1 er (e.g. serpins, regulating cell death, and
alpha-macroglobulins).
2 systemic inflammation as measured by plasma
alpha-macroglobulin.
3 Proteins in the
alpha-macroglobulin (
alphaM) superfamily use thiol ester
4 alpha-Macroglobulins (
alphaMs) are large glycoproteins t
5 Only the active enzyme bound to the two
alpha-macroglobulins,
and the interaction was specific f
6 Murinoglobulin, the second murine
alpha-macroglobulin,
bound both TGF-beta isoforms with 3
7 inhibitors phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and
alpha-macroglobulin could reverse the sigB biofilm defec
8 lpha2M, which is not redundant in the murine
alpha-macroglobulin family or in murine plasma.
9 bulin, which is the only known member of the
alpha-macroglobulin family that does not bind TGF-beta,
10 uch as albumin, fibrinogen, transferrin, and
alpha-macroglobulin in hepatocytes.
11 nalysis of bacterial genomes identified many
alpha-macroglobulin-
like sequences that appear to have b
12 d C5 are members of the thioester-containing
alpha-macroglobulin protein superfamily.
13 The specific binding of plasma CPB to
alpha-macroglobulins suggest that these proteins may fun
14 Malpha2M is the only murine
alpha-macroglobulin that promotes NO synthesis.
15 ion and characterization of such a bacterial
alpha-macroglobulin,
that from Escherichia coli.
16 This is also the first
alpha-macroglobulin to be characterized that is predicte