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  • SPACE BIOLOGY  (11)
  • CHEMISTRY AND MATERIALS (GENERAL)  (8)
  • ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: The interactions of Ni(II) cation with a representative suite of purine bases and the respective nucleosides and nucleotides have been studied by ultraviolet difference spectroscopy. Apparent association constants were determined for each system at pH 7.0, using computer linear regression coupled with an iteration technique. The specificity of binding of Ni(2+) for the purine nucleotides studied at pH 7.0 was 5-prime-GMP greater than 5-prime-AMP; a similar ordering was also found for the respective nucleosides and bases. In this study binding was not observed for the suite of pyramidines used, although an Ni(2+) -cytidine complex has been observed (Fiskin and Beer, 1965). It was also found that Ni(2+) bound more strongly to the purine 5-prime-nucleotides than to the respective nucleosides and bases. These trends are explained in terms of metal-ligand bonds and available bonding positions on the ligands. A role for metal-ion-nucleotide types of complexes is suggested in the processes that might have given rise to the origin of life.
    Keywords: SPACE BIOLOGY
    Type: Journal of Molecular Evolution; 18; Apr. 198
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Interactions between ATP, glycine and montmorillonite and kaolinite clay minerals in the presence of various metal cations are investigated. The adsorption of adenine nucleotides on clays and Al(OH)3 was measured as a function of pH, and glycine condensation was followed in the presence of ATP, ZnCl2, MgCl2 and either kaolinite or montmorillonite. The amounts of ATP and ADP adsorbed are found to decrease with increasing Ph, and to be considerably enhanced in experiments with Mg(2+)- and Zn(2+)-montmorillonite with respect to Na(+)-montmorillonite. The effects of divalent cations are less marked in kaolinite. Results for Al(OH)3 show the importance of adsorption at clay platelet edges at high pH. The decomposition of ATP during drying at high temperature is observed to be inhibited by small amounts of clay, vacuum, or Mg(2+) or Zn(2+) ions, and to be accompanied by peptide formation in the presence of glycine. Results suggest the importance of Zn(2+) and Mg(2+) in chemical evolution.
    Keywords: SPACE BIOLOGY
    Type: Journal of Molecular Evolution; 18; May 1
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Research done on detecting the contaminants of p-dioxane that cause a positive response for highly reactive acyl groups is discussed. Attention is given to the fact that the positive hydroxamate response might indicate an unsuspected hazard. It is found that all acyl groups transferred are formyl groups, and the mono- and diformates of 1,2-ethanediol are identified as major sources of this activity. It is also found that the formate esters are formed by way of peroxide intermediates. Concentrations of the formate ester group as high as 1.8 M are found in partially consumed bottles of dioxane but not in other common ethers stored under similar conditions. Attention is called to the possibility that the exposure to the glycol formates is probably much wider than expected. It is noted that by purging containers of dioxane with nitrogen each time they are opened and storing them in the cold away from light can prevent both the economic loss and possible health hazard caused by contamination with peroxide and formate ester.
    Keywords: CHEMISTRY AND MATERIALS (GENERAL)
    Type: Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology; 25; 1980
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Methylsuccinic acid was isolated from human urine, derivatized as the di-S-(+)-2-butyl ester, and analyzed using a gas chromatographic system capable of separating the enantiomers of the derivative. The R-(+)-isomer was found to be present. Methylsuccinic acid is potentially important as a criterion for abiogenicity, having been obtained as a racemic mixture from sources known to be abiotic.
    Keywords: CHEMISTRY AND MATERIALS (GENERAL)
    Type: Biomedical Medicine; 13; 1975
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: The abundances of some of the straight- and branched-chain isomers of the monocarboxylic acids found in the Murchison carbonaceous chondrite are determined. Monocarboxylic acids extracted from a crushed sample of Murchison interior were quantified by means of gas chromatography and mass spectroscopy after a spiking solution of deuterated analogues of 11 carboxylic acids had been added. Monocarboxylic acid abundances are found to range between 1.83 and 0.01 micromole/g, which is significantly higher than Murchison amino acid concentrations, and to decrease with increasing carbon number for both branched and unbranched molecules. The results are interpreted to support the abiotic extraterrestrial synthesis of monocarboxylic acids. Possible mechanisms leading to the equal synthesis of branched and each unbranched carboxylic acid with the same carbon number are considered, noting that the Fischer-Tropsch Type mechanism by itself is incapable of accounting for the observed distributions.
    Keywords: SPACE BIOLOGY
    Type: Nature; 282; Nov. 22
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: The effect of the exchangeable cation on the condensation of glycine and alanine was investigated using a series of homoionic bentonites. A cycling procedure of drying, warming and wetting was employed. Peptide bond formation was observed, and the effectiveness of metal ions to catalyze the condensation was Cu(2+) greater than Ni(2) approximately equals Zn(2+) greater than Na(+). Glycine showed 6% of the monomer incorporated into oligomers with the largest detected being the pentamer. Alanine showed less peptide bond formation (a maximum of 2%) and only the dimer was observed.
    Keywords: SPACE BIOLOGY
    Type: Journal of Molecular Evolution; 13; Nov. 197
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  • 7
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: A problem encountered in the analysis of amino acids in chemical evolution experiments and in extracts of meteorites is the large number present. A method for selectively destroying the alpha-amino acids, with only the beta- and gamma-amino acids remaining in the solution, is described. The amino acids used were racemic, with one milliliter of solution containing 0.0000025 mol of each acid irradiated in a 1-cm quartz cell having 254-nm monochromatic light in the presence of CuCl2. Excess H2S was added to precipitate the Cu (2+) as CuS. A gas chromatographic analysis was used to observe that irradiation with 254-nm light in the presence of Cu (2+) destroyed all the amino acids except the beta and the gamma types. It is concluded that with such a procedure, complex mixtures of amino acids can be simplified to make identification by GC mass spectrometry easier.
    Keywords: CHEMISTRY AND MATERIALS (GENERAL)
    Type: Analytical Biochemistry; 90; 1978
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: The binding of nucleotides to homoionic clays is studied as a possible mechanism for the concentration and catalysis of biological or prebiotic materials on the prebiotic earth. Samples of radioactively labeled adenosine and thymidine nucleotides were mixed in solutions with bentonite, kaolinite or Dowex-50 particles in which all exchangeable sites were occupied by Na, Mg, Ca, Mn, Fe, Cu or Zn ions. The binding of nucleotides to homoionic clays is observed, with adenosine nucleotides favored over thymidine, bentonite as the best absorber, and greater binding to clays homoionic in transition metal ions. Results indicate that the oligomerization of nucleotides may be possible by this mechanism, however difficulties in nucleotide variability and base pairing may arise due to the observed preference for purines at the adsorption sites.
    Keywords: CHEMISTRY AND MATERIALS (GENERAL)
    Type: Journal of Molecular Evolution; 12; Apr. 12
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: A self-consistent charge extended Hueckel program is used in modeling isomorphic substitution of Al(3+) by Na(+), K(+), Mg(2+), Fe(2+), and Fe(3+) in the octahedral layer of a dioctahedral smectite clay, such as montmorillonite. Upon comparison of the energies involved in the isomorphic substitution, it is found that the order for successful substitution is as follows: Al(3+), Fe(3+), Mg(2+), Fe(2+), Na(+), which is equivalent to Ca(2+), and then K(+). This ordering is found to be consistent with experimental observation. The calculations also make it possible to determine the possible penetration of metal ions into the clay's 2:1 crystalline layer. For the cases studied, this type of penetration can occur at elevated temperatures into regions where isomorphic substitution has occurred with metal ions that bear a formal charge of less than 3+. The computed behavior of the electronic structure in the presence of isomorphic substitution is found to be similar to behavior associated with semiconductors.
    Keywords: CHEMISTRY AND MATERIALS (GENERAL)
    Type: Inorganic Chemistry; 21; 10, 1; 1982
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-01-25
    Description: N2O dynamics were studied at the soil-atmosphere interface and their effects on the global N2O budget. Troposphere nitrous oxide (N2O) concentration has increased by 0.2 to 0.4 pct. per year over the period 1975 to 1982, amounting to a net addition to the atmosphere of 2.8 to 5.6 Tg N2O-N per year. This perturbation, if continued into the future, will affect stratospheric chemical cycles, and the thermal balance of the Earth. In turn it will have direct and indirect global effects on the biosphere. The only well documented heat sinks identified to date are the stratospheric photolytic decomposition processes. However, quantitatively, they do not account for all the known sources. Emission from soils is the least understood and most variable component in the N2O budget. An automated field station that will measure N2O fluxes and interchanges over long periods of time is being developed. At each station, the source/sink relations of N2O at the soil-atmosphere interface will be measured and their relations to environmental conditions are documented and quantified. The results from the perennial measurements will generate the data base on which global budgets for N2O will be constructed and related to ecosystem parameters.
    Keywords: ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
    Type: First Symposium on Biospheric Research; p 1
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