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  • Book
    edited by Richard J. Simpson and David W. Greening.
    Contents:
    Plasma biomarker discovery using 3D protein profiling coupled with label-free quantitation / Lynn A. Beer [and others]
    Intact protein separation by one- and two-dimensional liquid chromatography for the comparative proteomic separation of partitioned serum or plasma / Simon Sheng [and others]
    In-depth analysis of a plasma or serum proteome using a 4D protein profiling method / Hsin-Yao Tang, Lynn A. Beer, and David W. Speicher
    Intact-protein analysis system for discovery of serum-based disease biomarkers / Hong Wang and Samir Hanash
    Model-based discovery of circulating biomarkers / Maryann S. Vogelsang [and others]
    Low-molecular weight plasma proteome analysis using centrifugal ultrafiltration / David W. Greening and Richard J. Simpson
    High-throughput analysis of glycoproteins from plasma / Yan Li and Hui Zhang
    Minimizing preanalytical variation of plasma samples by proper blood collection and handling / Jizu Yi, David Craft, and Craig A. Gelfand
    Collection and handling of blood specimens for peptidomics / Harald Tammen and Rüdiger Hess
    Investigation of peptide biomarker stability in plasma samples using time-course MS analysis / Jizu Yi [and others]
    Biomarker validation in blood specimens by selected reaction monitoring mass spectrometry of N-glycosites / Reto Ossola [and others]
    Fluorescent microsphere-based method for assay of multiple analytes in plasma / Oliver K. Bernhard [and others]
    Immuno-mass spectrometry : quantification of low-abundance proteins in biological fluids / Vathany Kulasingam [and others]
    Qualitative and quantitative analysis of glycated proteins in human plasma by glucose isotopic labeling with 13C6-reducing sugars / Feliciano Priego-Capote [and others]
    Exosome isolation for proteomic analyses and RNA profiling / Douglas D. Taylor, Wolfgang Zacharias, and Cicek Gercel-Taylor
    Extraction and proteome analysis of liver tissue interstitial fluid / Wei Sun, Ying Jiang, and Fuchu He
    Protocol for the preparation of cryoprecipitate and cryodepleted plasma / Rosemary L. Sparrow, David W. Greening, and Richard J. Simpson
    Preparation of platelet concentrates / David W. Greening, Rosemary L. Sparrow, and Richard J. Simpson
    Phosphoproteome analysis of the platelet plasma membrane / Thomas Premsler [and others]
    Statistical design and analysis of label-free LC-MS proteomic experiments : a case study of coronary artery disease / Timothy Clough [and others]
    Data management in mass spectrometry-based proteomics / Lennart Martens
    Bioinformatics challenges in the proteomic analysis of human plasma / Joseph M. Foster and Lennart Martens
    Using the human plasma peptide atlas to study human plasma proteins / Terry Farrah, Eric W. Deutsch, and Ruedi Aebersold.
    Digital Access Springer 2011
  • Article
    Suominen H, Heikkinen E, Parkatti T, Forsberg S, Kiiskinen A.
    Scand J Soc Med Suppl. 1977;14:225-40.
    Functional aging was examined in a cross-sectional study of 22 habitually trained and 22 sedentary men (aged 34 to 70 and 33 to 68, respectively) by using various physiological, psychophysiological, and anthropometric measurements. Compared to the control group, the trained subjects had significantly higher maximal oxygen uptake, vertical velocity, maximal breathing capacity, percentage of slow twitch muscle fibers, and muscle isocitrate dehydrogenase activity, in addition to lower values in body weight, systolic as well as diastolic blood pressure, patellar reflex time, serum triglycerides, and fast twitch muscle fibers (particularly glycolytic fibers). The results showed that the effects of endurance training are largely limited to functions which are apparently relevant to physical performance. The age regression lines were parallel or as in some of the variables influenced by training, even slightly steeper for the trained versus the untrained group. It is suggested that the aging process itself is not retarded by habitual physical training. Great differences between the two groups in muscle fiber composition and maximal oxygen uptake indicate that endurance-active people are also selected on the basis of inherited structural and functional properties.
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