نتایج جستجو برای: bitter almonds

تعداد نتایج: 5867  

Journal: :journal of agricultural science and technology 2010
m. safari h. alizadeh

iran annually exports considerable quantities of nuts such as almonds, hazelnuts, pista-chios and walnuts. the fatty acid profile of these nut oils as an index of their quality was determined using gas chromatography. results indicated that oleic acid (c18:1) was the major fatty acid in almonds (75.37%), hazelnuts (76.21%) and pistachios (60.49%) fol-lowed by linoleic acid (c18:2), whereas in w...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2007
Giovanni Mita Pasqua Fasano Stefania De Domenico Giancarlo Perrone Filomena Epifani Rina Iannacone Rod Casey Angelo Santino

Phyto-oxylipins are a group of biologically active molecules that play an important role in plant defence. Their production begins with the oxygenation of polyunsaturated fatty acids by lipoxygenases (LOX) to form 9- or 13-hydroperoxides that are substrates for several enzymes involved in the synthesis of final oxylipins, which can act as signal molecules and/or direct antimicrobials. In the pr...

Journal: :Environmental entomology 2015
Wee L Yee Robert B Goughnour Glen R Hood Andrew A Forbes Jeffrey L Feder

The western cherry fruit fly, Rhagoletis indifferens Curran (Diptera: Tephritidae), is an endemic herbivore of bitter cherry, Prunus emarginata (Douglas ex Hooker) Eaton, but ∼100 years ago established on earlier-fruiting domesticated sweet cherry, Prunus avium (L.) L. Here, we determined if eclosion times of adult R. indifferens from sweet and bitter cherry differ according to the phenology of...

2008
MUHAMMAD JAFAR JASKANI HAIDER ABBAS M. M. KHAN UMBREEN SHAHZAD

Morphological studies showed that tree shape in Bitter sweet orange and Yuma citrange was spheroid with spreading growth habit and wide branch angle. Leaves were simple with dark green color, medium size and brevipetiolate in Sour orange while Yuma citrange had trifoliate leaves with medium and green color. Bitter sweet orange had the highest leaf lamina length (10.4 mm) than other rootstocks. ...

2014
Laura S Snee Vivek R Nerurkar Dian A Dooley Jimmy T Efird Anne C Shovic Pratibha V Nerurkar

Corrections to “Recipe development and preparations” Approximately 50 g of uncooked bitter melon per one cup (250 ml) of raw ingredients was added to each dish, except curry dish. The curry dish does not have any other ingredients besides bitter melon and therefore contained approximately 61 g of bitter melon per onehalf cup (125 ml). Each of the raw ingredients in these recipes (except the cur...

Journal: :Current Biology 2016
Emily E. LeDue Kevin Mann Ellen Koch Bonnie Chu Roslyn Dakin Michael D. Gordon

Nutrient deprivation can lead to dramatic changes in feeding behavior, including acceptance of foods that are normally rejected. In flies, this behavioral shift depends in part on reciprocal sensitization and desensitization of sweet and bitter taste, respectively. However, the mechanisms for bitter taste modulation remain unclear. Here, we identify a set of octopaminergic/tyraminergic neurons,...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2007
Maik Behrens Susann Foerster Frauke Staehler Jan-Dirk Raguse Wolfgang Meyerhof

Human bitter taste is mediated by approximately 25 members of the human TAS2 receptor (hTAS2R) gene family. The hTAS2R genes are expressed in taste buds of gustatory papillae on the tongue surface. Because many naturally occurring bitter compounds are toxic, bitter taste receptors are believed to serve as warning sensors against the ingestion of toxic food compounds. An important question is wh...

2017
Junjie Cui Jiaowen Cheng Dingguo Nong Jiazhu Peng Yafei Hu Weiming He Qianjun Zhou Narinder P. S. Dhillon Kailin Hu

Bitter gourd (Momordica charantia) is widely cultivated as a vegetable and medicinal herb in many Asian and African countries. After the sequencing of the cucumber (Cucumis sativus), watermelon (Citrullus lanatus), and melon (Cucumis melo) genomes, bitter gourd became the fourth cucurbit species whose whole genome was sequenced. However, a comprehensive analysis of simple sequence repeats (SSRs...

2016
Fang Zhao Tongzuo Zhang Jiuxiang Xie Shoudong Zhang Eviatar Nevo Jianping Su Gonghua Lin

The ability to detect bitter tastes is important for animals; it can help them to avoid ingesting harmful substances. Bitter taste perception is mainly mediated by bitter taste receptor proteins, which are encoded by members of the Tas2r gene family and vary with the dietary preference of a specific species. Although individuals with different genotypes differ in bitterness recognition capabili...

2018
Antonella Di Pizio Nitzan Shy Maik Behrens Wolfgang Meyerhof Masha Y. Niv

Chickens sense the bitter taste of structurally different molecules with merely three bitter taste receptors (Gallus gallus taste 2 receptors, ggTas2rs), representing a minimal case of bitter perception. Some bitter compounds like quinine, diphenidol and chlorpheniramine, activate all three ggTas2rs, while others selectively activate one or two of the receptors. We focus on bitter compounds wit...

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