Search results for "Transform"
showing 10 items of 3975 documents
Infrared biospectroscopy for a fast qualitative evaluation of sample preparation in metabolomics.
2014
Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) has been increasingly used in biomedicine to study the dynamic metabolomic responses of biological systems under different physiological or pathological conditions. To obtain an integrated snapshot of the system, metabolomic methods in biomedicine typically analyze biofluids (e.g. plasma) that require clean-up before being injected into LC-MS systems. However, high resolution LC-MS is costly in terms of resources required for sample and data analysis and care must be taken to prevent chemical (e.g. ion suppression) or statistical artifacts. Because of that, the effect of sample preparation on the metabolomic profile during metabolomic method d…
Direct Analysis of Phase I Metabolites, Phenol Sulfates, Glucuronides and Glutathione Conjugates of Benzo[a]pyrene in Freshly Isolated, Hypothermical…
1996
Abstract The complex biotransformation of benzo[a]pyrene (BaP), the prototype of the class of carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, can be used as a tool to characterize the capacity of in vitro systems for the biotransformation of xenobiotics. In order to account for the ability of liver parenchymal cells to metabolize BaP, a method was developed for the isolation, separation and quantitation of its phase I metabolites, e.g. tetrahydrotetraols, trans-dihydrodiols, quinones and phenols, as well as its phase II metabolites, e.g. sulfates, glucuronides and glutathione conjugates, employing a combination of extractive and chromatographic steps. Upon incubation of BaP with freshly isol…
Sweeteners determination in table top formulations using FT-Raman spectrometry and chemometric analysis
2004
Abstract A partial least squares (PLS) Fourier transform Raman spectrometry procedure based on the measurement of solid samples contained inside standard glass vials, has been developed for direct and reagent-free determination of sodium saccharin and sodium cyclamate in table top sweeteners. A classical 22 design for standards was used for calibration, but this system provides accuracy errors higher than 13% w/w for the analysis of samples containing glucose monohydrate. So, an extended model incorporating glucose monohydrate (23 standards) was assayed for the determination of sodium saccharin and sodium cyclamate in all the samples. Mean centering spectra data pre-treatment has been emplo…
Stopped-flow Fourier-transform infra-red spectrometric speciation of glycolic and lactic acids in cosmetic formulations
2001
The dermatological activity of cosmetic formulations containing alpha-hydroxyacids depends on their different chemical forms, and it is therefore useful to determine these species in the finished products. In the present report a new procedure for studying the protonation equilibria of glycolic and lactic acids by stopped-flow Fourier-transform infra-red (FTIR) spectrometry is described. The procedure was validated for use in the speciation of glycolic and lactic acids in cosmetic formulations, with preferential attention given to glycolic acid, which is the most widely used. Species of these alpha-hydroxyacids can be approximately determined at different pHs and the total content of each a…
Protoplasts fromPodospora anserina: Isolation, purification, and transformation
1985
Protoplasts fromPodospora anserina mycelium were produced using the commercially available enzyme Novozym 234. Different parameters involved in protoplast isolation were analyzed in order to establish optimal conditions, and protoplast production was notably increased. For the purification of protoplasts, several techniques based on both centrifugation and filtration were assayed, with filtration yielding the best results. Regeneration of protoplasts was studied on different media and osmostic stabilizers, and about 80% regeneration was obtained. The good physiological condition of the protoplasts produced with this method is demonstrated by the lack of cell wall and high regeneration rate …
Determination of lecithin and soybean oil in dietary supplements using partial least squares-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy.
2008
Lecithin and soybean oil in dietary supplements were determined by Fourier transform infrared spectrometry transmission measurements in dichloromethane in combination with a partial least squares (PLS) regression. Two different PLS models were developed, using 16 synthetic mixtures of analytes in dichloromethane, making measurements in the spectral range from 931.8 to 1252.3 cm(-1) for lecithin and from 911.4 to 1246.9 cm(-1) and 1695.3 to 1774.5 cm(-1) for soybean oil. Seven products from the Spanish market with lecithin concentrations between 21.1% and 99.1% and soybean oil concentrations between 0% and 37.2% were analyzed by the proposed method and the data was compared to a chromatograp…
The chemistry of Cr(VI) adsorption on to poly(p-phenylenediamine) adsorbent
2019
Abstract Water pollution due to industrial processes has necessitated and spurred robust research into the development of adsorbent materials for remediation. Polyphenylenediamines (PPD) have attracted significant attention because of their dual cationic and redox properties. They are able to reduce Cr(VI) to Cr(III) in solution. Interrogation of the chemical processes involved in the Cr(VI) adsorption on para-PPD was primarily by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy. It was confirmed that the underlying oxidation of the amino groups to imines during the reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) was irreversible. This process occurred at both acidi…
Premature aging in bone of fish from a highly polluted marine area
2015
Fish species have attracted considerable interest in studies assessing biological responses to environmental contaminants. In this study, the attention has been focussed on fishbone of selected fish species from a highly polluted marine area, Augusta Bay (Italy, Central Mediterranean) to evaluate if toxicant elements had an effect on the mineralogical structure of bones, although macroscopic deformations were not evident. In particular, an attempt was made to evaluate if bone mineral features, such as crystallinity, mineral maturity and carbonate/phosphate mineral content, determined by XR-Diffraction and FT-IR Spectroscopy, suffered negative effects due to trace element levels in fishbone,…
Detection of Reactive Quinones in the Metabolism of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons by the Formation of their Glutathione Conjugates
1996
Abstract The biotransformation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to quinones by rat liver microsomes was investigated. The employment of an electrochemical detector allowed the specific detection of quinones separated by reverse phase HPLC with higher sensitivity as compared to UV detection. Microsomal incubations of benzo[a]pyrene (BP) resulted in the formation of 1,6-, 3,6- and 6,12-quinones, of naphthalene in the detection of naphthalene-1,4-quinone, whereas ortho-quinones could only be detected in trace amounts. Additional protein binding studies showed that only 9–22% of synthetic ortho-quinones could be recovered from microsomal incubations. In order to scavenge possible reactive qu…
Genotoxicity characteristics of reverse diol-epoxides of chrysene.
2017
Trans-3,4-dihydroxy-3,4-dihydrochrysene (chrysene-3,4-diol), a major metabolite of chrysene, is further metabolized by rat liver enzymes to products which effectively revert the his- Salmonella typhimurium strain TA98 to histidine prototrophy, but are only weakly mutagenic in strain TA100 and in Chinese hamster V79 cells (acquisition of resistance to 6-thioguanine). The liver enzyme mediated mutagenicity of chrysene-3,4-diol is substantially enhanced in the presence of 1,1,1-trichloropropene 2,3-oxide, an inhibitor of microsomal epoxide hydrolase. The predominant metabolites of chrysene-3,4-diol, namely the anti- and syn-isomers of its 1,2-oxide (termed reverse diol-epoxides), proved to be …