Search results for "Incubation"

showing 10 items of 200 documents

Volcanic CO2 tracks the incubation period of basaltic paroxysms

2021

Description

BasaltgeographyEarth Environmental Ecological and Space SciencesMultidisciplinarygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGeochemistrySciAdv r-articlesGeologyIncubation periodGeochemistrybasaltic paroxysms CO2 fluxesVolcanovolcanic gasesGeologyResearch Article
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Pollen-pollen interactions in Betula pendula in vitro

1998

Direct pollen interactions, as well as interactions mediated by a recipient, can have a remarkable influence on pollen fertilization ability. Under conditions of pollen competition it could be advantageous if pollen grains interfered with the germination of other pollen. The aim of this study was to find out if there are direct negative or positive pollen–pollen interactions between pollen grains from genetically slightly different donors. The in vitro germinability of the pollen from several Betula pendula Roth clones was investigated. The pollen interactions between the clones were examined pairwise by using equal pollen mixtures. In three of the eight cases the germination percentage of …

BetulaceaePhysiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectfood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologymedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)Sexual reproductionHuman fertilizationBetula pendulaGerminationPollenBotanyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineIncubationmedia_commonNew Phytologist
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Determination of lectin-cell-binding parameters by a new agglutination technique.

1992

We applied a recently described technique which is based on a light transmission/scattering method to determine the association characteristics of the Geodia lectin to sheep erythrocytes. The agglutination assays were performed in a total volume of 3 ml with 5.4 x 10(6) erythrocytes/ml. At a concentration of 360 ng/ml 50% of the lectin molecules were bound to the cells within the first 10 s of incubation. Scatchard analyses revealed an association constant (K(a)) of 0.9 +/- 0.1 x 10(8) M-1 and a number of 3.8 +/- 0.6 x 10(6) lectin binding sites on one erythrocyte. The method was also successfully applied to determine quantitatively the inhibitory potential of sugars competing with cell sur…

BiochemistryAgglutination techniquechemistry.chemical_compoundLectinsmedicineAnimalsLactoseIncubationchemistry.chemical_classificationScatchard plotChromatographySheepbiologyChemistryLectinHemagglutination TestsHemagglutination Inhibition TestsPoriferaRed blood cellAgglutination (biology)Kineticsmedicine.anatomical_structureReceptors MitogenImmunologyCalibrationbiology.proteinGlycoproteinProtein BindingBiological chemistry Hoppe-Seyler
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Development of a rapid and highly sensitive biochemical method for the measurement of fungal spore viability. An alternative to the CFU method

2001

Abstract 1 A biochemical method, based on dehydrogenase activity (DHA) measurement, has been developed as an alternative to colony forming unit (CFU) enumeration, for assessing the viability of fungal spores. In viable cells, a tetrazolium salt (MTT) is reduced to a coloured formazan (MTTf) by cellular dehydrogenase enzymes. From the colorimetric assay developed by Mosmann for mammalian cells, the procedure has been adapted and optimised using P. digitatum spores as a model. Propan-2-ol has been selected as the best solvent to extract the MTTf from the spores. The sensitivity of the method has been considerably increased by determining the optimal conditions of incubation for the MTT reduct…

BioengineeringMetarhizium flavovirideApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBiochemistry03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundFood scienceIncubation[SDV.MP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biologyColony-forming unit0303 health sciencesPenicillium digitatumbiology030306 microbiologyfungiAspergillus nigerFungi imperfectibiology.organism_classificationSpore[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologychemistryBiochemistryFormazanBiotechnology
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Plant effects on the soil community: A microcosm experiment

1999

Abstract An experiment was carried out in microcosms for testing the hypothesis that a higher level of primary production should maintain a decomposer community with higher biomass and activity. Microcosms with coniferous forest humus and a diverse microbial and faunal community were divided into three sets: (1) control without plants, (2) with birch seedlings in full illumination, and (3) with birch seedlings, shaded to reduce the net primary production. During 16 weeks of incubation at +16 °C, no treatment effects were found in numbers or biomass of taxonomic or functional groups of soil organisms, nor in the system respiration in darkness. The community structure of the shaded systems di…

Biomass (ecology)Community structureSoil ScienceBiologyMicrobiologyHumusDecomposerAgronomyInsect ScienceRespirationBotanyMicrocosmIncubationOrganic contentEuropean Journal of Soil Biology
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Biotransformation in vitro of the 22R and 22S epimers of budesonide by human liver, bronchus, colonic mucosa and skin.

2001

The pharmacological effects of glucocorticoids are greatly influenced by their pharmacokinetic properties. In the present report, the in vitro biotransformation of the 22R and 22S epimers of the topical steroid budesonide was studied in the S-9 fraction of human liver, bronchus, skin and colonic mucosa. The disappearance of unchanged epimers of budesonide was measured during 90 min of incubation by high performance liquid chromatography. The rate of disappearance was high in human liver while little biotransformation occurred in bronchial tissue and colonic mucosa, and none was detected in the skin. A marked decay of the initial concentration of unchanged budesonide epimers was noticed afte…

Budesonidemedicine.medical_specialtyColonAdministration TopicalAnti-Inflammatory AgentsBronchiCell LineTherapeutic indexPharmacokineticsBiotransformationInternal medicineCulture TechniquesmedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Intestinal MucosaBudesonideIncubationGlucocorticoidsBiotransformationCells CulturedSkinPharmacologyBronchusChemistryStereoisomerismIn vitroEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureLiverHepatocytesEpimermedicine.drugFundamentalclinical pharmacology
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In vitro efficacy of a Hydrophilic Central Venous Catheter Loaded with Silver to Prevent Microbial Colonization

1998

A method was developed to load the surface of a central venous catheter with silver to prevent bacterial colonization. Silver confers a broad antimicrobial activity with a relatively low risk of resistance. Catheters were incubated with a silver nitrate solution in different concentrations. The solvent, incubation temperature and incubation period were varied to examine the influence on the catheter loading. With increasing incubation temperature, time and concentration of silver nitrate, higher rates of silver elution were observed by atomic absorption spectroscopy. Furthermore, by using ethanol-water as a solvent instead of pure water, the amount of silver bound to the catheter surface wa…

Catheterization Central VenousStaphylococcus aureusMicrococcaceaemedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyMicrobial Sensitivity TestsBacterial AdhesionIncubation periodMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundEscherichia coliStaphylococcus epidermidismedicineCandida albicansChromatographybiologyAntimicrobialbiology.organism_classificationSolventSilver nitrateCatheterchemistryPseudomonas aeruginosaAnti-Infective Agents LocalSilver NitrateCentral venous catheterZentralblatt für Bakteriologie
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Dimethylsulfoxide as carrier in enzyme cytochemistry.

1971

Addition of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) to the incubation medium of succinate dehydrogenase in a concentration of 10% enhances the staining reaction in the hyphae of the fungus Cercosporella herpotrichoides after an incubation period of 15 min. Controls without DMSO remain unstained. DMSO causes a rapid penetration of the components of the medium through the mucilage that covers the hyphae.

CercosporellaHistologyintegumentary systembiologyHyphaStaining and LabelingHistocytochemistryorganic chemicalsSuccinate dehydrogenasefungiCell BiologyStainingIncubation periodMedical Laboratory TechnologyBiochemistryMucilagebiology.proteinCytochemistryDimethyl SulfoxideMitosporic FungiMolecular BiologyIncubationHistochemie. Histochemistry. Histochimie
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Availability of polyphenols in fruit beverages subjected to in vitro gastrointestinal digestion and their effects on proliferation, cell-cycle and ap…

2009

Abstract Three fruit beverages: Fb (grape–orange–apricot), FbFe (Fb + iron sulphate) and FbFeM (FbFe + skimmed milk) were subjected to in vitro gastrointestinal digestion. Addition of Fe and milk decreased the phenolic content of Fb by 13% and 55%, respectively. The digestion process decreased the phenolic content by 47%, 60%, and 70% in Fb, FbFe and FbFeM with respect to the initial, non-digested, Fb. Caco-2 cells were incubated for 4 h daily for four days or continuously for 24 h with bioaccessible fractions obtained after the digestion (digests). Polyphenols were not metabolised by Caco-2 cells. Fb digest (∼50 μM total phenolics) was the sample that led to the highest inhibition of cell …

ChemistryCell growthfood and beveragesGeneral MedicineCell cycleAnalytical ChemistryBioavailabilityBiochemistryCaco-2ApoptosisPolyphenolFood scienceDigestionIncubationFood ScienceFood Chemistry
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Cr(VI) sorption by intact and dehydrated Candida utilis cells: differences in mechanisms

2001

The Cr(VI) sorption kinetics by intact and dehydrated Candida utilis cells were studied. Yeast dehydration led to enhanced Cr(VI) sorption activity by cells during the first 15–20 min of rehydration. In experiments with K2Cr2O7 as a chromium source, [Cr2O7]2− was converted into [CrO4]2− during incubation with dehydrated biomass. An effect of the considerably enhanced Cr(VI) sorption activity by dehydrated cells in the buffered media at pH≈8.0 can serve as another confirmation of the different sorption mechanisms of intact and dehydrated C.utilis cells. This effect was not revealed in water solution at pH 8.0. This phenomenon will be studied in further investigations.

ChemistryInorganic chemistrySorption kineticsBiomasschemistry.chemical_elementBioengineeringSorptionmedicine.diseasecomplex mixturesApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBiochemistryYeastChromiummedicineDehydrationIncubationProcess Biochemistry
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