Chemical Similarity (chemical + similarity)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Papilio aegeus Donovan (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae) host plant range evaluated experimentally on ancient angiosperms

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 1 2007
J Mark Scriber
Abstract, Chemical similarities among ancient Angiosperms presumably played a role in the ecological and evolutionary diversification of the swallowtail butterflies (Papilionidae). The abilities of neonate larvae of the Citrus swallowtail, Papilio (=Princeps) aegeus (from Queensland, Australia), to eat, survive and grow on leaves (a choice of young and old) of 34 plant species from families of ancient Angiosperms; 8 Rutaceae, 3 Magnoliaceae, 13 Lauraceae, 3 Monimiaceae, 1 Aristolochiaceae, 2 Apiaceae, 1 Sapotaceae, 1 Winteraceae and 2 Annonaceae were tested. It was apparent that there is genetic variation in populations of Rutaceae-specialised Australian P. aegeus for acceptance, consumption and larval growth, reflecting differential suitability of some native Australian Lauraceae species as food plants (as well as certain Winteraceae, Monimiaceae and non-Australian Magnoliaceae, Lauraceae and Annonaceae). No consumption or survival of P. aegeus was seen on Aristolochia elegans (Aristolochiaceae) or Pouteria australis (Sapotaceae) despite literature records alluding to this possibility. The Rutaceae specialist P. aegeus appears to have the fundamental detoxification capabilities for processing many existing species of the basal Angiosperm families, without having direct ancestors that historically had fed on them. [source]


Tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons intrinsic to the human striatum express the transcription factor Nurr1

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 8 2004
Martine Cossette
Abstract The putative dopaminergic (DA) neurons intrinsic to human striatum were studied to determine their similarity with DA neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc). The comparison was based on morphological features and on the presence or absence of Nurr1, an orphan receptor of the nuclear receptor family that is essential for the expression of DA phenotype by developing SNpc neurons. Immunohistochemistry for the neuronal nuclear protein (NeuN; a neuronal marker) and in situ hybridization for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and/or Nurr1 were applied to post-mortem tissue obtained from seven normal individuals. On one hand, the TH-positive multipolar neurons in the human striatum, which were subdivided into three groups according to their size and pattern of dendritic arborization, were found to be morphologically similar to TH-positive neurons of the SNpc. The distribution frequency of striatal TH-positive neurons, according to their diameter, closely matches the frequency observed for multipolar TH-positive cells in the SNpc. On the other hand, the proportion of neurons expressing Nurr1 and TH mRNA transcripts on single striatal section was similar to the proportion of TH-immunoreactive neurons observed on adjacent sections. More importantly, in each striatum analysed, virtually all cells that stained for TH also expressed NeuN and Nurr1. This study provides novel data that confirm the existence of DA neurons intrinsic to the human striatum. It also provides the first evidence for the existence of striking morphological and chemical similarities between the DA neurons present at striatal level and those that populate the SNpc. [source]


Baseflow and peakflow chemical responses to experimental applications of ammonium sulphate to forested watersheds in north-central West Virginia, USA,

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 12 2002
Pamela J. Edwards
Abstract Stream water was analysed to determine how induced watershed acidification changed the chemistry of peakflow and baseflow and to compare the relative timing of these changes. Two watersheds in north-central West Virginia, WS3 and WS9, were subjected to three applications of ammonium sulphate fertilizer per year to induce acidification. A third watershed, WS4, was the control. Samples were collected for 8 years from WS9 and for 9 years from WS3. Prior to analyses, concentration data were flow adjusted, and the influence of natural background changes was removed by accounting for the chemical responses measured from WS4. This yielded residual values that were evaluated using robust locally weighted regression and Mann,Kendall tests. On WS3, analyte responses during baseflow and peakflow were similar, although peakflow responses occurred soon after the first treatment whereas baseflow responses lagged 1,2 years. This lag in baseflow responses corresponded well with the mean transit time of baseflow on WS3. Anion adsorption on WS3 apparently delayed increases in SO4 leaching, but resulted in enhanced early leaching losses of Cl and NO3. Leaching of Ca and Mg was strongly tied, both by timing and stoichiometrically, to NO3 and SO4 leaching. F -factors for WS3 baseflow and peakflow indicated that the catchment was insensitive to acid neutralizing capacity reductions both before and during treatment, although NO3 played a large role in reducing the treatment period F -factor. By contrast, the addition of fertilizer to WS9 created an acid sensitive system in both baseflow and peakflow. On WS9, baseflow and peakflow responses also were similar to each other, but there was no time lag after treatment for baseflow. Changes in concentrations generally were not as great on WS9 as on WS3, and several ions showed no significant changes, particularly for peakflow. The lesser response to treatment on WS9 is attributed to the past abusive farming and site preparation before larch planting that resulted in poor soil fertility, erosion, and consequently, physical and chemical similarities between upper and lower soil layers. Even with fertilizer-induced NO3 and SO4 leaching increases, base cations were in low supplies and, therefore, unavailable to leach via charge pairing. The absence of a time lag in treatment responses for WS9 baseflow indicates that it has substantially different flow paths than WS3. The different hydrologies on these nearby watersheds illustrates the importance of understanding watershed hydrology when establishing a monitoring programme to detect ecosystem change. Published in 2002 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Theory and applications of the integrated molecular transform and the normalized molecular moment structure descriptors: QSAR and QSPR paradigms

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUANTUM CHEMISTRY, Issue 6 2001
Stephen P. Molnar
Abstract The chemical and mathematical rationalé in the development of the numerically unitary integrated molecular transform (FTm), its analogous electronic (FTe) and charge (FTc) transforms, and the normalized molecular moment (Mn), and its analogous electronic (Me) and charge (Mc) moment as molecular structure descriptors are presented. The reported application and utilization of these indices for predictive capability correlations of structure with physicochemical, pharmacological, and thermodynamic properties are reviewed. The further use of these descriptors in considerations of chemical similarity is noted, as is their capability for searching compound databases whose contents include the noted calculated indices. Their potential for characterizing peptides, proteins, and oligomers as well as their possible function in mathematical models is discussed. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2001 [source]


Oleuropein and hydroxytyrosol inhibit MCF-7 breast cancer cell proliferation interfering with ERK1/2 activation

MOLECULAR NUTRITION & FOOD RESEARCH (FORMERLY NAHRUNG/FOOD), Issue 6 2010
Rosa Sirianni
Abstract The growth of many breast tumors is stimulated by estradiol (E2), which activates a classic mechanism of regulation of gene expression and signal transduction pathways inducing cell proliferation. Polyphenols of natural origin with chemical similarity to estrogen have been shown to interfere with tumor cell proliferation. The aim of this study was to investigate whether hydroxytyrosol (HT) and oleuropein (OL), two polyphenols contained in extra-virgin olive oil, can affect breast cancer cell proliferation interfering with E2-induced molecular mechanisms. Both HT and OL inhibited proliferation of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. Luciferase gene reporter experiments, using a construct containing estrogen responsive elements able to bind estrogen receptor alpha (ER,) and the study of the effects of HT or OL on ER, expression, demonstrated that HT and OL are not involved in ER,-mediated regulation of gene expression. However, further experiments pointed out that both OL and HT determined a clear inhibition of E2-dependent activation of extracellular regulated kinase1/2 belonging to the mitogen activating protein kinase family. Our study demonstrated that HT and OL can have a chemo-preventive role in breast cancer cell proliferation through the inhibition of estrogen-dependent rapid signals involved in uncontrolled tumor cell growth. [source]


Use of flow injection atmospheric pressure photoionization quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry for fast olive oil fingerprinting

RAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY, Issue 8 2006
J. L. Gómez-Ariza
The recently introduced technique of an atmospheric pressure photoionization (APPI) source coupled to quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (QqTOFMS) has been applied to fast olive oil fingerprinting on the basis of the accurate mass measurements obtained with this instrumentation. The key compounds can be characterized as [M+H]+ (produced by proton transfer) or as [M]+. (by charge transfer) ions in the mass spectra. [M+H]+ ions, however, show higher abundance, especially for triacylglycerols. Other ions present in APPI-MS are the acylium ion [RiCO]+ and [RiCOH2O]+. This latter ion is absent in the electrospray ionization (ESI)-MS spectra, and this represents valuable complementary information. Several critical parameters in the APPI source were optimized such as LC eluent composition, ion spray voltage and, especially, declustering potential. APPI-QqTOFMS allows easy discrimination among different edible oils: olive, extra virgin olive, olive-pomace, hazelnut, sunflower, corn and several mixed oils, with high throughput (approximately 1,min per sample). Cluster analysis was applied to obtain the best experimental conditions for oil discrimination on the basis of declustering potential. Principal components analyses of these APPI-MS spectra show that the approach can be used for studies of olive oil adulteration with other oils, even in the case of hazelnut oil that exhibits a high chemical similarity with olive oil. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Synthesis and Transfection Activity of New Cationic Phosphoramidate Lipids: High Efficiency of an Imidazolium Derivative

CHEMBIOCHEM, Issue 9 2008
Mathieu Mével Dr.
Abstract In an effort to enhance the gene-transfer efficiencies of cationic lipids and to decrease their toxicities, a series of new phosphoramidate lipids with chemical similarity to cell membrane phospholipids was synthesised. These lipids contained various cationic headgroups, such as arginine methyl ester, lysine methyl ester, homoarginine methyl ester, ethylenediamine, diaminopropane, guanidinium and imidazolium. Their transfection abilities, either alone or with the co-lipid DOPE, were evaluated in HEK293,T7 cells. We found that imidazolium lipophosphoramidate 7,a/DOPE lipoplexes gave the most efficient transfection with low toxicity (15,%). The luciferase activity was 100 times higher than that obtained with DOTAP/DOPE lipoplexes. The size, , potential, pDNA,liposome interactions and cellular uptakes of the lipoplexes were determined. No definitive correlation between the , potential values and the transfection efficiencies could be established, but the uptake of lipoplexes by the cells was correlated with their final transfection efficiencies. Our results show that imidazolium phosphoramidate lipids constitute a potential new class of cationic lipids for gene transfer. [source]