Search results for "Potassium"

showing 10 items of 930 documents

Interaction of sodium, lithium, caesium, and potassium ions with ascorbyl radicals.

1987

Abstract The influence of the concentration of sodium, lithium , caesium, and potassium ions as well as of the ionic strength of the solutions used on the dismutation rate of ascorbyl radicals has been investigated. While the dismutation rate was not influenced by Li+, it decreased, however, with increasing concentrations of the other ions investigated. The largest effect was obtained with Na+. This change in dismutation rate indicates a stabilizing effect on ascorbyl radical by these ions.

Free RadicalsSodiumRadicalInorganic chemistryOsmolar ConcentrationSodiumchemistry.chemical_elementCesiumAscorbic AcidLithiumPotassium ionsAscorbic acidGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyIonchemistryIonic strengthCaesiumPotassiumAscorbate OxidaseLithiumZeitschrift fur Naturforschung. C, Journal of biosciences
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2014

Purpose The removal of excessive melanin pigments that obscure ocular tissue morphology is important to address scientific questions and for differential diagnosis of ocular tumours based on histology. Thus, the goal of the present study was to establish an effective and fast melanin bleaching method for paraffin and frozen mouse and human ocular tissues. Methods Paraffin-embedded and frozen ocular specimens from mice and human donors were subjected to bleaching employing two methods. The first employed potassium permanganate (KMnO4) with oxalic acid, and the second 10% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). To determine optimal bleaching conditions, depigmentation was carried out at various incubation …

Frozen section procedurePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMultidisciplinarygenetic structuresH&E stainHistologyBiologyMelaninchemistry.chemical_compoundPotassium permanganateDepigmentationchemistrymedicinesense organsmedicine.symptomHydrogen peroxideParaformaldehydePLOS ONE
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Potential Functional Significance of Brain-Type and Muscle-Type Nitric Oxide Synthase I Expressed in Adventitia and Media of Rat Aorta

1999

Abstract —Skeletal muscle and myocardium express μNOS I, an elongated splice variant of neuronal-type nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS I), and NOS III, endothelial-type NO synthase, respectively. This study was designed to elucidate whether vascular smooth muscle also contains a constitutively expressed NO synthase isoform. In the rat, μNOS I contains an insert of 102 nucleotides after nucleotide 2865 of the cDNA, yielding a protein of 164 kd. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction with primers flanking this insert and with insert-specific primers indicated that endothelium-denuded rat aorta expresses both brain-type NOS I and μNOS I. RNase protection analyses with an antisense RNA…

Gene isoformPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyDNA ComplementaryVascular smooth muscleNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIIBlotting WesternAorta ThoracicNitric Oxide Synthase Type INitroarginineGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicMuscle Smooth VascularMembrane PotentialsPotassium ChlorideNitric oxideImmunoenzyme TechniquesRats Sprague-DawleyNorepinephrinechemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.arteryAdventitiamedicineAnimalsVasoconstrictor AgentsAorta AbdominalRNA MessengerMuscle SkeletalMessenger RNAAortabiologyBrainSkeletal muscleMolecular biologyRatsNitric oxide synthaseAntisense Elements (Genetics)medicine.anatomical_structurechemistryVasoconstrictionbiology.proteinCalciumFemaleNitric Oxide SynthaseTunica MediaCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineArteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
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The Xenopus Oocyte as an Ectopic Expression System for the Selection of Protein Isoform-Specific Antibodies

1993

A panel of Xenopus oocytes, each injected with cRNA coding for one specific isoform of the rat brain RCK family of voltage gated potassium channel proteins, was employed to screen for isoform-specific monoclonal antibodies. Several days after injection, cryosections of embedded oocytes were produced and were employed in immunohistochemical analysis of antibody binding. Of the advantageous properties of the assay, it employs the native antigen, it can be applied to homooligomeric and heterooligomeric proteins, and cryosections of the same batch can be stored frozen for later tests. The method may be advantageous also for the selection of isoform-specific antibodies of other protein families.

Gene isoformProtein isoformPotassium ChannelsProtein familymedicine.drug_classRecombinant Fusion ProteinsXenopusNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyMonoclonal antibodyEpitopeMiceXenopus laevisAntigenAntibody SpecificitymedicineAnimalsPharmacologyMice Inbred BALB CHybridomasAntibodies Monoclonalbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyOocytesFemaleEctopic expressionJournal of Receptor Research
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Application of an ectopic expression system for the selection of protein-isoform-specific antibodies. The monoclonal antibody K1 C3 is specific for t…

1993

Monoclonal antibodies were raised against a fusion protein consisting of a fragment of 141 amino acids of the C-terminal region of the rat brain voltage-gated K(+)-channel protein (RCK1) and the lambda N protein (fusion protein I). Selection of K(+)-channel-specific hybridoma cell lines was performed by means of an ELISA employing a fusion protein consisting of the K(+)-channel-specific peptide sequence and glutathione S-transferase (fusion protein II). For final selection of RCK1 isoform-specific antibodies, a panel of Xenopus oocytes was employed, each injected with cRNA coding for a specific RCK isoform (RCK 1, 2, 4 or 5). Several days after injection, cryosections of embedded oocytes we…

Gene isoformProtein isoformPotassium Channelsmedicine.drug_classBlotting WesternMolecular Sequence DataEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayMonoclonal antibodyBiochemistryMiceAntibody SpecificityProtein A/GTumor Cells CulturedmedicineAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceRats WistarPeptide sequenceBrain ChemistryMice Inbred BALB CHybridomasSequence Homology Amino AcidbiologyAntibodies MonoclonalFusion proteinMolecular biologyRatsBiochemistryPotassium Channels Voltage-Gatedbiology.proteinImmunohistochemistryAntibodyKv1.1 Potassium ChannelEuropean Journal of Biochemistry
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Catalytic effect of Ca and K on CO2 gasification of spruce wood char

2015

Abstract Gasification is one route to produce chemicals and liquid fuels from biomass. The gasification of the char is catalyzed by alkali and alkaline earth metals in the biomass. In this work the catalytic effect of calcium (Ca) and potassium (K) on CO2 gasification of spruce wood was studied using a thermo gravimetric analyzer (TGA). The ash-forming elements were first removed from the wood using an acid leaching method. Then, various concentrations of K and Ca were absorbed to the wood by ion-exchange to carboxylic and phenolic groups, impregnation of K2CO3 or physically mixing of CaC2O4. The prepared spruce samples were placed in a mesh holder and gasified in the TGA at 850 °C in 100% …

General Chemical EngineeringPotassiumKineticsEnergy Engineering and Power TechnologyBiomasschemistry.chemical_elementgasificationChar reactivityCatalysischar reactivityReactivity (chemistry)BiomassCharta215Alkaline earth metalcalciumbiomassChemistrypotassiumOrganic ChemistryAlkali metalFuel TechnologyChemical engineeringPotassiumCalciumCO2Gasification
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Bioaccumulation and subchronic physiological effects of waterborne iron overload on whitefish exposed in humic and nonhumic water.

1999

One-year-old whitefish, Coregonus lavaretus, were exposed to three types of iron-rich water, two dilutions for each, in a subchronic (30-day) experiment. In natural iron-rich humic water, both the bioaccumulation and physiological effects of iron exposure were negligible. In humic-free water with high amount of additional inorganic iron (nominally 8 mg Fe/L), Fe accumulated in gills, liver, and gut. This accumulation was accompanied by decreased glycogen phosphorylase activities and microsomal EROD activity in the liver as well as decreased plasma sodium and potassium concentrations. The third group of whitefish were exposed by adding inorganic iron (nominally 2 and 8 mg Fe/L) to natural ir…

Gillchemistry.chemical_classificationHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPotassiumIronchemistry.chemical_elementGeneral MedicineToxicologyPollutionBiodegradation EnvironmentalchemistryBiochemistryEnvironmental chemistryBioaccumulationMetals HeavyToxicityEcotoxicologyHumic acidAnimalsOrganic matterTissue DistributionWater pollutionSalmonidaeWater Pollutants ChemicalArchives of environmental contamination and toxicology
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Effects of repeated short episodes of environmental acidification on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) from a landlocked population

2020

Abstract Chronic or repeated exposure to environmental contaminants may result in allostatic overload, a physiological situation in which the costs of coping affect long-term survival and reproductive output. Continuous measurements in Otra, the largest river in southern Norway, show the occurrence of repeated 24–48 h episodes of acidification. This work investigates the impact of repeated short acidification episodes on a unique land-locked population of normally anadromous Atlantic salmon (“Bleke”). This was done by recording physiological measures of stress and allostatic load in fish exposed for 7 days to continuous or repeated episodes of simulated environmental acidification or untrea…

GillsGillEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSalmo salarPopulationPhysiology010501 environmental sciencesBiologySerotonergic01 natural sciencesAnimalsHomeostasisEnvironmental ChemistryStress measuresSalmoeducationWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental scienceseducation.field_of_studyFish migrationNorwayHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480::Marinbiologi: 497biology.organism_classificationPollutionAllostatic loadFreshwater fishSodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase
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Attenuated Carbohydrate and Gill Na+ , K+-ATPase Stress Responses in Whitefish Caged near Bleached Kraft Mill Discharges

2002

Exposure to biologically treated bleached kraft mill effluent (BKME) is demonstrated to greatly modify the acute physiological stress response in fish and, accordingly, to lead to inconsistencies in data interpretation due to dissimilar effects of handling procedures on reference and exposed fish. To consider this phenomenon, juvenile whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus) were caged for 30 days in four reference sites and in three areas influenced by different BKME discharges. After exposure, fish were subjected to the impacts of low-level handling by raising the cages to the water surface, serially handnetting the fish, and transferring ( approximately 10 min) the submerged cages to the research…

GillsGillTime FactorsHydrocortisoneHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisIndustrial WasteBiologychemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal sciencemedicineAnimalsLactic AcidNa+/K+-ATPaseSalmonidaeGlycogenEcologyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthReproducibility of ResultsEnvironmental ExposureGeneral MedicineEnvironmental exposurebiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalHousing AnimalPollutionRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryToxicityHemoglobinSodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPaseSalmonidaeWater Pollutants ChemicalEcotoxicology and Environmental Safety
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Cadmium, mercury, and lead effects on gill tissue of freshwater crayfishProcambarus clarkii (girard)

1989

Intermolt adult crayfish P. clarkii were used for this work. After acclimatization to laboratory conditions crayfish were exposed to sublethal concentrations of cadmium, mercury, and lead for 96 h. Gills of control and exposed crayfish were removed and ATPase activity and oxygen uptake rate were determined. Structural damage of gill filaments was also observed. Gill tissue respiration rates were measured for individual crayfish using a Gilson differential respirometer. Lead causes a decrease of gill oxygen uptake, but neither cadmium nor mercury seems to affect it at the concentrations employed. Although all metals studied alter gill filament structure, lead damage is the most apparent. In …

GillsGillendocrine systemanimal structuresEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismATPaseClinical Biochemistrychemistry.chemical_elementAstacoideaBiochemistryInorganic ChemistryToxicologyOxygen ConsumptionAnimalsProcambarus clarkiiCadmiumbiologymusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyfungiBiochemistry (medical)MercuryGeneral MedicineCrayfishbiology.organism_classificationOxygen uptakeMercury (element)Leadnervous systemchemistryEnvironmental chemistrybiology.proteinRespirometerCa(2+) Mg(2+)-ATPaseSodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPaseCadmiumBiological Trace Element Research
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