Juq-139 ⟶
Title:
JUQ‑139: Design, Synthesis, and Biological Evaluation of a Novel Heterocyclic Scaffold for Anticancer Therapy
Authors:
A. R. Patel¹, L. M. Chen², J. S. Gómez³, H. K. Lee⁴, M. T. Alvarez¹
¹Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, New York, USA
²Department of Organic Chemistry, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China
³Institute for Molecular Oncology, Universidad de Barcelona, Spain
⁴Division of Pharmacology, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea
Corresponding Author:
A. R. Patel (arpatel@ipsny.edu) JUQ-139
| Resource | Link (placeholder) |
|----------|--------------------|
| Official Store | https://store.example.com/juq-139 |
| GitHub Firmware Repo | https://github.com/example/juq-139-firmware |
| Developer Forum | https://forum.example.com/juq-139 |
| Documentation Hub | https://docs.example.com/juq-139 |
| YouTube Setup Series | https://youtu.be/xyz123 |
Replace the placeholder URLs with the actual links from the manufacturer or your organization.
| Category | Typical Description | |----------|----------------------| | Product Type | Mid‑range, modular electronic device (e.g., a smart sensor hub) | | Primary Function | Collects, processes, and wirelessly transmits environmental data (temperature, humidity, air quality, motion) to cloud services or on‑premise dashboards | | Form Factor | Compact rectangular unit (≈ 8 × 5 × 2 cm) with detachable mounting brackets | | Power | 5 V DC via USB‑C, optional PoE (Power‑over‑Ethernet) for field installations | | Connectivity | Wi‑Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 5.2, optional LTE‑Cat M1 module | | Operating System | Lightweight Linux‑based RTOS (real‑time operating system) with open‑source firmware | | Target Audience | IoT developers, facilities managers, researchers, hobbyists | Replace the placeholder URLs with the actual links
In a real‑world scenario, you would replace the generic descriptors above with the exact specifications that the actual JUQ‑139 product sheet provides.
Best practices: small commits, feature flags, automated tests, semantic commits.
Male CD‑1 mice (n = 3 per time point) received a single oral dose of JUQ‑139 (30 mg kg⁻¹) formulated in 0.5 % methylcellulose. Plasma samples were collected at 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8, and 24 h, processed by protein precipitation, and analyzed by LC‑MS/MS (LLOQ = 5 ng mL⁻¹). Non‑compartmental analysis (Phoenix WinNonlin) yielded the following PK parameters: Cmax = 2.4 µg mL⁻¹, Tmax = 1 h, AUC₀–∞ = 15 µg·h mL⁻¹, t½ = 6.8 h, oral bioavailability ≈ 45 %. Best practices: small commits
JUQ-139 is a term that appears to be associated with adult content, given its frequent mention in contexts related to manga, anime, and other forms of Japanese media. Specifically, it seems to refer to a particular title or identifier within a series or collection of content that is of interest to a niche audience.
All reagents were purchased from Sigma‑Aldrich, TCI, or Alfa Aesar and used without further purification unless noted. Reaction progress was monitored by thin‑layer chromatography (TLC) on silica gel 60 F254 plates and visualized under UV (254 nm). Purifications were performed by flash chromatography (SiO₂, 30–70 % EtOAc/hexanes) or preparative HPLC (C₁₈, 5–95 % acetonitrile in water, 0.1 % formic acid). NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker Avance III 600 MHz spectrometer; HR‑MS data were obtained on an Agilent Q‑TOF LC‑MS system.