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1 , and extensively, throughout the grain than selenite.
2 the selD or the xdh mutant upon addition of selenite.
3 erevisiae, catalyzes high-affinity uptake of selenite.
4 ration of reactive oxygen species induced by selenite.
5 peroxide production and apoptosis induced by selenite.
6 elenate but were low in plants supplied with selenite.
7 ins were up-regulated by chronic exposure to selenite.
8 uced in rats by a single injection of sodium selenite.
9 rticles of elemental selenium (nano-Se) from selenite.
10 hat selenate was taken up 2-fold faster than selenite.
11 vol) fetal bovine serum and 0.1 microM [75Se]selenite.
12 mobile selenate into relatively less mobile selenite.
13 ponic solution supplemented with selenate or selenite.
14 ble Se was comprised of Se oxyanions, mainly selenite.
15 ximately 1 mm from the apex) when exposed to selenite.
16 or the crystallization of templated vanadium selenites.
18 al cell bodies were also stained with either selenite (1 hr) or 6-methoxy 8-para-toluene sulfonamide
19 dicates that, in LB medium supplemented with selenite (1 mM), reduction to nano-Se occurs at a rate o
21 Se converted to organic forms was higher for selenite (100%) than for selenate (26%), the absolute co
26 showed that overexpression of Jen1p enables selenite accumulation in yeast compared with a JEN1 knoc
30 sms by which selenium, in the form of sodium selenite, added to serum-free growth medium regulates TR
32 vation of intracellular calcium levels after selenite administration resulted in increased levels of
37 ed in the presence of up to 1.5 mM NaCl, and selenite analysis is even more robust against chloride.
39 the Recommended Dietary Allowance of sodium selenite and antiretroviral drugs (ARV) on maternal plas
41 otic dissimilatory reduction of selenate and selenite and assimilation of the reduced Se species into
42 vector-only control plants when treated with selenite and exhibited an increased tolerance to Se.
44 e mechanism of 3D versus 2D A549 cultures to selenite and metabolic reprogramming that can mediate th
46 tRNA(Sec) in vitro in the presence of sodium selenite and purified recombinant E. coli selenophosphat
47 PC3 cells increased cellular sensitivity to selenite and resulted in increased superoxide production
48 imed to produce Se-microparticles (selenate, selenite and Se-organic) using combined methods of micro
49 e NOM with Fe(III) increases the sorption of selenite and selenate by several orders of magnitude.
52 th different concentrations of inorganic Se (selenite and selenate) and applied twice to the plants i
53 , were enriched with two selenium compounds (selenite and selenate) to test their suitability as natu
54 lenocysteine and inorganic selenium species (selenite and selenate) were not detected in the dialyzat
59 increased resistance to the toxic effects of selenite and selenomethionine (SeMet), respectively.
60 3D A549 spheroids in response to anticancer selenite and simultaneously (13)C/(15)N atoms from [(13)
61 Phoma glomerata to effect transformation of selenite and tellurite was investigated including intera
62 pheroids in response to the anticancer agent selenite and that of [(13)C(5),(15)N(2)]-glutamine in 2D
63 ae were also exposed to waterborne dissolved selenite and to dietary selenomethionine as selenized al
64 the form of Se-supplemented (0.4 ppm; sodium selenite) and high Se (1.0 ppm; sodium selenite) diets.
65 <0.01 ppm Se), Se-adequate (0.08 ppm; sodium selenite), and two supraphysiological levels in the form
66 s" and related oxidation products, selenate, selenite, and other species relatable to the quality and
67 We also measured whether oxidized selenium, selenite, and reduced selenium, selenide, would target t
68 nic or organic species of Se (e.g. selenate, selenite, and Se-methionine [Met]) into gaseous Se forms
69 The stoichiometric reductions of selenate, selenite, and selenium dioxide with an iron(II) complex
72 SeMSC accumulation in response to selenate, selenite, and sulfate treatments showed that the BoSMT t
73 re treated with increasing concentrations of selenite, and the effects on DNA-binding activity of NF-
76 ers) occurred at a much higher rate than for selenite (apparently by both passive diffusion and phosp
78 o accumulate selenium by growing with sodium selenite as the selenium source under hydroponic conditi
79 that oxidative stress was induced by sodium selenite at high concentrations in both acute and chroni
80 of loss of cell viability induced either by selenite at pharmacological levels or by growth factor d
82 differential cytotoxicity observed by sodium selenite between HCT116 and HCT116+Chr.3 cell lines was
84 ave strong implications for the retention of selenite by corrosion products in nuclear waste reposito
87 e, but in higher toxic levels (>5-10 microM) selenite can react with essential thiol groups on enzyme
91 on pollutants (arsenate, arsenite, selenate, selenite, chromate, and perchlorate) were selected for s
95 an SG assembly and provide insights into how selenite cytotoxicity may be exploited as an anti-neopla
99 increasing selenite levels and, at 7 microM selenite, DNA-binding activity was completely inhibited.
100 th the exception of Salmonella culture using selenite enrichment for which PCR was less sensitive tha
103 icles in the presence of EPS, extracted from selenite fed anaerobic granular sludge, yielded stable c
104 adpoles were exposed to dissolved (75)Se (as selenite) for 7 days and depurated until completion of m
105 as sole electron donor in the reaction with selenite, further conversion of the R-SSeS-R product app
106 of yogurt with Se in the form of free sodium selenite had a low effect on improving the bioaccessibil
108 much less toxic to the cells than was sodium selenite (IC(50) approximately 17 microM) or the parent
110 at both pathways significantly contribute to selenite immobilization in a microfluidic flow cell havi
120 xpressing LNCaP cells were more sensitive to selenite-induced apoptosis than p53-null PC3 cells.
121 to involve DNA topoisomerase II (Top II) as selenite-induced apoptosis was reduced in Top II-deficie
124 In the aggregate, these results suggest that selenite-induced apoptosis, which involves ATM/ATR and T
127 N-acetylcysteine amide-only group, a sodium selenite-induced cataract group, and a NACA-treated sodi
131 c sites of MIP N- and C-terminal cleavage in selenite-induced cataractous lenses were identified.
132 Macroarray analysis showed more pronounced selenite-induced increases in mRNA levels of ethylene- o
140 siderite is essentially a two-step process, selenite ions being immobilized on siderite surface prio
142 readily internalized by C. reinhardtii, but selenite is accumulated around ten times more efficientl
146 (DMEM) containing insulin-transferrin-sodium selenite (ITS) supplement (DMEM/ITS) or 10% fetal bovine
147 e DMEM containing insulin-transferrin-sodium selenite (ITS) with 10, 100, and 1000 pg/mL TGF-beta1 or
148 14-(1-pyridinium)-N-octadecanoyl-sphingosine selenite (LCL768) to induce mitophagy and metabolic stre
149 ts was decreased progressively by increasing selenite levels and, at 7 microM selenite, DNA-binding a
152 ells with a gradient concentration of sodium selenite, methylseleninic acid and methylselenocysteine
153 n media containing various concentrations of selenite, molybdate, and various purine substrates.
154 nate was 9-fold more toxic to the roots than selenite, most likely due to increased accumulation of o
155 rminated after soaking with different sodium selenite (Na2SeO3) concentrations (0, 1 and 2mg/100g see
156 d fastest uptake rates for both selenate and selenite, of all zirconium-based MOFs studied here.
158 r chemopreventive agents and less toxic than selenite or certain naturally occurring selenoamino acid
159 ivities of PH and XDH, increased when either selenite or molybdate was added to the culture medium.
160 on processes for groundwater contaminated by selenite or other contaminants (e.g., uranium(IV)) that
162 atch reactor experiments were performed with selenite or selenate by equilibrating suspensions contai
164 es of radioactive selenium 75 in the form of selenite or selenide and measured blood and tissue selen
167 , (ii) that are highly electrophilic such as selenite, or (iii) that are activated by strain such as
168 amended with the selenium oxyanion selenate, selenite, or selenocyanate, produces volatile organosele
169 B damage to DNA and modulation by vitamin C, selenite, or Trolox, a water-soluble vitamin E analog.
170 eMet and SeMet (but no DMSeP) accumulated in selenite- or SeMet-supplied wild-type plants and in sele
172 ics the reaction zone along the margins of a selenite plume undergoing bioremediation in the presence
174 manner and supplementation of 100 nM sodium selenite prevented the detrimental effects of glutamate
175 nium supplementation of 2000 mug/L of sodium selenite prior to cardiopulmonary bypass, 2000 mug/L imm
177 combination of reference spectra showed that selenite reaction with siderite is essentially a two-ste
180 eine thiol groups in reduced rSeBP prevented selenite reduction and selenium binding under comparable
181 regation of the more thermodynamic favorable selenite reduction and the less thermodynamically favora
182 rous oxides, is the main reason for its high selenite removal performance demonstrated by batch and c
186 ndex demonstrated a clear difference between selenite-resistant Col-0 and selenite-sensitive Ws-2.
188 use high levels of molybdate, tungstate, and selenite restored growth to wild-type levels, this trans
189 0 micrograms/ml Trolox, and 5 or 12.5 microM selenite resulted in a significant decrease in the numbe
190 feeding mice a diet supplemented with sodium selenite results in an MR-like phenotype, marked by prot
191 rphous elemental selenium precipitate on the selenite-rich side of the mixing zone, while long crysta
192 presence of selenoproteins, suggesting that selenite's neutralization of auranofin is not because of
195 rite and sphalerite, 19% of Se is present as selenite (Se(4+)) in barite, 21% of Se is present as exc
196 olize selenium when grown in the presence of selenite (Se(IV)) and selenate (Se(VI)) was investigated
197 method, the predominant selenium oxyanions, selenite (Se(IV)) and selenate (Se(VI)), can be quantifi
198 es were exposed to dissolved Se (30 ug/L) as selenite (Se(IV)) or selenate (Se(VI)) for 7 days follow
199 or five selenium species; selenate (Se(VI)), Selenite (se(IV)), selenocysteine (SeC), Se-methylseleno
200 dation states, selenate (Se(VI)O(4)(2-)) and selenite (Se(IV)O(3)(2-)) oxyanions can interact with ma
204 in QD exposures, we examined the toxicity of selenite, selenate, and amorphous selenium nanoparticles
206 ed and reduced into various inorganic forms (selenite, selenide, or elemental Se) or partially incorp
208 olism of common dietary selenium compounds - selenite, selenomethionine, methylselenocysteine and sel
211 reduction-oxidation reaction between aqueous selenite (SeO(3)(2-)) and siderite (FeCO(3(s))) was moni
213 AtSBP1 binds selenium after incubation with selenite (SeO3(2-)) with a ligand to protein molar ratio
214 ubsequent toxicity to consumers of dissolved selenite (SeO3) versus selenate (SeO4) uptake into aquat
216 nsgenic seedlings tolerated Se, particularly selenite, significantly better than the wild type, produ
217 ls were treated with selenocompounds (sodium selenite, sodium selenate, Se-Met, MeSeCys) or SeB [high
218 ated in growth compost irrigated with sodium selenite solution increased by 28- and 43-fold compared
220 capsaicin treatment, which had no effect on selenite stain or MT-III mRNA content in small-diameter
224 x-ray absorption spectroscopy revealed that selenite-supplied plants accumulated organic Se, most li
226 SRM selective inhibitors including selenate, selenite, tellurate, tellurite, nitrate, nitrite, perchl
227 ransverse mixing zone between propionate and selenite that mimics the reaction zone along the margins
228 mpare acute versus chronic effects of sodium selenite, the latter most closely resembling human clini
229 When grown in the presence of selenate or selenite, these bacteria produced both organo-sulfur and
230 ith plants supplied with SeMet, selenate, or selenite; they also accumulated more Se in shoots than i
231 steps in Se volatilization from selenate and selenite, time- and concentration-dependent kinetics of
233 hr) that allows retrograde transport of zinc selenite to cell bodies, only small-diameter neurons and
237 cumulated mainly in the leaves compared with selenite-treated plants where the selenium was retained
238 e peptides inhibited cataract development in selenite-treated rats, which was accompanied by inhibiti
244 such as glutathione and cysteine, react with selenite under specific conditions to form selenotrisulf
246 latilization from selenite may be limited by selenite uptake and by the conversion of selenomethionin
248 ninic acid, methylselenocysteine, and sodium selenite via reactive oxygen species and facilitates the
257 tral evolutions showed that more than 60% of selenite was reduced at the siderite surface after 20 h
259 Using purified human recombinant Top II, selenite was shown to induce reversible Top II cleavage
261 ultured in the presence or absence of Se (as selenite) was used to examine temporal changes in the pr
265 o foliar Se fertilisers (sodium selenate and selenite) were tested at four rates (0-10-20-40gha(-1))
267 e Se-containing substrates selenocystine and selenite with only slightly less activity than the wild-