Search results for " Divalent"

showing 10 items of 33 documents

Mechanisms of nitric-oxide-induced increase of free cytosolic Ca2+ concentration in Nicotiana plumbaginifolia cells.

2005

In this study, we investigated a role for nitric oxide (NO) in mediating the elevation of the free cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](cyt)) in plants using Nicotiana plumbaginifolia cells expressing the Ca(2+) reporter apoaequorin. Hyperosmotic stress induced a fast increase of [Ca(2+)](cyt) which was strongly reduced by pretreating cell suspensions with the NO scavenger carboxy PTIO, indicating that NO mediates [Ca(2+)](cyt) changes in plant cells challenged by abiotic stress. Accordingly, treatment of transgenic N. plumbaginifolia cells with the NO donor diethylamine NONOate was followed by a transient increase of [Ca(2+)](cyt) sensitive to plasma membrane Ca(2+) channel inhibitors …

Cations DivalentNicotiana tabacumAequorinNitric OxideBiochemistryNitric oxideCell Linechemistry.chemical_compoundCytosolPhysiology (medical)medicineStaurosporinePhosphorylationProtein kinase ANicotiana plumbaginifoliaSolanaceaebiologyCell MembraneDepolarizationbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyMolecular WeightCytosolchemistryBiophysicsbiology.proteinCalciumProtein Kinasesmedicine.drugFree radical biologymedicine
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Pb(II) adsorption by a novel activated carbon - alginate composite material. A kinetic and equilibrium study.

2016

The adsorption capacity of an activated carbon – calcium alginate composite material (ACAA-Ca) has been tested with the aim of developing a new and more efficient adsorbent material to remove Pb(II) ion from aqueous solution. The study was carried out at pH = 5, in NaCl medium and in the ionic strength range 0.1–0.75 mol L−1. Differential Pulse Anodic Stripping Voltammetry (DP-ASV) technique was used to check the amount of Pb(II) ion removed during kinetic and equilibrium experiments. Different kinetic (pseudo first order, pseudo second order and Vermuelen) and equilibrium (Langmuir and Freundlich) models were used to fit experimental data, and were statistically compared. Calcium alginate …

Composite materialThermogravimetric analysisLangmuirCalcium alginateMaterials scienceAlginatesCations DivalentActivated carbonInorganic chemistry02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesBiochemistryWater PurificationStructural Biology.chemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionGlucuronic AcidStructural BiologymedicineHumansFreundlich equationComposite materialMolecular Biology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesAqueous solutionDrinking WaterHexuronic AcidsAlginateOsmolar ConcentrationTemperatureGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion Concentration021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPb(II)Anodic stripping voltammetryKineticschemistryLeadCharcoalAdsorption0210 nano-technologyWater Pollutants ChemicalActivated carbonmedicine.drugInternational journal of biological macromolecules
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Structure of matrices based on pectin : formulation, characterization, functionality and controlled release during the encapsulation

2016

In this thesis, we studied the interactions between an anionic polysaccharide (pectin) and monovalent cation (Na+) and divalent cations (Ca2+, Zn2+, Ba2+, Mg2+) in dilute regime (c Ca2+ > Zn2+ > Mg2+; this may be related to the affinity between the water molecules from the coordination sphere and the cation. Indeed, the affinity of the cation for water molecules increases in the reverse order: Ba2+ < Ca2+ < Zn2+ < Mg2+. Finally, we have used the three polysaccharides (PGA, LMP and ALMP - amidated low methoxyl pectin) in association with calcium ions to produce microparticles containing rutin to target drug release in the intestine. We have linked the rutin release kinetics to the network st…

Divalent cationsGelNaClMécanisme d’associationBinding mechanismCations divalentsPectinsStructureEncapsulationPectines[SDV.IDA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineering[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-CHEM-PH] Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Chemical Physics [physics.chem-ph]
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Naturally occurring hemolysins in the coelomic fluid of Holothuria polii delle chiaie (Echinodermata).

1979

Abstract The coelomic fluid of Holothuria polii D.Ch contains hemolytic activity against erythrocytes of several vertebrate species. The hemolytic potency depends upon calcium ion concentration and varies according to erythrocyte source and cell number in the reaction mixture. Absorption experiments with formalinized rabbit erythrocytes suggest that hemolytic activity is not specific. Its heat lability, water insolubility at low pH values, and sensitivity to proteolytic enzymes suggest that hemolytic activity resides in protein molecules. The activity, maximal in alkaline media, appears to depend up time and temperature.

ErythrocytesCations DivalentSea CucumbersImmunologyDose-Response Relationship Immunologicchemistry.chemical_elementCalciumHemolysisHemolysin ProteinsPotencyAnimalsbiologyLabilityProteolytic enzymesTemperatureHemolysinExudates and TransudatesHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationKineticschemistryBiochemistryCoelomAbsorption (chemistry)HolothuriaDevelopmental BiologyEchinodermataDevelopmental and comparative immunology
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The inhibition of glycerol permeation through aquaglyceroporin-3 induced by mercury(II)

2016

Mercurial compounds are known to inhibit water permeation through aquaporins (AQPs). Although in the last years some hypotheses were proposed, the exact mechanism of inhibition is still an open question and even less is known about the inhibition of the glycerol permeation through aquaglyceroporins. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of human aquaporin-3 (AQP3) have been performed up to 200 ns in the presence of Hg2+ ions. For the first time, we have observed the unbiased passage of a glycerol molecule from the extracellular to cytosolic side. Moreover, the presence of Hg2+ ions covalently bound to Cys40 leads to a collapse of the aromatic/arginine selectivity filter (ar/R SF), blocking th…

Glycerol0301 basic medicineMolecular dynamicCell Membrane PermeabilityBiochemistryProtein Structure Secondarychemistry.chemical_compoundGLPFCOORDINATIONCRYSTALEscherichia coli ProteinsPermeationBiochemistryCovalent bondSettore CHIM/03 - Chimica Generale E InorganicaPhosphatidylcholinesCOMPLEXESProtein BindingSTRUCTURAL BASISCations DivalentPlasmodium falciparumAquaporinCYSTEINE-189Molecular Dynamics SimulationMolecular dynamicsAquaporinsWATER CHANNELInorganic Chemistry03 medical and health sciencesEscherichia coliGlycerolExtracellularHumansMoleculePERMEABILITYProtein Structure QuaternaryAquaporin 3Binding SitesAQUAPORIN INHIBITIONWaterBiological TransportMembranes ArtificialAquaglyceroporinMercurySIMULATIONSProtein Structure TertiaryCytosolWater permeation030104 developmental biologyAquaglyceroporinschemistryStructural Homology ProteinBiophysicsGlycerol permeationJournal of Inorganic Biochemistry
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Sorption of copper(II) ions in the biomass of alga Spirogyra sp.

2012

Abstract Sorption of copper ions by the alga Spirogyra sp. was investigated to determine the influence of experimental conditions and the methods of sample preparation on the process. The experiments were carried out both under the static and the dynamic conditions. Kinetics and equilibrium parameters of the sorption were evaluated. In addition, the influence was studied of the algae preparation methods on the conductivity of demineralized water in which the algae samples were immersed. The static experiments showed that the sorption of Cu2+ ions reached equilibrium in about 30 min, with approximately 90% of the ions adsorbed in the initial 15 min. The sorption capacity determined from the …

LangmuirCations DivalentInorganic chemistryBiophysicschemistry.chemical_elementFresh WaterConductivityAdsorptionAlgaeElectrochemistrySample preparationBiomassPhysical and Theoretical ChemistrybiologyElectric ConductivityTemperatureSorptionGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationSpirogyrabiology.organism_classificationCopperSolutionsKineticsBiodegradation EnvironmentalchemistryVolume (thermodynamics)Environmental chemistryThermodynamicsAdsorptionCopperWater Pollutants ChemicalBioelectrochemistry
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Purification of a glucose-binding protein from rat liver nuclei. Evidence for a role in targeting of nuclear mRNP to nuclear pore complex.

1992

A nuclear carbohydrate-binding protein with a molecular mass of 67 kDa (CBP67), which is specific for glucose residues, was purified to essential homogeneity from rat liver nuclear extracts. This protein could also be isolated from nuclear ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes by extraction in the presence of 0.6 M or 2 M NaCl, but it was absent in polysomal RNP complex. The binding of the purified protein, which has an isoelectric point of 7.3, to glucose-containing glycoconjugates depends on the presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+. Using closed nuclear envelope vesicles as a system to study nuclear transport of RNA, it was shown that both entrapped polysomal mRNA and nuclear RNA precursors are readily …

MaleMonosaccharide Transport ProteinsCations DivalentBiologyBiochemistryAnimalsHumansMagnesiumRNA MessengerNuclear proteinNuclear poreCell NucleusBinding proteinNuclear cap-binding protein complexBiological TransportRats Inbred StrainsRatsMessenger RNPGlucose bindingMolecular WeightBiochemistryLiverRibonucleoproteinsCalciumElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelNucleoporinNuclear transportIsoelectric FocusingHeLa CellsEuropean journal of biochemistry
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Effect of Divalent Cations on the Contractile Response of Rat Aorta to Depolarization before and after Nifedipine Treatment

1996

The influence of the divalent cations, Ca2+, Mg2+ and Ba2+, on the contractile response of the rat aorta to KCl and on the recovery of this response after nifedipine treatment was analyzed. KCl (80 mmol/l) promoted a two-phase (phasic and tonic) contractile response in Krebs solution but, as expected, no contractile response in Ca(2+)-free medium. In Mg(2+)-free medium, the phasic response to KCl was unaffected but the tonic one decreased slowly, suggesting that a long incubation time in the absence of Mg2+ (65 min) promotes a loss of or a change in the intracellular distribution of this ion that modifies Ca2+ entry through L channels or Ca2+ handling. Ba2+ (1.8 mmol/l) contracted the rat a…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyNifedipineCations DivalentAorta ThoracicMuscle Smooth VascularPotassium ChlorideDivalentTonic (physiology)NifedipineInternal medicinemedicine.arterymedicineAnimalsRats WistarPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationAnalysis of VarianceAortaChemistryContractile responseDepolarizationGeneral MedicineCalcium Channel BlockersRatsEndocrinologyKrebs solutionIntracellularMuscle Contractionmedicine.drugPharmacology
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The solution behavior of dopamine in the presence of mono and divalent cations: A thermodynamic investigation in different experimental conditions

2021

The interactions of dopamine [2-(3,4-Dihydroxyphenyl)ethylamine, (Dop-)] with methylmercury(II) (CH3Hg+), magnesium(II), calcium(II), and tin(II) were studied in NaCl(aq) at different ionic strengths and temperatures. Different speciation models were obtained, mainly characterized by mononuclear species. Only for Sn2+ we observed the formation of binuclear complexes (M2L2 and M2LOH (charge omitted for simplicity)

Models MolecularCations DivalentDopaminePotentiometric titrationEnthalpyIonic bondingBiochemistryMicrobiologyArticleDivalentchemistry.chemical_compoundMetal complexesTheoryofComputation_ANALYSISOFALGORITHMSANDPROBLEMCOMPLEXITYSettore CHIM/01 - Chimica AnaliticaStability constantsMolecular Biologychemistry.chemical_classificationCatechol; Chemical speciation; Metal complexes; Sequestration; Stability constantsLigandHydrolysisOsmolar ConcentrationTemperatureSequestrationHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationQR1-502SolutionsKineticschemistrySpecific ion interaction theoryIonic strengthThermogravimetryCatecholPhysical chemistryThermodynamicsChemical speciationEthylamine
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Theoretical characterization of end-on and side-on peroxide coordination in ligated Cu2O2 models.

2006

The relative energetics of mu-eta1:eta1 (trans end-on) and mu-eta2:eta2 (side-on) peroxo isomers of Cu2O2 fragments supported by 0, 2, 4, and 6 ammonia ligands have been computed with various density functional, coupled-cluster, and multiconfigurational protocols. There is substantial disagreement between the different levels for most cases, although completely renormalized coupled-cluster methods appear to offer the most reliable predictions. The significant biradical character of the end-on peroxo isomer proves problematic for the density functionals, while the demands on active space size and the need to account for interactions between different states in second-order perturbation theor…

Models MolecularCations DivalentInorganic chemistry010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesPeroxidechemistry.chemical_compoundIsomerismComputational chemistry0103 physical sciencesOrganic chemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPerturbation theory010304 chemical physicsMolecular Structure010308 nuclear & particles physicsChemistryOxidesGeneral Medicine0104 chemical sciences3. Good healthCharacterization (materials science)PeroxidesQuaternary Ammonium CompoundsActive spaceCharacter (mathematics)Models Chemicalddc:540CopperThe journal of physical chemistry. A
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