Search results for "Concentration."

showing 10 items of 1849 documents

Isoproterenol inhibits fluid-phase endocytosis from early to late endosomes

1999

We have shown recently that isoproterenol affects both the cellular location and the morphology of late endosomes in a pH-dependent manner [Marjomäki et al., Eur. J. Cell Biol. 65, 1-13 (1994)]. In this study, using fluorescence and quantitative electron microscopy, we wanted to examine further what is the fate of internalized markers during their translocation from early to late endosomes under isoproterenol treatment. Fluorescein dextran internalized for 30 min (10-min pulse followed by a 20-min chase) showed accumulation in the cellular periphery during isoproterenol treatment in contrast to the control cells, which accumulated dextran in the perinuclear region. Quantitative electron mic…

HistologyEndosomeCell CountEndosomesBiologyEndocytosisPathology and Forensic Medicinechemistry.chemical_compoundCyclic AMPAnimalsFragmentation (cell biology)Cells CulturedVesicleIsoproterenolCell BiologyGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationMembrane transportEndocytosisIn vitroRatsCell biologyDextranchemistryBiochemistryCalciumRabbitsPercollBiomarkers
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The Nuremberg Trial in the Finnish Press Discourse

2011

The opening of the Nuremberg Trial was widely reported in Finland, as in other countries examined here. Like the reportage from the liberated concentration camps, the Finnish press was not represented on the spot although it had a quota for one journalist. However, the trial was a much-awaited event in Finland. The Belsen Trial (the trial of Josef Kramer and 44 others), which had ended on 17 November 1945, was duly reported in Finland, and in part indicated that the interest in Nazi criminality was running high.1

HistoryLawEvent (relativity)Media studiesNazi concentration campsNazism
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The Finnish Press and the Liberation of the Concentration Camps

2011

Finland’s response to the liberation of the concentration camps was considerably different from the British and Swedish responses; the Finnish press wrote far less about the liberations than their British and Swedish counterparts; the event hardly sparked any public discussions in Finland; and there was almost no pictorial record of the atrocities to accompany the news. The purpose of this chapter is twofold: first, to establish what the Finnish press wrote about the liberation of the camps — to investigate what type of discourses the Finnish press subscribed to; and second, to analyse why they wrote in the way they did — to understand why the news was framed in certain ways.

HistoryMedia studiesNazi concentration campsEvent (philosophy)
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Religious thought and experience in the prison camps

2020

The development of religious thought has often been marked by discord and conflicts be tween religions (and/or individual religious thinkers) and the State, which at times led to the repression of individuals and or groups of people united by the same confession. The Russian case is fully in line with this unfortunate tradition: from Nikon’s schism to the re pression against all religions under the Soviet regime, Russian religious thought has of ten developed in repressive conditions. However, the Russian case has one distinguishing feature, that is, the extensive use of prison camps by Russian and Soviet authorities from the nineteenth century onwards, which has had a direct effect on some…

Historymedia_common.quotation_subjectGulagNazi concentration campsPrisonKarsavinConfessionSocial groupKatorgaState (polity)AvvakumConcentration campsPavel FlorenskyGulagReligious studiesSchismmedia_commonF. M. Dostoevsky
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Effect of the Alkaline Cations on the Stability of the Model Polynucleotide Poly(dG-dC)·Poly(dG-dC)

2011

When the model polynucleotide poly(dG-dC)∙poly(dG-dC) [polyGC] is titrated with a strong acid (HCl) in unbuffered aqueous solutions containing the chlorides of the alkali metals in the concentration range 0.010 M-0.600 M, two transitions in the absorbance vs. pH plots are evidenced, characterized by the constants pK(a(₁)) and pK(a(₂)). The limiting values at infinite saline concentrations of these two constants, namely pK(∞)(a(₁)) and pK(∞)(a(₂)) obtained making use of the "one site saturation constant" equation or, in turn, of the double logarithmic plot: pK(a) vs. log([salt]⁻¹), exhibit a clear dependence on the nature of the cations. The effects of the different alkali cations on the pK(…

Hofmeister seriesalkaline cationsSodiumPolynucleotidesInorganic chemistryAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementSodium Chloridemodel polynucleotidesAbsorbancePolydeoxyribonucleotidesUltraviolet visible spectroscopyalkaline cations; hofmeister effect; model polynucleotides; uv-spectroscopyStructural BiologyCationsuv-spectroscopyhofmeister effectMicroemulsionAlkaline cationMolecular BiologyAqueous solutionMetals AlkaliChemistryModel polynucleotideGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAlkali metalPolynucleotideNucleic Acid ConformationJournal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics
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Ocean acidification and elevated temperature negatively affect recruitment, oxygen consumption and calcification of the reef-building Dendropoma cris…

2019

Expected temperature rise and seawater pH decrease may affect marine organism fitness. By a transplant experiment involving air-temperature manipulation along a natural CO2 gradient, we investigated the effects of high pCO(2) (similar to 1100 mu atm) and elevated temperature (up to +2 degrees C than ambient conditions) on the reproductive success, recruitment, growth, shell chemical composition and oxygen consumption of the early life stages of the intertidal reef-building vermetid Dendropoma cristatum. Reproductive success was predominantly affected by temperature increase, with encapsulated embryos exhibiting higher survival in control than elevated temperature conditions, which were in t…

Hot TemperatureEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesIntertidal zonechemistry.chemical_elementIntertidal specie010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesOxygenpCO2Calcification PhysiologicOxygen ConsumptionAnimal scienceMediterranean SeaAnimalsClimate changeEnvironmental ChemistrySeawaterLife History TraitsWaste Management and DisposalReef0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryReproductive successbiologyCoral ReefsChemistryDendropomaOcean acidificationHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAnthozoabiology.organism_classificationPollutionItalyPhysiological traitsLarval developmentSeawaterLarval settlementScience of The Total Environment
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Different effectors of dimorphism in Yarrowia lipolytica

2002

Yarrowia lipolytica is an ascomycete with biotechnological potential. In common media, the fungus grows as a mixture of yeast-like and short mycelial cells. The environmental factors that affect dimorphism in the wild-type strain, W29, and its auxotrophic derivative, PO1a, were analyzed. In both strains, pH was the most important factor regulating the dimorphic transition. Mycelium formation was maximal at pH near neutrality and decreased as pH was lowered to become almost null at pH 3. Carbon and nitrogen sources, namely glucose and ammonium, were also important for mycelium formation; and their effect was antagonized by some alternative carbon and nitrogen sources. Citrate was an importan…

Hot TemperatureNitrogenAuxotrophyYarrowiaFungusBiochemistryMicrobiologyCitric Acidchemistry.chemical_compoundBotanyCyclic AMPMorphogenesisGeneticsAmmoniumMolecular BiologyMyceliumSex CharacteristicsbiologyEffectorfungiYarrowiaGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationCarbonYeastCulture MediaBiochemistrychemistryStarvationDimorphic fungusArchives of Microbiology
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Lack of correlation between trehalose accumulation, cell viability and intracellular acidification as induced by various stresses in Saccharomyces ce…

1998

A pma1-1 mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with reduced H+-ATPase activity and the isogenic wild-type strain accumulated high levels of trehalose in response to a temperature upshift to 40 éC and after addition of 10% ethanol, but only modest levels in response to a rapid drop in external pH and after addition of decanoic acid. There was, however, no correlation between the absolute levels of trehalose in the stressed cells and their viability. All these treatments induced a significant decrease in intracellular pH, and surprisingly, this decrease was very similar in both strains, indicating that intracellular acidification could not be the triggering mechanism for trehalose accumulation i…

Hot TemperatureTime FactorsATP synthaseEthanolIntracellular pHMutantSaccharomyces cerevisiaeTrehaloseSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiologyHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyTrehaloseYeastArtificial Gene FusionFungal Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryBiochemistryGlucosyltransferasesbiology.proteinViability assayAcidsIntracellularMicrobiology (Reading, England)
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Biosorption of copper by wine-relevant lactobacilli

2011

Must and wine may be contaminated with elevated copper concentrations by the use of fungicides or in course of the vinification process. Hitherto only a few practicable and harmless procedures exist to reduce an excess of copper from must and wine. For this reason we investigated the biosorption of copper by eight wine-relevant Lactobacillus species. Both, living and heat-inactivated cells revealed a significant degree of Cu adsorption. It was shown that Cu binding correlated positively with an increasing pH value of the environment. The highest binding capacity of the tested lactic acid bacteria was found for L. buchneri DSM 20057 with a maximum of 46.17 μg Cu bound per mg cell in deionize…

Hot Temperaturechemistry.chemical_elementWineMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionLactobacillusFood microbiologyOrganic chemistryVitisFood scienceWinebiologyBiosorptionfood and beveragesGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationWine faultbiology.organism_classificationCopperCulture MediaLactic acidLactobacilluschemistryFood MicrobiologyAdsorptionCopperFood ScienceInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
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Study and characterization of polyphenol oxidase from eggplant (Solanum melongena L.)

2011

ABSTRACT: In this study the catecholase and cresolase activities of eggplant polyphenol oxidase (PPO) were investigated. Enzyme activity was determined by measuring the increase in absorbance using catechol as substrate and 3-methyl-2- benzothiazolinone hydrazone (MBTH) as coupled reagent. The effects of substrate specificity, heat inactivation, temperature, pH, and inhibitors were investigated to understand the enzymatic alteration of ready-to-eat preparations. Browning of vegetables was determined through a colorimeter. Decrease of lightness (L*) and increase of color difference values (ΔE*) were correlated with tissue browning. Antibrowning agents were tested on PPO under the same condit…

Hot Temperaturefood industryCatecholsPolyphenol oxidaseSubstrate Specificitychemistry.chemical_compoundAcetic acidEnzyme StabilityBrowningSolanum melongenaFood scienceEnzyme InhibitorsbrowningCatecholbiologySubstrate (chemistry)traditional landracesGeneral ChemistrySettore AGR/15 - Scienze E Tecnologie AlimentariHydrogen-Ion Concentrationpolyphenol oxidase antibrowning food technologies ready-to-eatEnzyme assayMaillard ReactionKineticsBiochemistrychemistryaubergineTartaric acidbiology.proteingermplasm exploitationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesCitric acidCatechol Oxidasetraditional landraces; browning; germplasm exploitation; food industry; aubergine
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