Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"
|    sci.chem    |    Chemistry and related sciences    |    55,615 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 55,111 of 55,615    |
|    Treon Verdery to All    |
|    Making millions,    |
|    07 Sep 22 01:17:39    |
      From: treon3verdery@gmail.com               billions, or even trillions of separate chemicals at a silicosomal (or       liposomal) containered reaction       The silicosomes or various-somes can be sequentially dipped in reagents, and       to facilitate transport of the reagents to the silicosome core, acoustics,       which are able to form liposomes, and likely silicosomes could be utilized,       also. without using so        much electricity as to do electrochemistry electric charge at the fluid, or       fluid-flow dribbling the silicosomal goo on the surface of the anode or       cathode, the molecule mH (like pH) could also be ionized, or the solvent       ionized to facilitate transport        of reagents to the core,              When the silicosomes are loaded with reagents the reaction environment reacts       the reagents              After reaction the silicosomes are sorted for separation of particular       chemicals, one possibility is that if the silicosomes have permeability or       their permeability is engineer able like side branches on the silicon lengthy       part have like a C=O or NH2 on        them then putting the liposomes at different pHes could heighten permeability,       so putting the silicosomes at an adjusted solvent could cause almost all of       the unreacted reagents to diffuse out; then a different number and       concentration of pHlike digit        areas could cause diffusion of different molecular mass reaction products.       With few AMU products diffusing out at slight solvent moleculeh mH values,       charged reaction products possibly diffusing out when silicosome goo is       dribbled on an electrode, it is        even possible some reactions produce are hygroscopic or some other solvent       scopic and placing the reacted silicosomes in NH3, DMSO, water,        etrahydrofuran or some other polar solvent would cause liposomal osmotic       fullness, there is a chance plumping, and        it could then have different mid level floatiness at another fluid like       neutral buoyancy or positive bouyancy at another fluid              Sortation of reaction products at silicosomes is also possible with       centrifugation; previously diffused to contain different reaction molecules at       the core silicosomes would have different masses based on the remaining       products and yield (amount) of        those products, osmotically plumped silicosomes could centrifuge differently,        and if the reaction products are either bendy or rigid, then cool silicosomes       might be stirrable to concentrate concentration of either the bendy or rigid       contents amount;        Cold thixotropic viscosity              Reaction product specific silicosomal freeze tearing, Reaction product side       chemical becomes silicosomal (or liposomal) chemical lytic at cool or warm       temperatures, like if you cool them until cores freeze then the crystals       pierce the silicasome or        liposome sides causing the product, which might even be at soluble       temperature, that is of main interest then spills into the solvent, and the       freeze piercing part is ignored              At silicosomes, liposomes, or other-somes it is possible that putting the       silicosomes in a solvent with a reagent that strongly reacts with the metal's       or other atom's electrically charged head would immediately release all the       reaction products, an Mg        head, a gadolinium head would do this       ,       Se or Ag electrically charged heads of various-somes or silicosomes might       react to light              Longevity technology       Rapamycin is a nootropic that can heighten laboratory mammal cognition and can       keep me awake, brain positron emission tomography could find out which neuron       types, and at what brain location these effects occur from, other nootropics       that activate these        areas could be screened for longevizing effects, also if rapamycin is       concentrating at some regions of the brain, or some neurotransmitter types and       not others then a molecular variant of rapamycin that goes to all brain areas       and all neurotransmitters        could be found               Longevity gene, neuron types where one neuron uses a particular        eurotransmitter or just all the cytes at the body could use epigenetic       modification drugs to make fewer mTOR receptors and possibly increase the       amount of AMPK receptors at neurons, causing        the CNS to be more youthful possibly causing longer duration of youthful mind,       and youthful cognition, and youthful emotion, cardiovascular system cytes       could also be beneficial, causing greater longevization, youthspan of the       heart and vasculature, this        could be a one dose drug that prevents cardiovascular disease              Create epigenetics that reduce activity of mTOR receptor producing genes, and       possibly heighten production of AMPK from AMPK genes, possibly through       screening a million or to find an even more optimal epigenetic modifier, tens       of millions of molecular        variants of epigenetic modifying molecules to one that is most specific to       downregulating mTOR, and up regulating AMPK, this could have multi generation       longevizing effects, germline or also oocytes and spem modification to have       the epigenetics of        longevity is beneficial              Modifying the genetics of cytes used at nuclear transfer to oocytes to have       mTOR epigenetics that cause greater longevity              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca