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  • 1
    ISSN: 1520-4995
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Andrusov1 first described the microflora and fauna of Black Sea sediments, but found very few organisms in the fine deep water carbonate muds, an observation confirmed by later workers. John Murray2 ascribed the white, "amorphous" carbonate phases of Cherncmorets samples to inorganic precipitation, ...
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-203X
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An embryogenic suspension culture of orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.) consisting of small, embryogenic cell clusters was obtained from callus formed on basal sections of young leaves through a process of selective enrichment. These suspensions were used as a source of protoplasts. The isolated protoplasts divided at a frequency of 0.5–10% when plated in an agarose solidified culture medium. Conditioned medium, in which embryogenic Dactylis suspension cultures had been grown, was found to increase the rate of cell colony formation. Protoplast-derived colonies grew rapidly in a bead-type culture system of floating agarose slabs in liquid medium. New suspension cultures formed as the colonies grew out of the agarose. These cultures were embryogenic and formed green plantlets when plated on a solid medium lacking auxin. The plantlets were established in soil and grown to mature plants.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key wordsBrycon guatemalensis ; Ficus glabrata ; Gut passage time ; Seed germination ; Radio telemetry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Studies were conducted at the La Selva Biological Station in the Atlantic lowlands of Costa Rica and in a greenhouse in California to assess the potential role of a Neotropical fish in dispersing the seeds of a rain forest tree. Feeding experiments showed that the seeds of Ficus glabrata H. B. K., a major, canopy-forming riparian tree, require approximately 18–36 h to pass through the digestive tract of Brycon guatemalensis Regan, an abundant riverine fish whose adult diet consists largely of leaves and fruits of this fig tree. The seeds were still viable after passing through the fish’s gut but germinated somewhat more slowly than seeds that had been left in the fig exposed to air or floated in water. Stem elongation of seedlings from seeds that had passed through the fish’s gut was faster than that of seeds in the other two treatments. Placement of seeds upstream may be more important than enhanced germination for plants such as Ficus that produce large numbers of seeds. Radio telemetry showed that five of six tagged fish had moved distances of 0.1–1 km upstream; seven other fish with transmitters, including three large males, were not relocated and may have moved into tributary streams for spawning or feeding. These findings suggest that Brycon can disperse large numbers of Ficus seeds and help maintain the upstream populations of the tree.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: carbon ; elevated CO2 ; nitrogen ; suspension culture
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A photoautotrophic soybean suspension culture (SB-P) was used to study CO2 assimilation while exposed to elevated or ambient CO2 levels. These studies showed that under elevated CO2 (5% v/v) malate is the dominant fixation product, strongly suggesting that phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) is the primary enzyme involved in carbon fixation in these cells under their normal growth conditions. Citrate and [aspartate + glutamate] were also significant fixation products during fifteen minutes of exposure to 14CO2. During the ten minute unlabeled CO2 chase however, 14C-malate continued to increase while citrate and [aspartate + glutamate] declined. Fixation of 14CO2 under ambient CO2 levels (0.037%) showed a very different product pattern as 3-phosphoglycerate was very high in the first one to two minutes followed by increases in [serine + glycine] and [aspartate + glutamate]. Hexose phosphates were also quite high initially but then declined relatively rapidly. Thus, the carbon fixation pattern at ambient CO2 levels resembles somewhat that seen in C3 leaf cells while that seen at elevated CO2 levels more closely resembles that of a C4 plant. The initial fixation product of C3 plants, 3-PGA, was never detectable under high CO2 conditions. These data suggest that an in vitro photoautotrophic system would be suitable for studying carbon fixation physiology during photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic growth.
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 39 (1994), S. 245-250 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: asparagine ; cell culture ; Glycine max L. ; nitrogen metabolism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A photoautotrophic soybean suspension culture was used to study free amino acid pools during a subculture cycle. Free amino acid analysis showed that the intracellular concentrations of asparagine, serine, glutamine, and alanine reached peaks of 200, 10, 9 and 7 mM, respectively, at specific times in the 14-day subculture cycle. Asparagine and serine levels peaked at day 14 but glutamine level rose quickly after subculture, peaking at day three and then declined gradually. Roughly similar patterns were found in the conditioned culture medium although the levels were 1000-fold lower than those found in cells. Photoautotrophic (SB-P) and photomixotrophic (SB-M) cultures were quantitatively similar with regard to free asparagine and serine but not glutamine or free ammonia. Heterotrophic (SB-H) cells had 81–85% less free asparagine on day seven than did SB-M or SB-P cells. Hence, similar to the phloem sap of a soybean plant, asparagine, glutamine, alanine and serine were the predominant amino acids in photoautotrophic soybean cell cultures. Varying the amount of total nitrogen in culture medium for two subcultures at 10, 25, 50, and 100% Of normal levels showed that growth was inhibited only at the 10 and 25% levels but that growth on medium containing 50% of the normal nitrogen was as good as that on 100% nitrogen. Moreover, cellular chlorophyll content correlated exceptionally well with initial nitrogen content of the medium. Thus, the photosynthesis of SB-P cells was not limited by chlorophyll content. SB-P cells grown for two subcultures on 10% nitrogen contained very low free amino acid levels and only 1% of the free ammonia levels found in cells growing on a full nitrogen complement.
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 30 (1992), S. 85-91 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: cell culture ; photoautotrophic ; soybean
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We have attempted to optimize the conditions under which a photoautotrophic soybean suspension culture line (SB-P; Horn et al. 1983) is grown. Magnesium, phosphate, and calcium concentrations were varied individually from one-tenth to five times the normal level found in the Murashige and Skoog (1962) recipe. After two subcultures, only phosphate at one-tenth the normal level caused the cells to show a substantial reduction in fresh and dry weight increase and chlorophyll level. Nitrate and ammonium levels were inversely varied in 20 millimolar increments of potassium nitrate and ammonium chloride. Neither N-source alone could support growth through two subcultures. A ratio of 40 millimolar potassium nitrate to 20 millimolar ammonium gave significantly better fresh and dry weight increases than did a ratio of 20:40 or 30:30 but the chlorophyll level was unchanged. The minor salts as a group resulted in a small improvement in growth when provided at twice the normal level. Indole-3-acetic acid at five milligrams per liter resulted in significantly better fresh and dry weight increases than did α-naphthaleneacetic acid at any level but the final chlorophyll level was not changed. There was no correlation between growth and kinetin level and this resulted in the discovery that SB-P cells are cytokinin-autotrophic, as are heterotrophic SB cells, with regard to both growth and greening ability. Growing SB-P cells under a 14 h:10 h day:night photoperiod resulted in a slow but inevitable death. Increasing the carbon dioxide level to 10% for four weeks gave no increase in SB-P cell growth or chlorophyll level, but SB-P cells would not grow with carbon dioxide levels below 0.4%. The results clearly show that SB-P cells, despite their tenuous existence, are capable of adapting to a wide range of culture conditions. A simplified and improved culture medium for photoautotrophic cultures is given.
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Molecular and cellular biochemistry 184 (1998), S. 439-443 
    ISSN: 1573-4919
    Keywords: MR spectroscopy ; Cardiac metabolism ; Cardiac energetics ; Ion homeostasis ; Heart failure ; Coronary artery disease ; Valve disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract MR spectroscopy opens a window to the non-invasive evaluation of various aspects of cardiac metabolism. Experimentally, the method has extensively been used since 1970's. 31P-MR allows the registration of cardiac high-energy phosphate metabolism to non-invasively estimate the energetic state of the heart: ATP, phosphocreatine, inorganic phosphate, monophosphate esters and intracellular pH can all be quantitated. In conjunction with extracellular shift reagents such as [DyTTHA]3- or [TmDOTP]5-5-, 23Na- and 39K-MR allow the measurement of intra- and extra-cellular cation pools. 1H-MR spectroscopy allows the detection of a large number of metabolites such as, e.g. creatine, lactate, or carnitine. Human cardiac spectrocsopy has so far been confined to the31 P nucleus. Localization techniques (DRESS, ISIS, 3D-CSI etc.) are required to confine the acquired signal to the heart region. Relative quantification is straightforward (phosphocreatine/ATP ratio), absolute quantification (mM) is under development. Cardiac31 P-MR spectroscopy has research application in at least three clinical areas: (1) Coronary artery disease: A biochemical stress test for non-invasive ischemia detection (decrease of phosphocreatine with exercise) and viability assessment via quantification of ATP may become feasible. (2) Heart failure: The phosphocreatine /ATP ratio may provide an independent index for grading of heart failure, allow to monitor the longterm effects of different forms of drug therapy on cardiac energy metabolism in heart failure, and may also hold prognostic information on survival. (3) Valve disease: It is possible that the decrease of phosphocreatine/ATP can be used to guide the timing for the valve replacement. At the present time, no routine clinical applications can be defined for the use of human cardiac spectroscopy in patients with cardiac disease. However, the technique holds great potential for the future as a non-invasive approach to cardiac metabolism, and in coming years routine applications may become reality.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Fresenius' Zeitschrift für analytische Chemie 350 (1994), S. 286-292 
    ISSN: 1618-2650
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract An isotope dilution mass spectrometric (IDMS) method with the thermal ionization (TI) technique has been developed for the determination of trace impurities of Cr, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Ag, Cd, Tl, Pb, Th, and U in high-purity HF (50% by weight) used in the semiconductor industry. The evaporation step of the HF solution was carried out in an apparatus which did not significantly contribute to contaminations of the heavy metals to be analysed. This apparatus allowed fast evaporation of the HF solution of up to 200 ml/h and therefore also a fast trace heavy metal/matrix separation was carried out. The evaporation step was also used in connection with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) when applying the isotope dilution technique and an external calibration for quantification, respectively. The detection limits for TI-IDMS were (in pg/g): Cr=30, Fe=400, Ni=70, Cu=20, Zn=1100, Ag=70, Cd=10, Tl=1, Pb=16, Th=3, and U=1. With ICP-MS in combination with the evaporation step, detection limits of less than 50 pg/g have been achieved for Cr, Ni, and Zn and of 〈5 pg/g for the other elements except Fe, which could not be determined in concentrations less than 100 ng/g. On the other hand, the detection limits were much higher when the HF matrix was not removed before measuring by ICP-MS. A comparison of the different ICP-MS methods (isotope dilution technique and external calibration for both HF evaporated samples and those with HF matrix) with the results of TI-IDMS has been carried out. An excellent agreement was achieved between the results of TI-IDMS and the two ICP-MS methods using the HF evaporation step, whereas the ICP-MS techniques without HF evaporation essentially deviated from these results. Fe was the only trace element of all investigated heavy metals which could only be analysed by TI-IDMS in high purity HF in a concentration of about 3 ng/g. Although ICP-MS with isotope dilution and external calibration resulted in comparable analytical data, the ICP-IDMS method has some practical advantages such as time-saving and more reliable results.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Protoplasts isolated from a 5-methyltryptophan resistant nonregenerable Nicotiana tabacum (L.) Xanthi suspension culture were fused via the dextran method (Kameya et al. 1981) with protoplasts isolated from N. glutinosa L. leaf mesophyll cells. Prospective somatic hybrids were selected by their ability to produce chlorophyll and to grow on medium containing 5-methyltryptophan and eventually to regenerate into complete plants. Twenty-eight plants regenerated from selected colonies were classified into three groups: (1) Four plants had intermediate morphology, were sterile, had hybrid isozyme patterns for four different enzymes, and contained fraction 1 protein large subunit patterns indicative of a N. glutinosa chloroplast origin. (2) One plant had N. tabacum morphology, was fertile, had two hybrid isozyme patterns, and contained fraction 1 protein large subunits indicative of the N. tabacum chloroplast type. Although this hybrid contained both parental small subunit patterns of fraction 1 protein, two-dimensional gel electrophoresis showed the N. glutinosa-type small subunit to consist of several molecular weights suggestive of errors in the processing steps. Progeny of the Type 2 hybrid (selfed) contained no N. glutinosa characteristics. (3) Twenty-three plants were N. glutinosa escapes. Chromosome numbers ranged from 60 (some chromosome loss) in two hybrids to 34–35 (extensive chromosome loss) in three hybrids. These results suggest that amino acid analog resistance and regeneration capability can be utilized as complementing markers for selecting and identifying somatic hybrids after protoplast fusion. Mesophyll protoplasts from N. glutinosa can also be regenerated into morphologically normal fertile plants.
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