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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Development of a Microfluidic Platform for Trace Lipid Analysis

Davic, Andrew Paul 04 May 2017 (has links)
The field of lipidomics encompasses the study of pathways, networks, and functionality of cellular lipids in biological systems. The lipid subclass, primary fatty acid amides, are crucial to nervous system signaling, receptor function, and numerous other physiological roles. Chapter 1 details these bioactive properties of several well-studied primary fatty acid amides as well as their biosynthesis, degradation, and most common analysis techniques. As these bioactive lipids are endogenously present in trace and ultra-trace abundancies, the field of microfluidics presents an attractive alternative analysis system to incorporate minimization of sample and reagent usage, analysis cost reduction, highly sensitive detection pairing, and decreased analysis time, all while limiting sample handling. Chapter 2 provides a microfluidics-based review of common device fabrication techniques, droplet microfluidics, and detection systems. Current primary fatty acid amide analysis techniques have detection limits on the periphery of endogenous concentrations, presenting the need for a more sensitive detection system, such as fluorescence. Chapter 3 serves as the foundation in developing methodology to analyze these amides and their conjugate fluorescently-tagged primary amines. Chapter 4 focuses on the development of a microfluidic platform capable of efficient on-chip fluorescent tagging reactions and the coupling of a highly sensitive laser induced fluorescence detection system capable of detection limits several orders of magnitude lower than currently employed mass spectrometry techniques. In addition, the appendix details the method development for the quantitative analysis of the anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer drug, celecoxib, uptake into novel drug delivery vehicles. / Bayer School of Natural and Environmental Sciences; / Chemistry and Biochemistry / PhD / Dissertation;
2

Biosynthesis of fatty acid amides

Farrell, Emma K 01 June 2010 (has links)
Primary fatty acid amides (PFAMs) and N-acylglycines (NAGs) are important signaling molecules in the mammalian nervous system, binding to many drug receptors and demonstrating control over sleep, locomotor activity, angiogenesis, vasodilatation, gap junction communication, and many other processes. Oleamide is the best-studied of the PFAMs, while the in vivo activity of the others is largely unstudied. Even less is known about the NAGs, as their discovery as novel compounds is much more recent due to low endogenous levels. Herein is described extraction and quantification techniques for PFAMs and NAGs in cultured cells and media using solvent extraction combined with solid phase extraction (PFAM) or thin layer chromatography (NAG), followed by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy to isolate and quantify these lipid metabolites. The assays were used to examine the endogenous amounts of a panel of PFAMs as well as the conversion of corresponding free fatty acids (FFAs) to PFAMs over time in several cell lines. The cell lines demonstrated the ability to convert all FFAs, including a non-natural FFA, and an ethanolamine to the corresponding PFAM. Different patterns of relative amounts of endogenous and FFA-derived PFAMs were observed in the cell lines tested. Essential to identifying therapeutic targets for the many disorders associated with PFAM signaling is understanding the mechanism(s) of PFAM and NAG biosynthesis. Enzyme expression studies were conducted to determine potential metabolic enzymes in the model cell lines in an attempt to understand the mechanism(s) of PFAM biosynthesis. It was found that two of the cell lines which show distinct metabolisms of PFAMs also demonstrate unique enzyme expression patterns, and candidate enzymes proposed to perform PFAM and NAG metabolism are described. RNAi knockdown studies revealed further information about the metabolism of PFAMs and calls into question the recently proposed involvement of cytochrome c. Isotopic labeling studies showed there are two pathways for PFAM formation. A novel enzyme is likely to be involved in formation of NAGs from acyl-CoA intermediates.

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