- actomyosin (chemistry)
protein: The muscle proteins: Actomyosin is a complex molecule formed by one molecule of myosin and one or two molecules of actin. In muscle, actin and myosin filaments are oriented parallel to each other and to the long axis of the muscle. The actin filaments are linked to each…
- Acton (England, United Kingdom)
Ealing: …de Actune sold land in Acton to St. Paul’s Cathedral. In late 1642, after the Battle of Edgehill during the English Civil Wars, defense forces at Acton, Brentford, and Turnham Green (at the present border between Ealing and Hounslow) barred the access of Charles I’s forces to London. Acton became…
- Acton of Aldenham, John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, 1st Baron, 8th Baronet (English historian and moralist)
John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, 1st Baron Acton was an English Liberal historian and moralist, the first great modern philosopher of resistance to the state, whether its form be authoritarian, democratic, or socialist. A comment that he wrote in a letter, “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute
- Acton Technical College (university, Uxbridge, London, United Kingdom)
Hillingdon: …of the main campus of Brunel University. Founded in 1928 as Acton Technical College, it became the Brunel College of Advanced Technology in 1962 and was later granted university status. It incorporated the Shoreditch College of Education in 1980 (adding the Runnymede campus) and the West London Institute of Higher…
- Acton, Brian (American businessman and computer programmer)
WhatsApp: …was founded in 2009 by Brian Acton and Jan Koum. Koum, a Ukrainian immigrant who had just begun attending classes at San Jose State University, and Acton, a Stanford-educated programmer, met while Acton was working for Internet pioneer Yahoo! in 1997. Koum was soon offered a job with the Mountain…
- Acton, John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, 1st Baron (English historian and moralist)
John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, 1st Baron Acton was an English Liberal historian and moralist, the first great modern philosopher of resistance to the state, whether its form be authoritarian, democratic, or socialist. A comment that he wrote in a letter, “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute
- Acton, Sir John Francis Edward, 6th Baronet (prime minister of the Kingdom of Naples)
Sir John Francis Edward Acton, 6th Baronet was the commander of the naval forces of Tuscany and then of Naples. As prime minister of Naples, he allied that kingdom with England and Austria in the period of the French Revolution. Finding the French Navy unappreciative of his skills, Acton, the son
- Actophilornis africanus (bird)
jacana: …variably black or reddish; the African jacana (Actophilornis africanus); the Australian lotus bird (Irediparra gallinacea) of New Guinea and the eastern Australian coast; and the pheasant-tailed jacana (Hydrophasianus chirurgus), of India and the Philippines, a handsome black, yellow, and white bird that acquires long tail feathers in breeding season.
- actor-manager system (theatrical production)
actor-manager system, method of theatrical production dominant in England and the U.S. in the 19th century, consisting of a permanent company formed by a leading actor who chose his or her own plays, took a leading role in them, and handled business and financial arrangements. The advantages of
- actor-network theory (sociology)
Bruno Latour: This approach became known as actor-network theory, and its influence soon spread beyond Latour’s field of science and technology studies. Latour’s work exasperated many practicing scientists with its denial of the existence of objective truths and its claims to have unmasked science as a social process and debunked its pretenses…
- Actors Studio, The (American drama workshop)
The Actors Studio, prestigious professional actors’ workshop in New York City whose members have been among the most influential performers in American theatre and film since World War II. It is one of the leading centres for the Stanislavsky method of dramatic training. (Read Lee Strasberg’s 1959
- Actors’ Company (British theatrical company)
Ian McKellen: In 1971 he cofounded the Actors’ Company, a collective of actors who had equal say in the choosing and casting of plays and in the recruiting of directors. He left the group in 1974 to join the Royal Shakespeare Company at the invitation of Barton.
- Acts (New Testament)
Acts of the Apostles, fifth book of the New Testament, a valuable history of the early Christian church. Acts was written in Greek, presumably by St. Luke the Evangelist. The Gospel According to Luke concludes where Acts begins, namely, with Christ’s Ascension into heaven. Acts was apparently
- Acts and Deeds of the Illustrious and Valiant Champion Sir William Wallace, Knight of Elderslie, The (work by Harry the Minstrel)
Harry The Minstrel: …and Valiant Champion Sir William Wallace, Knight of Elderslie, which is preserved in a manuscript dated 1488. He has been traditionally identified with the Blind Harry named among others in William Dunbar’s The Lament for the Makaris (“poets”) and with a “Blin Hary” who is listed from time to time…
- Acts and Monuments (work by Foxe)
John Foxe: …Puritan preacher and author of The Book of Martyrs, a graphic and polemic account of those who suffered for the cause of Protestantism. Widely read, often the most valued book beside the Bible in the households of English Puritans, it helped shape popular opinion about Roman Catholicism for at least…
- Acts of Judas Thomas the Apostle (apocryphal literature)
Gondophernes: …first known from the apocryphal Acts of Judas Thomas the Apostle, which told that St. Thomas visited the court of Gondophernes, where he was put in charge of building a royal palace but was imprisoned for spending the construction money on charitable purposes. Meanwhile, according to the story, Gad, the…
- Acts of Pilate (Apocryphal literature)
St. Joseph of Arimathea: In the apocryphal Gospel of Nicodemus (or Acts of Pilate; 4th/5th century), Jews imprison Joseph after Jesus’ burial, but he is released by the risen Lord, thus becoming the first witness of the Resurrection. In Robert de Boron’s verse romance Joseph d’Arimathie (c. 1200), he is entrusted with…
- Acts of St. Blaise (apocryphal literature)
St. Blaise: Subsequent legends, notably the apocryphal Acts of St. Blaise, claim that, before Blaise was made bishop, he was a physician possessed of wonderful healing power. Numerous miracles were attributed to him, including the cure of diseased beasts during his refuge, thus accounting for his also being the patron saint of…
- Acts of the Apostles (apocryphal literature)
Christianity: The early liturgy, the calendar, and the arts: …adventure was satisfied by apocryphal Acts of the Apostles, recounting their travels, with continence replacing love. Justin and Irenaeus did not write for high style but simply to convey information. Apologists hoping for well-educated readers, however, could not be indifferent to literary tastes. By 200 ce the most graceful living…
- Acts of the Apostles (New Testament)
Acts of the Apostles, fifth book of the New Testament, a valuable history of the early Christian church. Acts was written in Greek, presumably by St. Luke the Evangelist. The Gospel According to Luke concludes where Acts begins, namely, with Christ’s Ascension into heaven. Acts was apparently
- Acts of the Apostles, The (work by Gréban)
mystery play: In France a single play, The Acts of the Apostles by Arnoul and Simon Gréban, contained 494 speaking parts and 61,908 lines of rhymed verse; it took 40 days to perform. They died out in many areas with the Reformation.
- Acts of the Religion (Zoroastrian work)
Dēnkart, 9th-century encyclopaedia of the Zoroastrian religious tradition. Of the original nine volumes, part of the third and all of volumes four through nine are extant. The surviving portion of the third book is a major source of Zoroastrian theology. It indicates that later Zoroastrianism had
- Acts of the Scillitan Martyrs
patristic literature: Late 2nd to early 4th century: …works accepted as scripture—and the Acts of the Scillitan Martyrs (180) of Africa.
- ACTU (labor organization, Australia)
Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), the dominant association and governing body of the trade union movement in Australia, established in May 1927. Membership grew significantly when the Australian Workers’ Union joined the ACTU in 1967. Two other mergers with federations of white-collar
- actual cash value (insurance)
insurance: Limitations on amount recoverable: …either full replacement cost or actual cash value (ACV). Under the former, the owner suffers no reduction in loss recovery due to depreciation of the property from its original value. This basis applies if the owner took out coverage that is at least equal to a named percentage—for example, 80…
- actual sin (theology)
sin: ” Actual sin is sin in the ordinary sense of the word and consists of evil acts, whether of thought, word, or deed. Original sin (the term can be misleading) is the morally vitiated condition in which one finds oneself at birth as a member of…
- Actual Size (painting by Ruscha)
Ed Ruscha: …depicting the institution in flames; Actual Size (1962), an image of a flying can of Spam (a precooked luncheon meat) beneath the Spam logo; Large Trademark with Eight Spotlights (1962), a dramatic representation of the Twentieth Century-Fox logo, and Oof (1963), a straightforward rendering of the expression used to communicate…
- actuality (philosophy)
metaphysics: Aristotelianism: form and matter, potentiality and actuality, and cause (see Aristotle: Physics and metaphysics). Whatever happens involves some substance or substances; unless there were substances, in the sense of concrete existents, nothing whatsoever could be real. Substances, however, are not, as the name might suggest, mere parcels of matter; they are…
- actuals (economics)
commodity trade: Primary commodity markets: …technically as trade in “actuals”), or it may be conducted by means of futures contracts. A futures contract is an agreement to deliver or receive a certain quantity of a commodity at an agreed price at some stated time in the future. Trade in actuals has declined considerably and…
- actuals market (economics)
commodity trade: Primary commodity markets: …technically as trade in “actuals”), or it may be conducted by means of futures contracts. A futures contract is an agreement to deliver or receive a certain quantity of a commodity at an agreed price at some stated time in the future. Trade in actuals has declined considerably and…
- actuary (insurance)
actuary, one who calculates insurance risks and premiums. Actuaries compute the probability of the occurrence of various contingencies of human life, such as birth, marriage, sickness, unemployment, accidents, retirement, and death. They also evaluate the hazards of property damage or loss and the
- actuating device (automation)
automation: Computer process control: …of some optimizing strategy, (3) actuation of such devices as valves, switches, and furnaces that enable the process to implement the optimal strategy, and (4) generation of reports to management indicating equipment status, production performance, and product quality. Today computer process control is applied to many industrial operations, two of…
- Actuelles III (work by Camus)
Albert Camus: Camus’s literary career: …reprinted in abridged form in Actuelles III (1958), drew attention (15 years in advance) to many of the injustices that led to the outbreak of the Algerian War in 1954. Camus took his stand on humanitarian rather than ideological grounds and continued to see a future role for France in…
- actus reus (law)
criminal law: The elements of crime: …voluntary act or omission (actus reus), accompanied by (2) a certain state of mind (mens rea). An act may be any kind of voluntary human behaviour. Movements made in an epileptic seizure are not acts, nor are movements made by a somnambulist before awakening, even if they result in…
- ACTWU (American union)
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU), former union of garment and apparel workers in the United States and Canada. It was formed in 1976 by the merger of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA), a large union representing workers in the men’s clothing industry, with the
- acuchi (rodent)
acouchy, (genus Myoprocta), either of two species of South American rodents that resemble the small tropical-forest-dwelling hoofed animals of Africa and Asia (see royal antelope; chevrotain). Weighing 1 to 1.5 kg (2.2 to 3.3 pounds), acouchys are 30 to 39 cm (12 to 15 inches) long, with a very
- Acuff, Roy (American musician)
Roy Acuff was an American vocalist, songwriter, and fiddle player, called the “King of Country Music,” who in the mid-1930s reasserted the mournful musical traditions of Southeastern rural whites and became a national radio star on the “Grand Ole Opry” broadcasts. Turning his attention to music
- Acuff, Roy Claxton (American musician)
Roy Acuff was an American vocalist, songwriter, and fiddle player, called the “King of Country Music,” who in the mid-1930s reasserted the mournful musical traditions of Southeastern rural whites and became a national radio star on the “Grand Ole Opry” broadcasts. Turning his attention to music
- Acuff-Rose Publishing Company (American publishing company)
Roy Acuff: In 1942 he organized Acuff-Rose Publishing Company, the first publishing house exclusively for country music, with songwriter Fred Rose. Following an unsuccessful bid for the Tennessee governorship in 1948, Acuff continued to record extensively from the 1950s on, lending authenticity to the new boom in country music with such…
- Aculifera (mollusk)
mollusk: Critical appraisal: …by the more appropriate term Aculifera. All other mollusks are included in the subphylum Conchifera (shell-bearers). The familiar division of the Gastropoda into the subclasses Prosobranchia, Opisthobranchia, and Pulmonata is no longer widely accepted. Similarities in the morphology of the nervous system suggest that the opisthobranchs and pulmonates should be…
- Acuña (Mexico)
Ciudad Acuña, city, northern Coahuila estado (state), northeastern Mexico. The city is on the Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte) just across the U.S.-Mexico border from Del Rio, Texas, and is a port of entry. Ciudad Acuña is also a commercial and manufacturing centre for the agricultural hinterland.
- Acuña y Villanueva de la Iglesia, Rosario de (Spanish writer)
Rosario de Acuña was a Spanish playwright, essayist, and short-story writer known for her controversial liberal views. Little is known of Acuña’s early life. One of Spain’s few women playwrights, she was considered radical for her willingness to address such issues as religious fanaticism, atheism,
- Acuña, Ronald Jose, Jr. (Venezuelan baseball player)
Ronald Acuña, Jr. is a superstar baseball outfielder for the Atlanta Braves who is the only player in Major League Baseball history to hit at least 40 homers and steal at least 70 bases in a single season. Acuña is one of the most exciting players of his generation, a rare five-tool athlete who
- Acuña, Ronald, Jr. (Venezuelan baseball player)
Ronald Acuña, Jr. is a superstar baseball outfielder for the Atlanta Braves who is the only player in Major League Baseball history to hit at least 40 homers and steal at least 70 bases in a single season. Acuña is one of the most exciting players of his generation, a rare five-tool athlete who
- Acuña, Rosario de (Spanish writer)
Rosario de Acuña was a Spanish playwright, essayist, and short-story writer known for her controversial liberal views. Little is known of Acuña’s early life. One of Spain’s few women playwrights, she was considered radical for her willingness to address such issues as religious fanaticism, atheism,
- Acunha (Chinese painter and priest)
Wu Li was a Chinese painter who was a member of the orthodox school of “literati painting” (wenrenhua) in the early Qing period. Wu became a convert to Catholicism and in 1681 went to Macao Island (on the southeast coast of China), where, without family obligations after the deaths of his mother
- acupressure (medicine)
acupressure, alternative-medicine practice in which pressure is applied to points on the body aligned along 12 main meridians (pathways), usually for a short time, to improve the flow of qi (life force). Though often referred to by its Japanese name, shiatsu, it originated in China thousands of
- acupuncture (medicine)
acupuncture, ancient Chinese medical technique for relieving pain, curing disease, and improving general health. It was devised before 2500 bce in China and by the late 20th century was used in many other areas of the world. Acupuncture consists of the insertion of one or several small metal
- Acura (automobile)
Honda Motor Company, Ltd.: …has the luxury car line Acura. The company’s other major product areas include farm machinery and small engines. Honda is a major Japanese exporter to the United States and to other parts of the world. It also has assembly plants in a number of other countries and is engaged in…
- acutance (photography)
technology of photography: Resolving power and acutance: …measured physically to give an acutance value, which is preferred to resolving power as a criterion of a film’s sharpness performance. Fine-grain films with thin emulsions yield the highest acutance.
- acute anterior poliomyelitis (pathology)
polio, acute viral infectious disease of the nervous system that usually begins with general symptoms such as fever, headache, nausea, fatigue, and muscle pains and spasms and is sometimes followed by a more serious and permanent paralysis of muscles in one or more limbs, the throat, or the chest.
- acute cystitis (pathology)
cystitis: Acute cystitis: Acute, or common, cystitis is caused by bacterial infection, frequently as part of a general urinary tract infection (UTI). The mucous membrane of the bladder becomes swollen and red and bleeds. Small ulcers can develop, the surface layer can shred, and small clear cysts (sacs…
- acute disease (pathology)
alcoholism: Acute diseases: Alcohol intoxication produces a wide variety of disturbances of neuromuscular and mental functions and of body chemistry. In addition, the intoxicated person is more liable to accidents and injuries. Alcoholics—who chronically experience severe intoxication—are said to be 30 times more liable to fatal…
- acute flaccid myelitis (medical condition)
virus: Infectious patterns: …have also been linked to acute flaccid myelitis, a polio-like disease characterized by sudden muscle weakness and paralysis.
- acute glomerulonephritis (pathology)
Bright disease: Acute glomerulonephritis is characterized by severe inflammation, renal (kidney) insufficiency, swelling, increased blood pressure, and severe back pain. Recovery is usually fairly complete after an episode of acute glomerulonephritis, but minor infections may do further damage to the kidneys and bring on the subacute and…
- acute inflammation (pathology)
inflammation: Although acute inflammation is usually beneficial, it often causes unpleasant sensations, such as the pain of a sore throat or the itching of an insect bite. Discomfort is usually temporary and disappears when the inflammatory response has done its job. But in some instances inflammation can…
- acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (medical condition)
Guillain-Barré syndrome: Pathophysiology: Demyelinating forms include acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (AIDP), which is the most commonly occurring version of Guillain-Barré syndrome. Axonal forms include acute motor axonal neuropathy (AMAN) and acute motor and sensory axonal neuropathy (AMSAN). Miller Fisher syndrome is a rare and often rapidly developing variant of the syndrome…
- acute intermittent porphyria (pathology)
metabolic disease: Porphyrias: One common form is acute intermittent porphyria, which is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme porphobilinogen deaminase. Symptoms usually arise during adolescence, and hormonal changes (e.g., menstruation), alcohol ingestion, certain foods, and some drugs may exacerbate the condition. Diagnosis is made by detecting porphyrins in the
- acute lymphocytic leukemia (pathology)
blood disease: Leukemia: In acute lymphocytic anemia (ALL), most frequently seen in children, the cells are immature forms of the lymphatic series of cells. In acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), the predominant cells are the youngest recognizable precursors (myeloblasts) of the neutrophils of the blood. In a third and the…
- acute middle-ear infection (pathology)
otitis media, inflammation of the lining of the middle ear. Otitis media is one of the most common infections in childhood, with about three-quarters of children affected by age three. There are three types of otitis media. Acute otitis media commonly develops in association with an infection of
- acute motor and sensory axonal neuropathy (medical condition)
Guillain-Barré syndrome: Pathophysiology: …motor axonal neuropathy (AMAN) and acute motor and sensory axonal neuropathy (AMSAN). Miller Fisher syndrome is a rare and often rapidly developing variant of the syndrome that has three defining characteristics: areflexia (loss of tendon reflexes), ataxia (loss of limb coordination), and ophthalmoplegia (muscle weakness in the eyes that results…
- acute motor axonal neuropathy (medical condition)
Guillain-Barré syndrome: Pathophysiology: Axonal forms include acute motor axonal neuropathy (AMAN) and acute motor and sensory axonal neuropathy (AMSAN). Miller Fisher syndrome is a rare and often rapidly developing variant of the syndrome that has three defining characteristics: areflexia (loss of tendon reflexes), ataxia (loss of limb coordination), and ophthalmoplegia (muscle…
- acute myelogenous leukemia (pathology)
blood disease: Leukemia: In acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), the predominant cells are the youngest recognizable precursors (myeloblasts) of the neutrophils of the blood. In a third and the least common variety, acute monocytic leukemia, the immature cells appear to be precursors of the monocytes of the blood. Myelogenous and…
- acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis (pathology)
Vincent gingivitis, acute and painful infection of the tooth margins and gums that is caused by the symbiotic microorganisms Bacillus fusiformis and Borrelia vincentii. The chief symptoms are painful, swollen, bleeding gums; small, painful ulcers covering the gums and tooth margins; and
- acute otitis media (pathology)
otitis media, inflammation of the lining of the middle ear. Otitis media is one of the most common infections in childhood, with about three-quarters of children affected by age three. There are three types of otitis media. Acute otitis media commonly develops in association with an infection of
- acute pain (pathology)
therapeutics: Pain: Acute pain serves a useful function as a protective mechanism that leads to the removal of the source of the pain, whether it be localized injury or infection. Chronic pain serves a less useful function and is often more difficult to treat. Although acute pain…
- acute purulent meningitis (pathology)
meningococcus: …bacterium Neisseria meningitidis, which causes meningococcal meningitis in humans, who are the only natural hosts in which it causes disease. The bacteria are spherical, ranging in diameter from 0.6 to 1.0 μm (micrometre; 1 μm = 10−6 metre); they frequently occur in pairs, with adjacent sides flattened. They are strongly…
- acute radiation syndrome
ionizing radiation injury, tissue destruction or changes caused by deeply penetrating electromagnetic waves of high frequency or subatomic particles that form positively and negatively charged particles in the tissues, including individual cells that receive the radiation. Sources for radiation may
- acute respiratory distress syndrome of adults (pathology)
MERS: Complications include acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), kidney failure, and pericarditis (inflammation of the membranous sac that envelops the heart). More than 60 percent of infected persons who develop serious illness require hospitalization, and individuals die in more than 30 percent of reported…
- acute rhinitis (viral infection)
common cold, acute viral infection that starts in the upper respiratory tract, sometimes spreads to the lower respiratory structures, and may cause secondary infections in the eyes or middle ears. More than 200 agents can cause symptoms of the common cold, including parainfluenza, influenza,
- acute stress (psychology and biology)
stress: Types of stress and effects: In humans, acute stress is characterized by immediate danger that occurs within a short span of time and that activates the fight-or-flight response of the sympathetic nervous system; narrowly avoiding an automobile accident and being chased by a dog are examples of acute stress. Chronic stress is…
- acute-phase protein (immune system)
immune system: Acute-phase response: These proteins, collectively called acute-phase proteins, bind to bacteria and, by doing so, activate complement proteins that destroy the pathogen. The acute-phase proteins act similarly to antibodies but are more democratic—that is, they do not distinguish between pathogens as antibodies do but instead attack a wide range of microorganisms…
- acute-phase response (physiology)
immune system: Acute-phase response: When the body is invaded by a pathogen, macrophages release the protein signals interleukin-1 (IL-1) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) to help fight the infection. One of their effects is to raise the temperature of the body, causing the fever that often accompanies infection. (The…
- Acutis, Blessed Carlo (English-born Italian computer programmer)
Blessed Carlo Acutis ; beatified October 10, 2020) was an English-born Italian computer programmer who was beatified (the second of three stages in the process of canonization) by the Roman Catholic Church in 2020. Only 15 years old when he died of leukemia, his beatification and his interest in
- Acuto, Giovanni (Anglo-Italian mercenary)
Sir John Hawkwood was a mercenary captain who for 30 years played a role in the wars of 14th-century Italy. The son of a tanner, Hawkwood chose a soldier’s career, serving in the French wars of Edward III, who probably bestowed a knighthood on him. After the Treaty of Brétigny temporarily ended
- ACV (insurance)
insurance: Limitations on amount recoverable: …either full replacement cost or actual cash value (ACV). Under the former, the owner suffers no reduction in loss recovery due to depreciation of the property from its original value. This basis applies if the owner took out coverage that is at least equal to a named percentage—for example, 80…
- ACV
air-cushion machine: The former are classed as aerostatic craft (ACVs); the latter are called aerodynamic ground-effect machines (GEMs).
- ACWA (American union)
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union: …by the merger of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA), a large union representing workers in the men’s clothing industry, with the Textile Workers Union of America, a smaller union founded in 1939. The ACWA was originally formed when militant elements within the United Garment Workers, a relatively conservative…
- ACWF (Chinese organization)
All-China Women’s Federation (ACWF), the official, state-sponsored organization representing women’s interests in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Founded on April 3, 1949, the basic mission of the All-China Women’s Federation’s (ACWF) is to represent and safeguard the rights and interests of
- acyclic dialkene (chemical compound)
olefin: …known as acyclic dialkenes, or acyclic dienes, with the general formula CnH2n-2, contain two double bonds; they undergo reactions similar to the monoolefins. The best-known dienes are butadiene and isoprene, used in the manufacture of synthetic rubber.
- acyclic diene (chemical compound)
olefin: …known as acyclic dialkenes, or acyclic dienes, with the general formula CnH2n-2, contain two double bonds; they undergo reactions similar to the monoolefins. The best-known dienes are butadiene and isoprene, used in the manufacture of synthetic rubber.
- acyclic diolefin (chemical compound)
olefin: …known as acyclic dialkenes, or acyclic dienes, with the general formula CnH2n-2, contain two double bonds; they undergo reactions similar to the monoolefins. The best-known dienes are butadiene and isoprene, used in the manufacture of synthetic rubber.
- acyclic monoolefin (chemical compound)
olefin: Acyclic monoolefins have the general formula CnH2n, C being a carbon atom, H a hydrogen atom, and n an integer. They are rare in nature but can be formed in large quantities through industrial processing. One of the first processes used to produce them, developed…
- acyclic monoterpene (chemical compound)
isoprenoid: Monoterpenes: Acyclic monoterpene hydrocarbons are few in number, but their oxygenated derivatives are more widespread in nature and of greater importance.
- acycloguanosine (drug)
acyclovir, antiviral drug used to control the symptoms of infections involving herpes simplex virus (HSV), which causes herpes simplex, or varicella-zoster virus (VZV; a type of herpesvirus), which causes shingles and chickenpox. Acyclovir was first discovered in the mid-1970s and is effective
- acyclovir (drug)
acyclovir, antiviral drug used to control the symptoms of infections involving herpes simplex virus (HSV), which causes herpes simplex, or varicella-zoster virus (VZV; a type of herpesvirus), which causes shingles and chickenpox. Acyclovir was first discovered in the mid-1970s and is effective
- acyl azide (chemical compound)
azide: …(carboxylic acid) group as in acyl azide.
- acyl carnitine (chemical compound)
metabolism: Formation of fatty acyl coenzyme A molecules: …fatty acyl coenzyme A, forming acyl carnitine, which can cross the inner membrane of the mitochondrion and there return the acyl group to coenzyme A.
- acyl chloride (chemical compound)
carboxylic acid: Hydrolysis of acid derivatives: …acid derivatives to hydrolyze are acyl chlorides, which require only the addition of water. Carboxylic acid salts are converted to the corresponding acids instantaneously at room temperature simply on treatment with water and a strong acid such as hydrochloric acid (shown as H+ in the equations above). Carboxylic esters, nitriles,…
- acyl halide (chemical compound)
carboxylic acid: Acyl halides: The functional group of an acyl halide (acid halide) is an acyl group (RCO―) bonded to a halogen atom. They are named by changing the suffix -ic acid in the name of the parent carboxylic acid to -yl halide. Because…
- acyl-carrier protein (chemical compound)
metabolism: Fatty acids: …relatively small molecule known as acyl-carrier protein (ACP–SH); in higher organisms ACP–SH is part of a multienzyme complex called fatty acid synthetase. ACP–SH is involved in all of the reactions leading to the synthesis of a fatty acid such as palmitic acid from acetyl coenzyme A and malonyl coenzyme A.…
- acylating agent
amine: Substitution: Isocyanates are themselves acylating agents, of a type that also includes isothiocyanates (RN=C=S), ketenes (R2C=C=O), and carbon dioxide (O=C=O). They react more or less readily with primary and most secondary amines to form, respectively, ureas, thioureas (RNHCSNHR), amides, and salts of carbamic acid (RNHCO2−RNH3+).
- acylation
amine: Substitution: Acylation is one of the most important reactions of primary and secondary amines; a hydrogen atom is replaced by an acyl group (a group derived from an acid, such as RCOOH or RSO3H, by removal of ―OH, such as RC(=O)―, RS(O)2―, and so on). Reagents…
- acylcarnitine (chemical compound)
muscle disease: Lipid storage myopathies: The acylcarnitine that is formed crosses the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes and then is split in the presence of another form of the enzyme acyltransferase to give carnitine and the acyl molecule, which is then oxidized. A deficiency of carnitine results in the storage of…
- acylcarnitine transferase (enzyme)
metabolism: Formation of fatty acyl coenzyme A molecules: …are catalyzed by the enzyme carnitine acyl transferase. Defects in this enzyme or in the carnitine carrier are inborn errors of metabolism. In obligate anaerobic bacteria the linkage of fatty acids to coenzyme A may require the formation of a fatty acyl phosphate—i.e., the phosphorylation of the fatty acid by…
- acylglycerol (chemical compound)
fat: …vegetable oils, consisting primarily of glycerides, which are esters formed by the reaction of three molecules of fatty acids with one molecule of glycerol (see oil).
- Acyrthosiphon pisum (insect)
aphid: Types of aphids: The pea aphid (Acyrthosiphon pisum) has two colour morphs, pale green and pinkish red. It overwinters on clover and alfalfa, migrating to peas in spring. The yellow bean mosaic virus it transmits is often responsible for killing pea plants. Each female produces 50 to 100 young…
- Aczél, György (Hungarian politician)
György Aczél was a politician, communist ideologist, and the preeminent personality in the cultural policy of the János Kádár regime (1956–88) in Hungary. Born to a lower-middle-class Jewish family, Aczél joined the communist youth movement in 1935. After World War II he rose to the middle levels
- AD (political party, Venezuela)
Democratic Action (AD), social-democratic political party of Venezuela. Democratic Action was founded in 1936–37 as the National Democratic Party during a period when Venezuela’s government had relaxed its restrictive laws regulating political organizations. By the end of 1937, however, the
- AD (political organization, Chile)
Patricio Aylwin: …became the spokesperson for the Coalition of Parties for Democracy (Concertación de los Partidos por la Democracia; CPD). The CPD was a grouping of political parties created in February 1988, originally under the name Command for No (Comando por el No). After the resounding “no” vote that paved the way…