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      Sperm Membrane Behaviour during Cooling and Cryopreservation

      1 , 1 , 2
      Reproduction in Domestic Animals
      Wiley

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          Most cited references46

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          Beyond water activity: recent advances based on an alternative approach to the assessment of food quality and safety.

          Water, the most abundant constituent of natural foods, is a ubiquitous plasticizer of most natural and fabricated food ingredients and products. Many of the new concepts and developments in modern food science and technology revolve around the role of water, and its manipulation, in food manufacturing, processing, and preservation. This article reviews the effects of water, as a near-universal solvent and plasticizer, on the behavior of polymeric (as well as oligomeric and monomeric) food materials and systems, with emphasis on the impact of water content (in terms of increasing system mobility and eventual water "availability") on food quality, safety, stability, and technological performance. This review describes a new perspective on moisture management, an old and established discipline now evolving to a theoretical basis of fundamental structure-property principles from the field of synthetic polymer science, including the innovative concepts of "water dynamics" and "glass dynamics". These integrated concepts focus on the non-equilibrium nature of all "real world" food products and processes, and stress the importance to successful moisture management of the maintenance of food systems in kinetically metastable, dynamically constrained glassy states rather than equilibrium thermodynamic phases. The understanding derived from this "food polymer science" approach to water relationships in foods has led to new insights and advances beyond the limited applicability of traditional concepts involving water activity. This article is neither a conventional nor comprehensive review of water activity, but rather a critical overview that presents and discusses current, usable information on moisture management theory, research, and practice applicable to food systems covering the broadest ranges of moisture content and processing/storage temperature conditions.
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            Role of the Plasma Membrane in Freezing Injury and Cold Acclimation

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              The stabilization of proteins by osmolytes.

              The preferential interactions of lysozyme with solvent components and the effects of solvent additives on its stability were examined for several neutral osmolytes: L-proline, L-serine, gamma-aminobutyric acid, sarcosine, taurine, alpha-alanine, beta-alanine, glycine, betaine, and trimethylamine N-oxide. It was shown that all these substances stabilize the protein structure against thermal denaturation and (except for trimethylamine N-oxide for which interaction measurements could not be made) are strongly excluded from the protein domain, rendering unlikely their direct binding to proteins. On the other hand, valine, not known as an osmolyte, had no stabilizing effect, although it induced a large protein-preferential hydration. A possible explanation is given for the use of these substances as osmotic-pressure-regulating agents in organisms living under high osmotic pressure.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Reproduction in Domestic Animals
                Reprod Dom Anim
                Wiley
                09366768
                September 2015
                September 2015
                September 18 2015
                : 50
                : 20-26
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Clinic for Horses - Unit for Reproductive Medicine; University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover; Hannover Germany
                [2 ]Institute of Multiphase Processes; Leibniz Universität Hannover; Hannover Germany
                Article
                10.1111/rda.12594
                26382025
                795f6154-1c00-4c54-a921-b6b80ef6838d
                © 2015

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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