for annotating scientific documents on the web [PMID:21624159] Brucellosis Ontology (IDOBRU), Infec ...
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... • Anaerobic respiration does not require oxygen as the final electron acceptor. • Some organisms do not have the necessary enzymes to carry out the Krebs cycle and ETS. • Many prokaryotic organisms fall into this category. • Yeast is a eukaryotic organism that performs anaerobic respiration. ...
Score A_c5_17022012
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... electron transport system. (i) What is the reduced co-enzyme? _______ [1m] (ii) What is the reaction involved in the production of ATP when the reduced co-enzyme in e(i) enters the electron transport system? _________________ [1m] ...
Nucleolin: A Multifunctional Major Nucleolar Phosphoprotein
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Expressing Biologically Active Membrane Proteins in a Cell
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... to express membrane proteins in cell-free transcription-translation systems, and use them directly in biocircuits, considering the fact that histidine kinases, G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) and other important biosensors are all membrane proteins. Previous stud ...
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Chapter 6: Cellular Respiration
Chapter 6: Cellular Respiration

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electron transport chain

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... and Scott 2002). AKAPs are a group of structurally diverse proteins with the common ...
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Endocrine System: Overview
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... a. energizing ATP energy is used to move the myosin head from a low energy position to a high energy, ready position.released with myosin and actin interact. b. detaching ATP energy is used to detach the myosin head from its binding site on the actin filament during muscle contraction. ...
Development of a Novel Vector System for Programmed Cell Lysis
Development of a Novel Vector System for Programmed Cell Lysis

... cloned into pACYC184 using restriction enzymes to obtain pGlys (Table 1). To remove the T7 terminator located between gene t (holin gene) and the T7 lysozyme gene, pGlys was partially digested with BamHI and completely digested with Bpu1102I, treated with Klenow fragment, and ligated. To assure blue ...
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... treated with palmitate or the SERCA inhibitor thapsigargin for different periods of time followed by confocal microscopy and electron microscopy (EM) analysis. In nonstressed ␤-cells, ER morphology was mainly tubular; treatment with palmitate (0.5 mmol/l) or thapsigargin (300 nmol/l) for 6 h induced ...
Regulation of translation initiation following stress
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... causes the accumulation of uncharged-tRNAs (reviewed by Hinnebusch, 1994). It has been reported that phosphorylation of eIF2 (Ser51 of a subunit) inhibits eIF2B such that eIF2B can no longer catalyze nucleotide exchange and thus, a majority of the eIF2a exists in binary complex with GDP (reviewed by ...
Anaerobic Glucose and Serine Metabolism in Staphy
Anaerobic Glucose and Serine Metabolism in Staphy

... biochemical tests of Schleifer & Kocur (1973) and Schleifer & Kloos (1975). Growth of organism. Bacteria were grown in the medium and under the conditions described by Horan et al. (1978~);where indicated glucose was excluded and this is referred to as the basal medium. Anaerobic cultures were incub ...
Aspects of growth factor signal transduction in the cell cytoplasm
Aspects of growth factor signal transduction in the cell cytoplasm

... 1992) and the crystal structure of the phosphotyrosine recognition domain SH2 of v-src complexed with tyrosine phosphorylated peptides (Waksman et al., 1992) have been determined. Koch et al. (1991) suggested that the binding of SH2 domains to activated growth factor receptors exemplifies the genera ...
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Phosphorylation



Phosphorylation is the addition of a phosphate (PO43−) group to a protein or other organic molecule. Phosphorylation and its counterpart, dephosphorylation, turn many protein enzymes on and off, thereby altering their function and activity. Protein phosphorylation is one type of post-translational modification.Protein phosphorylation in particular plays a significant role in a wide range of cellular processes. Its prominent role in biochemistry is the subject of a very large body of research (as of March 2015, the Medline database returns over 240,000 articles on the subject, largely on protein phosphorylation).
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