Publications by authors named "N Koganesawa"

Article Synopsis
  • A survey was conducted in 2018 in Japan to estimate how much food additives young children (ages 1-6) consume daily, using various food additives like colorants, preservatives, and sweeteners.
  • The findings revealed that phosphorus compounds were consumed the most, with an intake of 11.2 mg/kg bw/day, followed by propylene glycol at 0.80 mg/kg bw/day, while other additives ranged between 0 and 0.20 mg/kg bw/day.
  • Comparisons with acceptable daily intakes (ADI) showed propylene glycol at 3.2% of its ADI, while other additives stayed between 0 and 1.1%, and phosphorus compounds were at 16%
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Tachycitin is an invertebrate chitin-binding protein with an amidated C-terminus, and possesses antimicrobial activity against both fungi and bacteria. The (1)H-NMR-based tertiary structure of tachycitin was recently determined [Suetake et al. (2000) J.

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Bombyx mori lysozyme (BmLZ), from the silkworm, is an insect lysozyme. BmLZ has considerable activity at low temperatures and low activation energies compared with those of hen egg white lysozyme (HEWLZ), according to measurements of the temperature dependencies of relative activity (lytic and glycol chitin) and the estimation of activation energies using the Arrhenius equation. Being so active at low temperatures and low activation energies is characteristic of psychrophilic (cold-adapted) enzymes.

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A small multifunctional cytokine, growth-blocking peptide (GBP), from the armyworm Pseudaletia separata larvae was expressed as a soluble and active recombinant peptide in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. An expression vector for GBP secretion was constructed using vector pPIC9, and GBP was expressed under the control of the alcohol oxidase (AOX1) promoter. Although we first tried to cultivate GBP in shake flask cultures, the yield was low, probably due to proteolysis of the recombinant protein.

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Expression systems of human and silkworm lysozymes were constructed using the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris as a host. The leader sequence and its prepro peptide of alpha-factor (a peptide pheromone derived from yeast) and the native signal sequences of these lysozymes, were used as secretion signals. When the alpha-factor leader is used as the signal sequence, human lysozyme is secreted at a much higher level than is silkworm lysozyme.

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