Solubility Selenites : Sulfites, selenites and tellurites / volume editor Mary R. Masson ; co-editors H.D. Lutz, B. Engelen
1986
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Solubility Silver compounds Tables : Silver azide, cyanide, cyanamides, cyanate, selenocyanate, and thiocyanate : solubilities of solids / vol. editor, Mark Salomon ; evaluator, M. Salomon ; compilers, H. Ohtaki, M. Salomon, W. A. van Hock
Solubility Tellurites : Sulfites, selenites and tellurites / volume editor Mary R. Masson ; co-editors H.D. Lutz, B. Engelen
1986
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Solubility Transition metal compounds : Copper, silver, gold and zinc, cadmium, mercury, oxides and hydroxides / volume editor T.P. Dirkse ; contributors T. Michalowski, H. Akaiwa, F. Izumi
1986
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Solubility Transition metal compounds Tables : Copper, silver, gold and zinc, cadmium, mercury, oxides and hydroxides / volume editor T.P. Dirkse ; contributors T. Michalowski, H. Akaiwa, F. Izumi
1986
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Solubility Xenon Tables : Krypton, xenon, and radon : gas solubilities / volume editor, H. Lawrence Clever ; evaluators, Rubin Battino ... [and others]
1979
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Solubilization : Micro/nanoencapsulation of active food ingredients / Qingrong Huang, editor, Peter Given, editor, Michael Qian, editor ; sponsored by the ACS Division of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, Inc
A 51-amino acid pancreatic hormone that plays a major role in the regulation of glucose metabolism, directly by suppressing endogenous glucose production (GLYCOGENOLYSIS; GLUCONEOGENESIS) and indirectly by suppressing GLUCAGON secretion and LIPOLYSIS. Native insulin is a globular protein comprised of a zinc-coordinated hexamer. Each insulin monomer containing two chains, A (21 residues) and B (30 residues), linked by two disulfide bonds. Insulin is used as a drug to control insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (DIABETES MELLITUS, TYPE 1)
Soluble mediators of cellular immunity -- See Lymphokines
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Soluble mediators of immunologic regulation -- See Lymphokines
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Soluble N-ethylmaleimide-Sensitive-Factor Attachment Protein Receptor -- See SNARE Proteins
A superfamily of small proteins which are involved in the MEMBRANE FUSION events, intracellular protein trafficking and secretory processes. They share a homologous SNARE motif. The SNARE proteins are divided into subfamilies: QA-SNARES; QB-SNARES; QC-SNARES; and R-SNARES. The formation of a SNARE complex (composed of one each of the four different types SNARE domains (Qa, Qb, Qc, and R)) mediates MEMBRANE FUSION. Following membrane fusion SNARE complexes are dissociated by the NSFs (N-ETHYLMALEIMIDE-SENSITIVE FACTORS), in conjunction with SOLUBLE NSF ATTACHMENT PROTEIN, i.e., SNAPs (no relation to SNAP 25.)