Nutrients and Nutrient Requirements (modified)
... are maintenance and reproduction •Supplied by nutrients containing carbon •Carbohydrates, fats, and proteins all supply energy •Energy evaluation of feeds is measured by total digestible nutrients, digestible energy, energy for metabolism, and net energy ...
... are maintenance and reproduction •Supplied by nutrients containing carbon •Carbohydrates, fats, and proteins all supply energy •Energy evaluation of feeds is measured by total digestible nutrients, digestible energy, energy for metabolism, and net energy ...
Genomics
... do? What is the function of the protein? – Search the databases for similar sequences – Is the sequence similar to sequences for proteins of known function? – Use computer to search for functional motifs. • Various proteins that do the same thing have similar structural elements. • Example: transcri ...
... do? What is the function of the protein? – Search the databases for similar sequences – Is the sequence similar to sequences for proteins of known function? – Use computer to search for functional motifs. • Various proteins that do the same thing have similar structural elements. • Example: transcri ...
April 3 lecture slides
... polymerase complex are names “enhanceosomes”. TBP stands for TATAbinding protein, a component of RNA polymerase II associated factor, TFIID ...
... polymerase complex are names “enhanceosomes”. TBP stands for TATAbinding protein, a component of RNA polymerase II associated factor, TFIID ...
simulating protein analysis using gel electrophoresis
... questions regarding both proteins and DNA. Gel electrophoresis works on two relatively simple principles. First, when an electrical field is established with positive and negative poles, molecules are attracted to the pole opposite their own electrical charge. It so happens that DNA and protein mole ...
... questions regarding both proteins and DNA. Gel electrophoresis works on two relatively simple principles. First, when an electrical field is established with positive and negative poles, molecules are attracted to the pole opposite their own electrical charge. It so happens that DNA and protein mole ...
1. Categorize chemical signals in terms of the
... - interacts with a variety of proteins - hosts metabolic and developmental processes Tyrosine-kinase characterized by an extracellular ligand-binding domain and enzyme activity - ligand binding causes aggregation of 2 receptor units which activates the kinase activity Ion channels protein pores ...
... - interacts with a variety of proteins - hosts metabolic and developmental processes Tyrosine-kinase characterized by an extracellular ligand-binding domain and enzyme activity - ligand binding causes aggregation of 2 receptor units which activates the kinase activity Ion channels protein pores ...
ppt
... Heuristic – won’t always find the optimum result Z-score signifies how likely to find a subnetwork with a similar number of DE genes. ...
... Heuristic – won’t always find the optimum result Z-score signifies how likely to find a subnetwork with a similar number of DE genes. ...
Lecture_11_2005
... • FtsZ and Tubulin have limited sequence similarity and would not be identified as homologous proteins by sequence analysis. ...
... • FtsZ and Tubulin have limited sequence similarity and would not be identified as homologous proteins by sequence analysis. ...
Mihaela_Leonida_Abstract
... Although the use of proteins and peptides as therapeutic agents and as antimicrobials in the food industry has expanded, problems are still encountered due to their susceptibility to proteolytic degradation, low solubility, and often physicochemical instability. As a solution to these problems, we p ...
... Although the use of proteins and peptides as therapeutic agents and as antimicrobials in the food industry has expanded, problems are still encountered due to their susceptibility to proteolytic degradation, low solubility, and often physicochemical instability. As a solution to these problems, we p ...
I. Characteristics of amino acids and folding of nascent polypeptides
... Post-translational process: After translation of the SS-containing precursor polypeptide, SecA binds to it (at the SS) while in the cytoplasm; an additional chaperone like SecB may also bind to other regions of the polypeptide to keep it from folding. The SecA-precursor protein complex then binds t ...
... Post-translational process: After translation of the SS-containing precursor polypeptide, SecA binds to it (at the SS) while in the cytoplasm; an additional chaperone like SecB may also bind to other regions of the polypeptide to keep it from folding. The SecA-precursor protein complex then binds t ...
Organic Molecules Review Worksheet | Chapter 2
... 16. Circle an entire nucleotide on the DNA segment. P 17. How many nucleotides are shown in the DNA P S segment pictured? 8 A S P 18. Name the three parts of a DNA nucleotide. P S ...
... 16. Circle an entire nucleotide on the DNA segment. P 17. How many nucleotides are shown in the DNA P S segment pictured? 8 A S P 18. Name the three parts of a DNA nucleotide. P S ...
Lecture Exam IV - Napa Valley College
... Even when lactose is present, the transcription of the lac operon does not proceed at a high rate. It needs an activator protein, catabolite activator protein (CAP). This protein needs to bind what molecule in order to be active? A. ...
... Even when lactose is present, the transcription of the lac operon does not proceed at a high rate. It needs an activator protein, catabolite activator protein (CAP). This protein needs to bind what molecule in order to be active? A. ...
Life of a Protein #1 This outline describes the job of a specialized
... This outline describes the job of a specialized cell in the human body. Determine 1) the cells location in the human body and 2) its job description from these clues. The NUCLEUS gets a signal. Genes in the NUCLEUS that code for specialized proteins are activated. Messanger RNA is produced in the NU ...
... This outline describes the job of a specialized cell in the human body. Determine 1) the cells location in the human body and 2) its job description from these clues. The NUCLEUS gets a signal. Genes in the NUCLEUS that code for specialized proteins are activated. Messanger RNA is produced in the NU ...
Protein Enriched Porridge High Protein Porridge
... © 2016. Univar BV. All rights reserved. UNIVAR, the hexagon, and other identified trademarks are the property of Univar Inc., Univar USA Inc., Univar Ltd., or affiliated companies. All other trademarks not owned by Univar Inc., Univar USA Inc., Univar Ltd., or affiliated companies that appear in thi ...
... © 2016. Univar BV. All rights reserved. UNIVAR, the hexagon, and other identified trademarks are the property of Univar Inc., Univar USA Inc., Univar Ltd., or affiliated companies. All other trademarks not owned by Univar Inc., Univar USA Inc., Univar Ltd., or affiliated companies that appear in thi ...
Protein Creation Pathway Tutorial
... ___________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. In general, what are small parts of the cell called? ___________________________________________________ 6. What is the monomer of a protein called? ______________________________________________________ ...
... ___________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. In general, what are small parts of the cell called? ___________________________________________________ 6. What is the monomer of a protein called? ______________________________________________________ ...
Cheese Lab - Protein Chemistry
... As we discussed in class, proteins are large organic molecules that are built as chain (or polymer) of amino acids. The behavior and function of the protein is caused by the specific amino acids that are linked together in the chain. These amino acids react with each other and cause the protein chai ...
... As we discussed in class, proteins are large organic molecules that are built as chain (or polymer) of amino acids. The behavior and function of the protein is caused by the specific amino acids that are linked together in the chain. These amino acids react with each other and cause the protein chai ...
Chem331 Lect 19 Enz Regulation short.pptx
... Regulation of protein phosphorylation varies depending on protein - some turned on or off - most kinases are regulated - phosphatases generally not regulated - can lead to large amplification of original signal Four general classes of protein kinases, based on substrate (both sequence and amino acid ...
... Regulation of protein phosphorylation varies depending on protein - some turned on or off - most kinases are regulated - phosphatases generally not regulated - can lead to large amplification of original signal Four general classes of protein kinases, based on substrate (both sequence and amino acid ...
Protein/Nucleic acid
... R group determines molecule charge charge affects polypeptide Ex: a point mutation in hemoglobin : folding > changes the amino acid, > changes the charge > changes the protein shape > deforming the cell ...
... R group determines molecule charge charge affects polypeptide Ex: a point mutation in hemoglobin : folding > changes the amino acid, > changes the charge > changes the protein shape > deforming the cell ...
File
... e.g. those lining the intestines and throat. Why is this protein relevant to us? © Michela Schaeppi, Wellcome Images ...
... e.g. those lining the intestines and throat. Why is this protein relevant to us? © Michela Schaeppi, Wellcome Images ...
ncbi_locuslink_direc..
... A list of all single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the gene, whether they are in coding sequence, what affect they have on function. ...
... A list of all single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the gene, whether they are in coding sequence, what affect they have on function. ...
Gene Section TAL2 (T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia 2) in Oncology and Haematology
... recombinase via a fortuitous recombination signal sequence (YRSS) on chromosome 9; the translocation results in a signal joint fusion of TAL2 YRSS with the Db1 23-RSS; this gene product was detected in 6 of 10 thymus samples of healthy children with an estimated frequency of 1 in 10 million thymic c ...
... recombinase via a fortuitous recombination signal sequence (YRSS) on chromosome 9; the translocation results in a signal joint fusion of TAL2 YRSS with the Db1 23-RSS; this gene product was detected in 6 of 10 thymus samples of healthy children with an estimated frequency of 1 in 10 million thymic c ...
Corn Gluten Meal - International Feed
... containing about 65% crude protein (DM), used as a source of protein, energy and pigments for livestock species including fish. It is also valued in pet food for its high protein digestibility. The product is golden yellow in color; and fine granular in its physical appearance. Due to its high prote ...
... containing about 65% crude protein (DM), used as a source of protein, energy and pigments for livestock species including fish. It is also valued in pet food for its high protein digestibility. The product is golden yellow in color; and fine granular in its physical appearance. Due to its high prote ...
Chapter 10 Intracellular Compartments and Transport
... A common pool of ribosomes is used to synthesize both the proteins that stay in the cytosol and those that are transported into membrane-enclosed organelles, including the ER ...
... A common pool of ribosomes is used to synthesize both the proteins that stay in the cytosol and those that are transported into membrane-enclosed organelles, including the ER ...
DNA
... sites on DNA (⎯GAATTC ⎯). → ~6nm size frustrates translocation through <6nm pore. • voltage threshold scales with the binding energy for proteins: i.e. BamHI (ΔΔG=-13.2kcal/mol→ 1.8V) (⎯GGATCC ⎯) while EcoRI (ΔΔG=-15.2kcal/mol→ 2.1V threshold) (⎯GAATTC ⎯) ...
... sites on DNA (⎯GAATTC ⎯). → ~6nm size frustrates translocation through <6nm pore. • voltage threshold scales with the binding energy for proteins: i.e. BamHI (ΔΔG=-13.2kcal/mol→ 1.8V) (⎯GGATCC ⎯) while EcoRI (ΔΔG=-15.2kcal/mol→ 2.1V threshold) (⎯GAATTC ⎯) ...
E. coli
... proteins for any given gene correlate well at the ensemble level, they do not correlate at all within individual cells. How is it that, in an organism in which the processes of transcription and translation are coupled, the number of mRNAs does not relate to the number of proteins within each cell? ...
... proteins for any given gene correlate well at the ensemble level, they do not correlate at all within individual cells. How is it that, in an organism in which the processes of transcription and translation are coupled, the number of mRNAs does not relate to the number of proteins within each cell? ...
Protein moonlighting
Protein moonlighting (or gene sharing) is a phenomenon by which a protein can perform more than one function. Ancestral moonlighting proteins originally possessed a single function but through evolution, acquired additional functions. Many proteins that moonlight are enzymes; others are receptors, ion channels or chaperones. The most common primary function of moonlighting proteins is enzymatic catalysis, but these enzymes have acquired secondary non-enzymatic roles. Some examples of functions of moonlighting proteins secondary to catalysis include signal transduction, transcriptional regulation, apoptosis, motility, and structural.Protein moonlighting may occur widely in nature. Protein moonlighting through gene sharing differs from the use of a single gene to generate different proteins by alternative RNA splicing, DNA rearrangement, or post-translational processing. It is also different from multifunctionality of the protein, in which the protein has multiple domains, each serving a different function. Protein moonlighting by gene sharing means that a gene may acquire and maintain a second function without gene duplication and without loss of the primary function. Such genes are under two or more entirely different selective constraints.Various techniques have been used to reveal moonlighting functions in proteins. The detection of a protein in unexpected locations within cells, cell types, or tissues may suggest that a protein has a moonlighting function. Furthermore, sequence or structure homology of a protein may be used to infer both primary function as well as secondary moonlighting functions of a protein.The most well-studied examples of gene sharing are crystallins. These proteins, when expressed at low levels in many tissues function as enzymes, but when expressed at high levels in eye tissue, become densely packed and thus form lenses. While the recognition of gene sharing is relatively recent—the term was coined in 1988, after crystallins in chickens and ducks were found to be identical to separately identified enzymes—recent studies have found many examples throughout the living world. Joram Piatigorsky has suggested that many or all proteins exhibit gene sharing to some extent, and that gene sharing is a key aspect of molecular evolution. The genes encoding crystallins must maintain sequences for catalytic function and transparency maintenance function.Inappropriate moonlighting is a contributing factor in some genetic diseases, and moonlighting provides a possible mechanism by which bacteria may become resistant to antibiotics.