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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Calcified tissue international 24 (1977), S. 105-111 
    ISSN: 1432-0827
    Keywords: Bone mineral ; X-ray diffraction ; Crystallinity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Physics
    Notes: Summary The mechanisms by which crystal size distributions affect the usual method of quantitative X-ray diffraction analysis of bone mineral have been determined on synthetic crystals. It was observed that each component of a crystal-size distribution diffracts independently. This independence causes systematic nonlinear behavior in the plot of integrated intensity vs. broadening parameter curves. The nonlinearity resulted in an overestimation of the amount of nondiffracting material present in bone mineral. Because crystal size distributions may vary for different crystallographic directions, it is strongly suggested that the usual practice of adding thec-axis anda-axis integrated intensities to estimate the crystallinity of the sample be discontinued. Methods of understanding the crystal size distribution function in bone mineral are discussed and evaluated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of microbiology 162 (1994), S. 151-157 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Key words     Cyanobacteria ; Synechococcus ; Cyanate metabolism ; Cyanase ; Photosynthesis ; CO2/HCO3 ; transport
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract      Intact cells of the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus UTEX 625 degraded exogenously supplied cyanate (as KOCN) to CO2 and NH3 in a light-dependent reaction. NH3 release to the medium was as high as 80 μmol(mgChl)–1h–1 and increased 1.7-fold in the presence of methionine sulfoximine, a glutamine synthetase inhibitor. Cyanate also supported photosynthetic O2 evolution to a maximum rate of 188 μmol O2(mgChl)–1h–1 at pH 8 and 30° C. Cyanate decomposition in cell-free extracts, measured by mass spectrometry as 13CO2 production from KO13CN, occurred in the soluble enzyme fraction, but not in the thylakoid/carboxysome fraction, and was enhanced by HCO3 – and inhibited by the dianion oxalate. CO2, rather than HCO3 –, was a product of cyanate decomposition. The ability to decompose cyanate was not dependent upon pre-exposure of cells to cyanate to induce activity. The collective results indicate that Synechococcus UTEX 625 possesses a constitutive, cytosolic cyanase (EC 4.3.99.1), similar in mechanism to that found in some species of heterotrophic bacteria. The reaction catalyzed was: OCN– + HCO3 – + 2 H+→ 2 CO2 + NH3. In intact cells, the CO2 produced by the action of cyanase on OCN– was either directly fixed by the Calvin cycle enzyme ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, leading to O2 evolution, or leaked into the medium where it was returned to the cell by the active CO2/HCO3 – transport systems for fixation. However, leakage of CO2 from air-grown cells was only observed when the active CO2 transport system was inhibited by darkness or the CO2 analogue carbon oxysulfide.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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