lysine

[ US /ˈɫaɪsin/ ]
NOUN
  1. an essential amino acid found in proteins; occurs especially in gelatin and casein
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How To Use lysine In A Sentence

  • Who knew that a complex tale about an international plot to rig the prices of an animal-feed additive called lysine could be almost impossible to put down? Books About Scandals
  • You feed them corn dextrose, or at least ADM feeds them corn dextrose, and the bacteria ultimately converts that dextrose into -- into lysine, which is then packaged and sold to the farmers and goes to the chickens, and we ultimately pay for it ourselves when we buy our Chicken McNuggets. The Informant: A True Story
  • In the event that you think you may have the flu, take the amino acids l-lysine, l-proline and l-glycine. Bird Flu Lakeside (A critical - literally - issue).
  • The overall protein quality of each of the fermented foods is determined by the content of lysine, which is limiting in the raw material for both the sigda and furundu fermentations and does not increase appreciably during fermentation. 12 Cassava Processing in Africa
  • All aspartic acid and glutamic acid residues as well as C-terminal groups were deprotonated; arginine, lysine, and N-terminal groups were protonated.
  • Palin zhang rabbit with high - protein , low fat, high lysine, low cholesterol, high digestibility, low heat.
  • Another feed may list 12 percent crude protein, 7 percent crude fat, and lysine, methionine, biotin, vitamin E and thiamin levels on the tag.
  • Two new complexes of L-lysine, L-threonine and Arsenic triiodide were synthesized by the solid phase reaction and characterized by elemental analysis, XRD, UV spectra and IR spectra.
  • Safety note: The following makes use of glutaraldehyde, a bifunctional cross-linking reagent that reacts with lysine residues on the exterior of the proteins. Archive 2004-12-01
  • The first contact is the mainchain-mainchain hydrogen bonding between the carbonyl oxygen of lysine at position 2 and the amide proton of E. For convenience, we termed the internuclear distance responsible for this contact, d1.
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