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111.
The X-ray crystal structures and thermal stabilities of the inclusion complexes formed between the organophosphate insecticide fenitrothion [O,O-dimethyl O-(3-methyl-4-nitrophenyl) phosphorothioate] and the host compounds TRIMEA and TRIMEB (permethylated α- and β-cyclodextrins, respectively) are reported. In the complex (TRIMEA)2·fenitrothion 1, the guest phosphate ester group is disordered and the molecule is fully encapsulated within a novel TRIMEA dimer in which the secondary rims of the two host molecules are in close contact. In contrast, the complex TRIMEB·fenitrothion 2 is monomeric and the guest molecule is statistically disordered over two positions, with the phosphate group inserted in the host cavity in both cases. Thermal analysis indicated gradual and partial loss of the guest in 1 during heating between 130 °C and the melting point of the complex (∼200 °C), whereas complex 2 displayed significant mass loss only after fusion of the complex at 161 °C.  相似文献   
112.
Cellulose degradation, fermentation, sulfate reduction, and methanogenesis are microbial processes that coexist in a variety of natural and engineered anaerobic environments. Compared to the study of 16S rRNA genes, the study of the genes encoding the enzymes responsible for these phylogenetically diverse functions is advantageous because it provides direct functional information. However, no methods are available for the broad quantification of these genes from uncultured microbes characteristic of complex environments. In this study, consensus degenerate hybrid oligonucleotide primers were designed and validated to amplify both sequenced and unsequenced glycoside hydrolase genes of cellulose-degrading bacteria, hydA genes of fermentative bacteria, dsrA genes of sulfate-reducing bacteria, and mcrA genes of methanogenic archaea. Specificity was verified in silico and by cloning and sequencing of PCR products obtained from an environmental sample characterized by the target functions. The primer pairs were further adapted to quantitative PCR (Q-PCR), and the method was demonstrated on samples obtained from two sulfate-reducing bioreactors treating mine drainage, one lignocellulose based and the other ethanol fed. As expected, the Q-PCR analysis revealed that the lignocellulose-based bioreactor contained higher numbers of cellulose degraders, fermenters, and methanogens, while the ethanol-fed bioreactor was enriched in sulfate reducers. The suite of primers developed represents a significant advance over prior work, which, for the most part, has targeted only pure cultures or has suffered from low specificity. Furthermore, ensuring the suitability of the primers for Q-PCR provided broad quantitative access to genes that drive critical anaerobic catalytic processes.The gene encoding the 16S small ribosomal subunit has served as a highly suitable target for studying bacterial species. When one obtains 16S rRNA gene sequence information, it is sometimes possible to infer function from an identical match to a well-characterized pure culture. More commonly, however, the similarity to pure cultures is low, and/or the highest similarities correspond to 16S rRNA gene sequences identified without isolation or phenotypic characterization. In either case, care must be taken, because distinct phenotypes [e.g., dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction, chlorate reduction] are found in microorganisms with highly similar (e.g., 99.5%) 16S rRNA gene sequences (1). In addition, 16S rRNA gene surveys of broad phylogenetic groups can be time-, labor-, and cost-intensive. For example, it is estimated that the 16S rRNA gene-based detection of all recognized lineages of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) would require approximately 132 16S rRNA gene-targeted microarray probes (32).A more-direct approach for the study of microbes that span phylogenetic groups is to target them as a physiologically coherent guild by using specific genetic markers (functional genes) for the functions of interest. Functional genes have been successfully targeted in bioremediation studies to investigate microbial populations responsible for the degradation of various contaminants. Some examples include the use of the large alpha subunit of benzylsuccinate synthase to monitor anaerobic hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria (5), the monitoring of ars genes for the identification and quantification of arsenic-metabolizing bacteria (45), and the detection of catechol 1,2-dioxygenase in aromatic-hydrocarbon-degrading Rhodococcus spp. (48). In the field of mine drainage/metal remediation, functional genes have been used to target SRB (17, 26), but the methods have suffered both from a lack of broad specificity for SRB and from the inability to distinguish SRB from sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (SOB). A general challenge to the functional-gene approach has been the relative lack of characterization and unavailability of target sequences. As a consequence, the primer sets that are available tend to be more relevant to pure cultures than to complex environmental samples.Microbial communities in natural and engineered anaerobic environments that utilize cellulose as the primary carbon source, such as those in rumina (56), termite guts (54), decomposing wood (7), sulfate-reducing and methanogenic sediments (9, 22), wetlands (28), and sulfate-reducing bioreactors (26), are particularly challenging to characterize. 16S rRNA gene-based studies have revealed the complexity of these microbial communities and their high levels of phylogenetic and functional diversity. In such anaerobic environments, mineralization of complex organic matter occurs through the concerted action of a variety of microorganisms. Primary fermenters, such as cellulose degraders, break down the complex molecules and ferment the hydrolysis products. Secondary fermenters also ferment the hydrolysis products. When sulfate is available, SRB utilize the fermentation products as carbon and energy sources. In addition, methanogens can also utilize some of the fermentation products. In many cases, functionally important members, such as SRB, are present only as a small fraction of the community (36, 38), making them difficult to detect by use of 16S rRNA gene-targeted fingerprinting methods. Furthermore, the phylogenetic diversity of cellulose degraders, fermenters, and SRB prevents their quantification using a small number of 16S rRNA gene-targeted probes.In this study, degenerate PCR primers were developed, validated, and demonstrated for the amplification of key functional groups in anaerobic environments possessing genes encoding glycoside hydrolases of families 5 (collectively designated cel5 in this study) and 48 (collectively designated cel48 in this study) (cellulose degradation), the alpha subunit of iron hydrogenase (hydA) (fermentation), dissimilatory sulfite reductase (dsrA) (sulfate reduction), and methyl coenzyme M reductase (mcrA) (methanogenesis). This work is particularly novel considering that the vast majority of existing methods are suitable only for pure cultures, especially in the cases of cel5, cel48, and hydA (21, 44, 47). Thus, the approach provides access to uncultured and unsequenced markers, a critical feature for the study of key anaerobic processes in complex environments. Specificity was also enhanced where possible, notably in the case of dsrA, for which existing primers either do not distinguish SRB from SOB (14, 17) or have good alignment with only a narrow range of SRB (31, 52). Finally, all primers in this study were designed and validated for quantitative PCR (Q-PCR), in order to provide valuable quantitative functional information about complex anaerobic communities. The approach is demonstrated on mine drainage remediation systems and is expected to be of broad value to a variety of fields, including advancing the understanding of biohydrogen production, global carbon cycling, and other important biogeochemical processes.  相似文献   
113.
We previously reported that Azospirillum brasilense induced a more elastic cell wall and a higher apoplastic water fraction in both wheat coleoptile and flag leaf. These biophysical characteristics could permit increased growth. Knowledge of the biochemical effects the bacteria could elicit in plant cell walls and how these responses change plant physiology is still scarce. The objective of this work was to analyze whether A. brasilense Sp245 inoculation affected elongation and extensibility of growing cucumber (Cucumis sativus) hypocotyls and ionically bound cell wall peroxidase activities. Hypocotyl tip and basal segments were excised from A. brasilense Sp245-inoculated cucumber seedlings growing in darkness under hydroponic conditions. Elongation, cell wall extensibility, cell wall peroxidase activities against ferulic acid and guaiacol and NADH oxidase activities were analyzed. Azospirillum-inoculated cucumber seedlings grew bigger than non-inoculated ones. Dynamic cell wall differences were detected between inoculated and non-inoculated hypocotyls. They included greater acid-induced cell wall extension and in vivo elongation when incubated in distilled water. Although there was no difference between treatments in either region of the hypocotyl NADH oxidase and ferulic acid peroxidase activities were lower in both regions in inoculated seedlings. These lesser activities could be delaying the stiffening of cell wall in inoculated seedlings. These results showed that the cell wall is a target for A. brasilense growth promotion.  相似文献   
114.
115.
Functional defects in cytotoxic CD8(+) T cell responses arise in chronic human viral infections, but the mechanisms involved are not well understood. In mice, CD4 cell-mediated interleukin-21 (IL-21) production is necessary for the maintenance of CD8(+) T cell function and control of persistent viral infections. To investigate the potential role of IL-21 in a chronic human viral infection, we studied the rare subset of HIV-1 controllers, who are able to spontaneously control HIV-1 replication without treatment. HIV-specific triggering of IL-21 by CD4(+) T cells was significantly enriched in these persons (P = 0.0007), while isolated loss of IL-21-secreting CD4(+) T cells was characteristic for subjects with persistent viremia and progressive disease. IL-21 responses were mediated by recognition of discrete epitopes largely in the Gag protein, and expansion of IL-21(+) CD4(+) T cells in acute infection resulted in lower viral set points (P = 0.002). Moreover, IL-21 production by CD4(+) T cells of HIV controllers enhanced perforin production by HIV-1-specific CD8(+) T cells from chronic progressors even in late stages of disease, and HIV-1-specific effector CD8(+) T cells showed an enhanced ability to efficiently inhibit viral replication in vitro after IL-21 binding. These data suggest that HIV-1-specific IL-21(+) CD4(+) T cell responses might contribute to the control of viral replication in humans and are likely to be of great importance for vaccine design.  相似文献   
116.
Aims: To evaluate mycobiota and aflatoxins B1 (AFB1), B2 (AFB2), G1 (AFG1), G2 (AFG2) and fumonisin B1 (FB1) contamination in different malted barley types and brands and brewer’s grain collected from a major Argentinean brewery. Methods and Results: Total fungal counts were performed using the plate count method. Aflatoxin B1, AFB2, AFG1, AFG2 and Zearalenone (ZEA) analyses were performed by thin‐layer chromatography (TLC). Fumonisin B1 was determined by HPLC. Eighty‐three percentage of the malted barley (100% M1, 50% M2 and 100% M3) and 61% of brewer’s grain samples had a count >1 × 104 CFU g?1. Yeasts were isolated from all malt and brewer’s grain samples. Genera containing some of the most important mycotoxin producer species –Fusarium ssp., Aspergillus ssp., Penicillium ssp. and Alternaria ssp. – were isolated from the analysed samples, along with other environmental saprophytic fungi such as Geotrichum ssp., Mucorales and Cladosporium ssp. All samples were contaminated with 104–145 μg kg?1 FB1. Eighteen per cent of brewer’s grain samples were contaminated with 19–44·52 μg kg?1 AFB1. Aflatoxin B2, AFG1, AFG2 and ZEA were not detected in any of the analysed samples. Conclusions: Fungal and mycotoxin contamination in malt and brewer’s grain is an actual risk for animal and human health. Significance and Impact of the Study: This study may be useful for assessing the risk of mycotoxins in Argentinean beers and especially in animal feeds.  相似文献   
117.
The herbicide trifluralin (I)(N,N-di-n-propyl-2,6-dinitro-4-trifluoromethylaniline) decomposes, by the action of UV-Vis light (lambda > 300 nm), to several products, the most important (because they give subsequent photochemical reactions) being N-n-propyl-2,6-dinitro-4-trifluoromethylaniline (VI), 2-ethyl-7-nitro-5-trifluoromethyl-1H-benzimidazole 3-oxide (VII) and 2,6-dinitro-4-trifluoromethylaniline (XII). The time evolution of degradation of trifluralin (I) and the aforementioned three main photoproducts was studied in water and acetonitrile as solvents. The pseudo-first order rate constants allow one to calculate the branching ratios for some of the reactions involved. The preference for either N-dealkylation or cyclization depends on the solvent employed. Dissolved oxygen accelerates the photodegradation, especially the dealkylation.  相似文献   
118.
119.
Anandamide (AEA), a major endocannabinoid, binds to cannabinoid and vanilloid receptors (CB1, CB2 and TRPV1) and affects many reproductive functions. Nanomolar levels of anandamide are found in reproductive fluids including mid-cycle oviductal fluid. Previously, we found that R(+)-methanandamide, an anandamide analogue, induces sperm releasing from bovine oviductal epithelium and the CB1 antagonist, SR141716A, reversed this effect. Since sperm detachment may be due to surface remodeling brought about by capacitation, the aim of this paper was to investigate whether anandamide at physiological concentrations could act as a capacitating agent in bull spermatozoa. We demonstrated that at nanomolar concentrations R(+)-methanandamide or anandamide induced bull sperm capacitation, whereas SR141716A and capsazepine (a TRPV1 antagonist) inhibited this induction. Previous studies indicate that mammalian spermatozoa possess the enzymatic machinery to produce and degrade their own AEA via the actions of the AEA-synthesizing phospholipase D and the fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) respectively. Our results indicated that, URB597, a potent inhibitor of the FAAH, produced effects on bovine sperm capacitation similar to those elicited by exogenous AEA suggesting that this process is normally regulated by an endogenous tone. We also investigated whether anandamide is involved in bovine heparin-capacitated spermatozoa, since heparin is a known capacitating agent of bovine sperm. When the spermatozoa were incubated in the presence of R(+)-methanandamide and heparin, the percentage of capacitated spermatozoa was similar to that in the presence of R(+)-methanandamide alone. The pre-incubation with CB1 or TRPV1 antagonists inhibited heparin-induced sperm capacitation; moreover the activity of FAAH was 30% lower in heparin-capacitated spermatozoa as compared to control conditions. This suggests that heparin may increase endogenous anandamide levels. Our findings indicate that anandamide induces sperm capacitation through the activation of CB1 and TRPV1 receptors and could be involved in the same molecular pathway as heparin in bovines.  相似文献   
120.

Background

Previous studies on the use of SO2 and CO2 as impregnating agent for sugar cane bagasse steam treatment showed comparative and promising results concerning the cellulose enzymatic hydrolysis and the low formation of the inhibitors furfural and hydroxymethylfurfural for the use of CO2 at 205°C/15 min or SO2 at 190°C/5 min. In the present study sugar cane bagasse materials pretreated as aforementioned were analyzed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM), X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) and Infrared (FTIR spectroscopy) aiming a better understanding of the structural and chemical changes undergone by the pretreated materials.

Results

SEM and TEM data showed that the structural modifications undergone by the pretreatment with CO2 were less pronounced in comparison to that using SO2, which can be directly related to the combined severity of each pretreatment. According to XRD data, untreated bagasse showed, as expected, a lower crystallinity index (CI = 48.0%) when compared to pretreated samples with SO2 (CI = 65.5%) or CO2 (CI = 56.4%), due to the hemicellulose removal of 68.3% and 40.5%, respectively. FTIR spectroscopy supported SEM, TEM and XRD results, revealing a more extensive action of SO2.

Conclusions

The SEM, TEM, XRD and FTIR spectroscopy techniques used in this work contributed to structural and chemical analysis of the untreated and pretreated bagasse. The images from SEM and TEM can be related to the severity of SO2 pretreatment, which is almost twice higher. The crystallinity index values obtained from XRD showed that pretreated materials have higher values when compared with untreated material, due to the partial removal of hemicellulose after pretreatment. FTIR spectroscopy supported SEM, TEM and XRD results. CO2 can actually be used as impregnating agent for steam pretreatment, although the present study confirmed a more extensive action of SO2.  相似文献   
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