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1 with a quantum mechanical description of the solute.
2 ach carrying a small amount of the delivered solute.
3 osed to high concentrations of extracellular solute.
4 a halochloris is limited to using compatible solutes.
5 xtrapolating beyond the subset of considered solutes.
6 n important role in the transient storage of solutes.
7 ontrolling their retention compared to small solutes.
8 ve or long-range diffusion of substitutional solutes.
9 ter, whilst wider channels permit passage of solutes.
10 iated distribution of nanoparticles or other solutes.
11 nnected and communicate through this pool of solutes.
12 cy arteriolar oscillations drive drainage of solutes.
13 nd how this affects the retention of several solutes.
14 re pores to achieve high selectivity between solutes.
15 res for precise separation of ions and small solutes.
16 ed Coulomb interactions only between charged solutes.
17  have focused on the crystallization of pure solutes(6,7) and the effects of single growth modifiers(
18                                     However, solute accumulation at the heating interface has severel
19  a high affinity for a wide range of organic solutes, achieving >95% encapsulation efficiency for hyd
20 operties from bulk soil, affecting water and solute acquisition by plants.
21  dynamics simulations, we are able to screen solutes across a wide range of chemistries and polaritie
22  that mediate the selective translocation of solutes across biological membranes.
23 ions and controls the selective transport of solutes across it and associated lymphoid tissues that p
24 e to molecular-mechanics calculations on the solute alone; as such, they can be incorporated into MD
25 as to probe the concentration profile of the solute and analyze the impact of operating parameters, s
26 her are similar in strength to those between solute and solvent.
27 e developed the first computational model of solute and water transport from Bowman space to the papi
28 ents were performed for a total of 12 single solutes and 55 bisolutes onto two widely used resins (MN
29 on to the host vasculature to exhaust water, solutes and carbohydrates.
30       Here, we determine the source of major solutes and carbon to Lake Untersee, evaluate the carbon
31 e interstitial fluid space rapidly transport solutes and clear waste from brain.
32 n revealed that EcYfdC can transport neutral solutes and could possibly be involved in the transport
33  Here, we investigate the influence of small solutes and lipid bilayers, both constituents of all bio
34 ole in preventing the backflow of reabsorbed solutes and water to the tubular lumen, as well as in co
35 nonstructural carbohydrates, photosynthesis, solute, and water potential were measured, and carbon ex
36 include exclusion of colloidal and molecular solutes, and characteristic light absorbance at 270 nm.
37 endothelial sieving, and transport of fluid, solutes, and particulates complicate interpretations in
38 ntioxidants, gut microbiome products, uremic solutes, and uremic toxins.
39  high producers is a constitutive compatible solute; and (2) DMSP production in low producers is a fi
40            Interactions between solvents and solutes are a cornerstone of physical organic chemistry
41 ce of advection in neuropil is contested and solutes are claimed to be transported by diffusion only.
42 teractions between the droplet and enzymatic solutes are important to achieve certain functions.
43                                 Classically, solutes are modeled using reaction-advection-diffusion k
44 e passively permeable to various hydrophilic solutes as large as 40 kDa, in contrast to synthetic gia
45 entrations of endogenous candidate secretory solutes at baseline, using targeted liquid chromatograph
46 fied by the segregation enthalpy spectrum-of solute atoms at GB sites in polycrystals, based solely o
47                           The segregation of solute atoms at grain boundaries (GBs) can profoundly im
48 e dynamic interplay between dislocations and solute atoms.
49 ng process that results in the clustering of solute atoms.
50 nsitive in frozen soils, as liquid water and solute availability decrease rapidly with declining temp
51 ClO(4), it was found that the diffusivity of solute becomes positively correlated to the average mesh
52                        Here we show that the solute binding lipoprotein PiuA from the piu Fe acquisit
53 consistent with recent descriptions of other solute binding proteins of type II ABC transporters.
54 ng an l,d-transpeptidase, an ABC transporter solute-binding protein, and a methionine sulfoxide reduc
55 , and they are functionally categorized into solute-binding proteins, oxidoreductases, cell envelope
56 ding but decreases with solution crowding by solutes, both of which we confirm with molecular dynamic
57            Under unsaturated conditions, the solute breakthrough curves show early arrivals and very
58 e, sodium fluorescein, and ~ 120% for larger solutes, BSA and Dex-70k.
59  not only the polarity and the volume of the solutes but also their HB-accepting ability, the main fa
60 f the oil phase and allows concentrating the solute by altering relative lengths of the sender and re
61                     The secretion of organic solutes by the proximal tubules is an essential intrinsi
62  precipitates from just miniscule amounts of solute can invoke simultaneous high strength and ductili
63 n the background electrolyte and an injected solute can limit or enhance the reactant delivery, cause
64 ting NTO reduction rate, and illustrates how solutes can shift the LFER by interacting with either ir
65  are affected, including those controlled by solute carrier (SLC) and ATP-binding cassette (ABC) tran
66           A plasma membrane transporter, the solute carrier (SLC) human multidrug and toxin extrusion
67 multiple amino acids and their transporters, solute carrier (SLC) members.
68              With more than 400 members, the solute carrier (SLC) membrane transport proteins are the
69 roup of membrane proteins that belong to the solute carrier (SLC) superfamily.
70                     OATP2B1, a member of the solute carrier (SLC) transporter family, is an important
71 n to develop prodrug molecules, which hijack solute carrier (SLC) transporters for active transport i
72                     There are over 420 human solute carrier (SLC) transporters from 65 families that
73  peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIF), solute carrier 15 (SLC15), solute carrier family 43 memb
74                               Members of the solute carrier 15 family (SLC15) transport di- and tripe
75                                          The solute carrier 16 (SLC16) family represents a diverse gr
76                               Members of the solute carrier 17 (SLC17) family use divergent mechanism
77                                    The human solute carrier 22A (SLC22A) family consists of 23 member
78 on electrochemical gradient, as found in the solute carrier 36 family of proton-coupled amino acid tr
79                        ZIP14 (encoded by the solute carrier 39 family member 14 (SLC39A14) gene) is a
80 esults reveal the principles of glycoprotein-solute carrier assembly and provide templates for improv
81  reabsorbed through the concerted actions of solute carrier channels and aquaporins at various positi
82           The neutral amino acid transporter solute carrier family 1 member 5 (SLC1A5 or ASCT2) is ov
83                                          The solute carrier family 13 (slc13) transporters mediate tr
84 n 1 protein (EPAS1, also called HIF2A), CA9, solute carrier family 16 member 4 (SLC16A4, also called
85                                              Solute Carrier Family 19 Member 2 (SLC19A2) encodes thia
86 ICI and the neighboring protein-coding gene, solute carrier family 2 member 3 (SLC2A3) which encodes
87 glucose transporter 1 (Glut1), also known as solute carrier family 2, facilitated glucose transporter
88 requency (MAF) = 25-44%; P < 3 x 10(-14)) of solute carrier family 2, member 9 (SLC2A9) and rs4148145
89                                              Solute carrier family 20 member 2 (SLC20A2) and xenotrop
90            In mice, the gene encoding Mfrn1, solute carrier family 25 member 37 (Slc25a37), is highly
91 he mitochondrial fusion-fission-related gene solute carrier family 25 member 46 (Slc25a46) and treate
92             The anion-conducting transporter solute carrier family 26 member 9 (SLC26A9) is a promisi
93 -acetylneuraminic acid synthetase (Cmas) and solute carrier family 35 member A1 (Slc35a1), promote si
94 ulfate proteoglycan synthesis encoded by the solute carrier family 35 member B2 gene (SLC35B2).
95  the cytoplasmic tail of the human lysosomal solute carrier family 38 member 9 (SLC38A9) destabilizes
96              We studied the functions of the solute carrier family 39 member 4 (SLC39A4, also called
97 f this is a single-nucleotide variant in the Solute Carrier Family 39 Member 8 (SLC39A8) gene encodin
98 work in our laboratory has revealed that the solute carrier family 39 member A2 (SLC39A2/ZIP2) increa
99                Significant downregulation of solute carrier family 43 A3 (SLC43A3), an equilibrative
100 isomerase (PPIF), solute carrier 15 (SLC15), solute carrier family 43 member 1 (SLC43A1), and solute
101 the angiotensin I-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2)-solute carrier family 6 member 19 (SLC6A19) dimer.
102 ed the functions of the creatine transporter solute carrier family 6 member 8 (SLC6A8, also called CR
103 te carrier family 43 member 1 (SLC43A1), and solute carrier family 7 member 11 (SLC7A11).
104 AD(P)H quinone dehydrogenase 1) and SLC7A11 (solute carrier family 7 member 11), decreased the GSH/GS
105                                              Solute carrier family 7 member 2 (SLC7A2, also known as
106                  Pathogenic mutations in the solute carrier family 7 member 5 (SLC7A5) gene, which en
107 x/WD repeat-containing protein 7 (Fbxw7) and solute carrier family 9 member 3 (Slc9a3).
108 dentified numerous variants of the endosomal solute carrier family 9 member A6 (SLC9A6)/(Na(+),K(+))/
109 id transporter 1 (LAT1), which is encoded by solute carrier transporter 7a5 (Slc7a5), plays a crucial
110                                              Solute carriers (SLC) and ABC transporters represented a
111            In eukaryotes the SLC35 family of solute carriers are responsible for their selective upta
112 ce has highlighted the importance of various solute carriers to the toxicity of anticancer drugs, the
113              These proteins comprise several solute carriers, such as the ATP/ADP antiporter nucleoti
114  to significant changes in the expression of solute carriers, such as the urea transporters encoded b
115 d Lake Untersee largely determines the major solute chemistry of the oxic water column with plagiocla
116  activities, indicating that the presence of solutes (citric acid and NaCl) after 27 kJ/cm(3) reduced
117                                    Secretory solute clearance measurements can predict kidney drug cl
118 regression to test associations of secretory-solute clearances with CKD progression and mortality, ad
119 score as the scaled average of the secretory solute clearances.
120 olution strengthening, another one mimicking solute cloud formation, and a third one where dislocatio
121 formation, and a third one where dislocation/solute coevolution leads to jerky flow as a precursor of
122  silica particles; the partitioning of model solutes compares favorably to that in lipid vesicle memb
123                                 Ectoine is a solute compatible with the physiologies of both prokaryo
124 ontent of biological secretions, their small-solute composition impacts the potency of antiviral micr
125 an be associated with alterations in urinary solute composition including hypercalciuria.
126 the spontaneous Raman spectra, and the total solute concentration from the refractive index retrieved
127 mic conditions, and feed temperature, on the solute concentration profile in the boundary layer.
128 ff)) was determined from the spatio-temporal solute concentration profiles using an unsteady diffusio
129 nterfacial tension which was affected by the solute concentration was responsible for the velocity di
130 produced, while imaging the evolution of the solute concentration with time at any given point within
131 ayers exhibits a quadratic dependence on the solute concentration, characteristic of the second-order
132 ese dependences enable quantification of the solute concentration.
133  exposure to decreased pH combined with high solute concentrations in the unfrozen water of frozen me
134 f culture media and the resulting changes in solute concentrations over time; as water evaporates fro
135    Animals tightly regulate blood volume and solute concentrations.
136 es the interplay between strong short-ranged solute core interactions, local hydrogen-bond configurat
137 R) and related methods may be used to obtain solute-correlated spectra revealing solute-induced pertu
138 oupling FN to RAST and requiring only single-solute data was proposed.
139 transport of biocidal metal cations and soil solutes, degradation and loss of crystallinity of cellul
140 uid chromatography (SFC), the retention of a solute depends on the temperature, density, pressure, an
141                    Partition coefficients of solutes differing in hydrodynamic radius were consistent
142                                The effective solute diffusion coefficient of brain tissue (D(eff)) wa
143 t (solute-network) H-bonding contribution to solute diffusion from the indirect contribution arising
144 nder load, which depends on metabolic rates, solute diffusion, and disc morphometry, remains unknown.
145 entally determined TMJ disc metabolic rates, solute diffusivities, and disc morphometry, and through
146                                Modulation of solute diffusivity and ECS could explain diverse outcome
147 ne crystals, an inversion centre, emerges in solute dimers extant in solution prior to crystallizatio
148 n microstructures, concurrent precipitation, solute drag, grain growth and texture evolution are disc
149  the case of a charged particle and an ionic solute (e.g., table salt, NaCl), previous studies have p
150 icular elution mechanism observed with large solutes (e.g., proteins) in liquid chromatography, colum
151 ny bacterial cells accumulate the compatible solute ectoine and its derivative 5-hydroxyectoine.
152 the absorption and disposition of a range of solutes, eight SLC22A family members remain classified a
153 ps and very short steep gradient segments at solute elution allows one to set the selectivity as desi
154 nner bubble pressure, which defines a bubble solute exchange with ambient porewaters.
155  provided >=1 24-h urine sample, and urinary solute excretion was analyzed.
156   However, despite the continuously elevated solute excretion, long-term osmotic diuresis does not oc
157 AFFF are similar to rates observed in single-solute experiments.
158 ntries such as Brazil) due to retardation in solute flow associated with the fine root system and the
159 aize increased nitrate loss through enhanced solute flow bypassing the soil matrix.
160 oss these scales are what ultimately control solute flux to the Arctic Ocean.
161 t membranes to selectively separate a single solute from a mixture of solutes is limited.
162 barrier (BBB) tightly regulates the entry of solutes from blood into the brain and is disrupted in se
163  energy required for constant reclamation of solutes from crude blood filtrate.
164              (2020) show that elimination of solutes from the brain along arterial walls is driven by
165                                  The flux of solutes from the chemical weathering of the continental
166  are at the core of processes for separating solutes from water, such as water purification and desal
167              In addition, several compatible solutes (glycerol, Pro, and Suc) accumulated to high lev
168                                        Small solutes have been shown to alter the lateral organizatio
169 cess electrons in liquids-archetypal quantum solutes-have been largely restricted to very dilute elec
170 ce of kynurenic acid, a highly protein-bound solute, having the strongest association.
171 quired to maintain neuronal activity-related solute homeostasis at the axon-myelin interface, and the
172 robe the competing energetics of inserting a solute in different membrane environments by means of th
173 ferential partitioning behavior of the model solute in two-layer gels, providing insight into the tra
174 an force between ionic or apolar hydrophobic solutes in dilute aqueous solutions described by standar
175 ly, we quantified eight endogenous secretory solutes in plasma and urine using liquid chromatography-
176 aphy (TRLC) allows for separation of organic solutes in purely aqueous mobile phases whereby retentio
177  to the on/off mechanism observed with large solutes in RPLC (S values were higher than 100 for intac
178 oefficients of various fluorescently labeled solutes in single-layer and multilayer open hydrogels.
179 e for the ventricles as a source or sink for solutes in the brain.
180 aracterized by the accumulation of water and solutes in the enlarging cells of parenchymatous tissues
181 embranous compartments that separate reduced solutes in the external medium from an encapsulated acce
182 es that actively alter the concentrations of solutes in the extracellular space.
183                               We reveal that solutes in the solution, pH value of the solution and th
184 ibuted in the reference material (e.g., many solutes in thermodynamic equilibrium).
185 ergy (in the form of glucose) and additional solutes (in the form of Na(+) and its accompanying anion
186 est that channel gating involves a change in solute-inaccessible volume in the CTD of ~1,900 angstrom
187                     Paravascular drainage of solutes, including beta-amyloid (Abeta), appears to be a
188 nd that lipid bilayers, in contrast to small solutes, increase the rate of cavitation, which remains
189 o obtain solute-correlated spectra revealing solute-induced perturbations of water structure, such as
190 ilic/psychrotolerant bacteria under diverse, solute-induced stresses (Brochothrix thermosphacta, Ente
191 r stress including low water activity, other solute-induced stresses, and dehydration-rehydration cyc
192 ss rat brain tissue of fluorescently-labeled solutes injected through the carotid artery after tDCS.
193 onsidering a dynamic material, we scrutinize solute interactions with a UV photoactive polyacrylamide
194 dodermis to direct the movement of water and solutes into and out of the vascular system in roots.
195 stripping or ion exchange if the proper draw solute is chosen.
196 pirically observed that the diffusion of the solute is counter to that of the solvent i.e. there is s
197  FO applications where a limited use of draw solute is necessary.
198 y separate a single solute from a mixture of solutes is limited.
199  the kidney's clearance of tubular secretory solutes is uncertain.
200 r adjustment, lower kidney clearances of six solutes-kynurenic acid, pyridoxic acid, indoxyl sulfate,
201 generated along the solid boundary as dense, solute-laden fluid descends under gravity.
202  reduced appressorial adhesion, which led to solute leakage.
203          Thermodynamic partitioning dictates solute loading and release from a hydrogel.
204 lvent fluctuations in the solvation shell of solute molecules attaching to the crystal surface.
205 zation to obtain high resolution between the solute molecules of interest.
206 ive activation energy values for the various solute molecules.
207 c theory is proposed to separate the direct (solute-network) H-bonding contribution to solute diffusi
208 centrated SSs apart from traditional solvent-solute ones.
209                 Instead, we track a bolus of solutes or nanoparticles using particle tracking based p
210 iruses is governed by the cumulative dose of solutes or the product of concentration and time, as in
211                                  Groundwater solutes originates from various sources such as atmosphe
212 s in acyl-chain structure (disordering) with solute partitioning.
213 gnificant in the case in which an immiscible solute (pentane) was mixed with H(2)O.
214               We show accurate prediction of solute permeabilities at physiological temperature using
215 e characterized for water permeability ( A), solute permeability ( B), and structural parameter ( S).
216 d type 2 diabetes-induced glomerular albumin solute permeability (Ps'alb).
217 at maintains brain homeostasis and regulates solute permeability into brain tissue.
218 R) selectivity filter, is thought to control solute permeability: previous studies on single represen
219   PAH[4]'s unique properties of a high water/solute permselectivity via cooperative water-wire format
220                            The crystallizing solute phase was characterized by low temperature powder
221                                   Solid- and solute-phase geochemical analyses combined with modeled
222 me-catalysis-induced positive chemotaxis and solute-phospholipid-based negative chemotaxis.
223 ic biomass surfaces so as to match the local solute polarity.
224 liquid phase separation into solute-rich and solute-poor phases is a fundamental step leading to the
225 s depends on a complex interplay between the solute, pore size, and polarity, and that using single w
226 tein nanopores, aquaporins and related polar solute pores, and a number of different classes of ion c
227 ations are linked to decreased levels of key solute processing and transporting factors in the brush
228 ne the intestinal tract, are specialized for solute processing and uptake.
229 suggests that tubular clearance of secretory solutes provides additional information about kidney hea
230 score (24.1%); MPEs for individual secretory solutes ranged from 27.3% to 48.0%.
231 ng the water permeance while maintaining the solute rejection of a nanofiltration (NF) membrane can p
232 novel mode of inhibitor binding and show how solutes release is coupled to protein conformational cha
233 sodium in 2 hours with negligible off-target solute removal and overall stable serum electrolytes.
234 e concentrations were stable, and off-target solute removal was negligible.
235 quantities of sodium with limited off-target solute removal.
236                        The robustness of the solute retention was lowest when operating the systems a
237 how that liquid-liquid phase separation into solute-rich and solute-poor phases is a fundamental step
238 zzling, mesoscopically sized inclusions of a solute-rich liquid, well outside the region of stability
239  well outside the region of stability of the solute-rich phase.
240  a limited understanding of the variation of solute segregation tendencies across the full, multidime
241 ns-in theory-just broaden the peaks of large solutes since a great part of the column only acts as vo
242 ngle X-ray scattering, which is sensitive to solute size and shape and has millisecond temporal resol
243 w rejection to near-perfect rejection over a solute size range smaller than half Angstrom.
244  tDCS, D(eff) increased by ~ 10% for a small solute, sodium fluorescein, and ~ 120% for larger solute
245          Herein, we demonstrate that precise solute-solute separation can be achieved using polyamide
246 S) model, with truncated solvent-solvent and solute-solvent Coulomb interactions and long-ranged but
247 leads to the possibility of amplifying these solute-solvent effects and will shed light on extremely
248                            Nevertheless, the solute-solvent interactions associated with their highly
249 a renewed interest in fundamental aspects of solute-solvent interactions has been sparked in the fiel
250 olecular polymers offer to gain insight into solute-solvent interactions have become clear relatively
251        As a result, many exciting effects of solute-solvent interactions in modern physical organic c
252 e, and the PE/PPE proteins apparently act as solute-specific channels.
253 an perspective of GS transport revealed that solute speed was faster in CSF compared to grey and whit
254  demonstrated 2-fold differences in regional solute speed within the brain.
255 ossible with single-molecule observations of solute-stationary phase interactions.
256                        We find that the high solute strength of the aerosol particles significantly e
257 ilute aqueous solutions, and not at the high solute strengths of atmospheric aerosol particles.
258       The accumulation of organic compatible solutes such as glycine betaine does not perturb the fun
259 time; as water evaporates from the droplets, solutes such as sodium chloride in the media become more
260 osmolytes such as KCl and membrane-permeable solutes such as weak acids.
261 rticular location to pollution from reactive solutes, such as nitrate, is determined by the interplay
262 aled reduced abundances of foliar compatible solutes, such as sugars and sugar alcohols, whereas nitr
263                        Osmolytes are organic solutes that change the protein folding landscape shifti
264             These processes are perturbed by solutes that interact with these atoms differently than
265  adhesion and dysfunction of the movement of solutes through the paracellular spaces in the neurovasc
266 er kidney clearances of endogenous secretory solutes to be associated with CKD progression and all-ca
267 hering contributing < 5% of the Ca(2+)-Na(+) solutes to the lake.
268 al porin proteins for the transport of small solutes to the periplasm.
269 n the thermodynamic equilibrium state of the solutes toward the gel phase.
270                                              Solute transfer was measured while simultaneously monito
271                                    Water and solute transport across epithelia can occur via the tran
272 ly, attentions should be paid when modelling solute transport by the classical advection-diffusion eq
273 eeking to represent lateral and longitudinal solute transport in rapidly changing Arctic landscapes.
274 del of cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD), solute transport in the perivascular spaces (PVS) and PV
275                                              Solute transport in unsaturated porous materials is a co
276                                              Solute transport modelling further demonstrates how incr
277  yet needs to be included in the Darcy-scale solute transport models.
278 either essential for signal transduction and solute transport or function as scaffold structures.
279  in this work systematically investigate the solute transport process in a simple porous medium model
280 l tubule for many commonly studied water and solute transport proteins and metabolic enzymes matched
281 hy (sCT) we obtained detailed information on solute transport through a glass bead packing at differe
282 nisms that contribute to energy barriers for solute transport through subnanometre pores.
283 fully coupled model of flow, heat transport, solute transport, and the geochemical reaction network t
284 port, pexophagy, matrix protein degradation, solute transport, signaling, redox homeostasis and vario
285 ately, the core kidney function of selective solute transport.
286 ocholate cotransporting polypeptide, organic solute transporter alpha/beta) in several cell lines [Hu
287 ructures, we propose that Rv1819c is a multi-solute transporter for hydrophilic molecules, analogous
288 protein (IBABP) and then released by organic solute transporter OSTalpha/beta.
289 iona`l codes driving regional specification, solute transporter program activation and terminal diffe
290 nsisting of tfap2b, irx1a and genes encoding solute transporters that dictate the specialized metabol
291 nts each expressing a distinct repertoire of solute transporters.
292                                              Solute transporting epithelial cells build arrays of mic
293 rgency release valve discharging cytoplasmic solutes upon osmotic stress.
294 itical for epithelial homeostasis, including solute uptake and host defense.
295  to the atomic scale diffusion mechanisms of solute-vacancy clusters.
296 grade biopolymers into bio-available smaller solutes, while oligotrophic bacteria usually cannot.
297 nally efficient proxy to establish whether a solute will stabilize or destabilize domain phase separa
298  height without solvent-based focusing for a solute with modest retention enthalpy.
299 lood) osmolality (i.e., its concentration of solutes), with bacterial growth being slower in protein-
300 IP exhibits highly size-dependent sieving of solutes, yielding a step-wise transition from low reject

 
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