The Collaborative International Dictionary
Butyrate \Bu"ty*rate\, n. (Chem.) A salt of butyric acid.
Wiktionary
n. (context organic compound English) Any salt or ester of butyric acid.
Wikipedia
Butyrate (also known as butanoate) is the traditional name for the conjugate base of butyric acid (also known as butanoic acid). The formula of the butyrate ion is CHO. The name is used as part of the name of esters and salts of butyric acid, a short chain fatty acid. Examples include
- Cellulose acetate butyrate, an aircraft dope
- Methyl butyrate
- Ethyl butyrate
- Butyl butyrate
- Pentyl butyrate
- Sodium butyrate, a HDAC inhibitor used in psychiatry
Butyrates are important as food for cells lining the mammalian colon (colonocytes). Without butyrates for energy, colon cells undergo autophagy (self digestion) and die. Short-chain fatty acids, which include butyrate, are produced by beneficial colonic bacteria ( probiotics) that feed on, or ferment prebiotics, which are plant products that contain adequate amounts of dietary fiber. These short-chain fatty acids benefit the colonocytes (cells of the colon) by increasing energy production and cell proliferation, and may protect against colon cancer.
Butyrate is a major metabolite in colonic lumen arising from bacterial fermentation of dietary fiber and has been shown to be a critical mediator of the colonic inflammatory response. Butyrate possesses both preventive and therapeutic potential to counteract inflammation-mediated ulcerative colitis (UC) and colorectal cancer. One mechanism underlying butyrate function in suppression of colonic inflammation is inhibition of the IFN-γ/ STAT1 signaling pathways at least partially through acting as a histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor. While transient IFN-γ signaling is generally associated with normal host immune response, chronic IFN-γ signaling is often associated with chronic inflammation. It has been shown that Butyrate inhibits activity of HDAC1 that is bound to the Fas gene promoter in T cells, resulting in hyperacetylation of the Fas promoter and upregulation of Fas receptor on the T cell surface. It is thus suggested that Butyrate enhances apoptosis of T cells in the colonic tissue and thereby eliminates the source of inflammation (IFN-γ production). Butyrate inhibits angiogenesis by inactivating Sp1 transcription factor activity and downregulating vascular endothelial growth factor gene expression.
Usage examples of "butyrate".
The only thing at Anthroresearch that still fazed him a little was SHROUD, whose face was a human skull that looked at you through a more-or-less abstracted butyrate head.
Solenoid relays would be her ganglia, servo-actuators move her flawless nylon limbs, hydraulic fluid be sent by a platinum heart-pump through butyrate veins and arteries.
Its skin was cellulose acetate butyrate, a plastic transparent not only to light but also to X-rays, gamma rays and neutrons.
Our lab found a cocktail of droperidol and gamma hydroxy butyrate in the dregs of his tea.
Will it ever benefit her to know that pine-apple oil is nothing more than butyrate of ethyloxide?
Cellulose acetate butyrate (CAB) dope is more resistant to fire than nitrocellulose and penetrates better as well.