Search results for "arthropod"

showing 10 items of 308 documents

Arthropods as biological soil quality indicators in a vineyard under different soil management

2008

biological soil quality arthropods vineyard
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Identification of four distinct subunit types in the unique 6 x 6 hemocyanin of the centipede Scutigera coleoptrata.

1999

We isolated 6 x 6 hemocyanin, dissociated it into subunits, and examined it by electron microscopy. The subunits were separated by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), sodium dodecyl sulfate PAGE, and crossed immunoelectrophoresis. Single subunits were isolated by gel cutting from native PAGE and identified as hemocyanin by measuring their ultraviolet spectrum. A total of four distinct hemocyanin subunits were identified, and the subunit pattern of the three electrophoresis systems assigned to each other. The relative proportion of subunits a:b:c:d were 2 : 2 :: 1 as determined by densitometry. Presumably, c and d act as linkers between hexamers.

biologyCrossed immunoelectrophoresisStereochemistryMacromolecular Substancesmedicine.medical_treatmentProtein subunitNative Polyacrylamide Gel ElectrophoresisHemocyaninGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologychemistry.chemical_compoundElectrophoresischemistryHemolymphHemocyaninsmedicineAnimalsElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelSodium dodecyl sulfateCentipedeArthropodsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsScutigera coleoptrataDie Naturwissenschaften
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Cydnidae (Burrowing Bug) Pigmentation

2015

biologyEcologyEvolutionary biologyDermatologyArthropodbiology.organism_classificationCydnidaeJAMA Dermatology
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Predatory behavior in the genusLeptogenys: A comparative study

1997

We studied the predatory behavior of seven species of the genusLeptogenys from Mexico and Cameroon. The ants of this genus are armed with long, thin, curved mandibles articulated at the extreme corners of the anterior margin of the head, permitting them easily to seize oniscoid isopods, the obligate or the principal prey of mostLeptogenys species. Workers hunt these prey, which are able to roll themselves up, solitarily. Foraging behavior comprises sequences of up to eight activities. The prey can be seized by the body (rolled up or not), or alternatively by the edge of the shell, then turned over and stung on the ventral face. A relationship between the mandible size of the workers and the…

biologyEcologyForagingHymenopterabiology.organism_classificationAttractionPredationMandible (arthropod mouthpart)LeptogenysAculeataAnimal ecologyInsect Sciencebehavior and behavior mechanismsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Insect Behavior
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Effects of ecological flooding on the temporal and spatial dynamics of carabid beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) and springtails (Collembola) in a pold…

2011

Within the scope of the Integrated Rhine Program an ecological flood gate and channel was inserted into the polder “Ingelheim” to enhance animal and plant diversity. In 2008, carabid beetles and springtails were collected, using pitfall traps, to measure the effects of ecological flooding and a strong precipitation event at a flood-disturbed and a dry location in this area. At both localities, xerophilic and mesophilic carabid beetle species were dominant throughout the study period. The total number of individuals of hygrophilic species was comparatively constant, while species number increased, partly due to the changed moisture conditions caused by ecological flooding and str…

biologyFlood mythEcologyFlooding (psychology)droughtSpringtailbiology.organism_classificationArticlebioindicationfloodingHabitatcommunity dynamicslcsh:ZoologySpecies evennessAnimal Science and ZoologyPrecipitationArthropodlcsh:QL1-991BioindicatorIntegrated Rhine Program (IRP)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZooKeys
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The comparison of beta-thymosin homologues among metazoa supports an arthropod-nematode clade.

2000

The definition of an Ecdysozoa clade among the protostomians, including all phyla with a regularly molted alpha-chitin-rich cuticle, has been one of the most provocative hypotheses to arise from recent investigations on animal phylogeny. Here we present evidence in favor of an arthropod-nematode clade, from the comparison of beta-thymosin homologues among the Metazoa. Arthropods and nematodes share the absence of the highly conserved beta-thymosin form found in all other documented bilaterian phyla as well as sponges, and the possession of a very unusual, internally triplicated homologue of the beta-thymosin protein, unknown in other phyla. We argue that such discrete molecular character is…

biologyNematodaSequence Homology Amino AcidPhylumMolecular Sequence DataZoologybiology.organism_classificationCladisticsThymosinMonophylyNematodeDrosophila melanogasterPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimalsArthropodAmino Acid SequenceCladeCaenorhabditis elegansMolecular BiologyEcdysozoaArthropodshormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyJournal of molecular evolution
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Molecular Structure of the Arthropod Hemocyanins

1992

Hemocyanin is an extracellular, blue protein that occurs in high concentrations in the blood of many arthropods, including spiders, scorpions, horseshoe crabs, crustaceans, and at least two centipedes. Serving as an ### oxygen carrier, it is functionally equivalent to hemoglobin, but performs reversible oxygen binding between two copper ions. Hemocyanin is composed of a number of subunits that assemble in an extremely large macro-molecular entity. These particles, which are similar in size to viruses or ribosomes, exhibit a complex allosteric behavior during oxygen binding. There is growing evidence that this functional plasticity has evolved upon, and answers to, ecophysiological constrain…

biologyStereochemistrymedicine.medical_treatmentAllosteric regulationchemistry.chemical_elementHemocyaninbiology.organism_classificationCopperHorseshoe crabRespiratory proteinchemistrymedicineProtein quaternary structureArthropodOxygen binding
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Evolutionary history and diversity of arthropod hemocyanins

2004

Hemocyanins are copper-containing, multi-subunit proteins that transport oxygen in the hemolymph of many molluscs and arthropods [Markl and Decher, Adv. Comp. Environ. Physiol. 13 (1992) 325; van Holde et al., J. Biol. Chem. 276 (2001) 15563]. Arthropod hemocyanins originated more than 550 million years ago from oxygen-consuming phenoloxidases. Hemocyanins are present in various Onychophora, Chelicerata, Myriapoda, Crustacea, and Hexapoda, but subunit evolution differs striking in these arthropod subphyla. Hemocyanins also gave rise to non-respiratory proteins (crustacean pseudo-hemocyanins, insect hexamerins, and hexamerin receptors), which most likely have storage functions.

biologymedia_common.quotation_subjectMyriapodaGeneral Physics and AstronomyCell BiologyAnatomyInsectbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionCrustaceanHexapodaStructural BiologyEvolutionary biologyHemocyaninsHemolymphAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceOnychophoraChelicerataArthropodArthropodsmedia_commonMicron
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On the stability of the 24-meric hemocyanin from Eurypelma californicum.

1998

The stability of the 24-meric hemocyanin from Eurypelma californicum towards various denaturants (GdnHCl, urea, urea derivatives and salts of the Hofmeister series) indicates that the quaternary structure is stabilized by hydrophilic and polar forces. Thus, the interaction between the seven different subunit types of this cheliceratan hemocyanin is comparable with that of the closely related crustacean hemocyanins. In contrast, no significant influence of divalent ions such as Ca2+ and Mg2+ on the stability is observed at pH 8.0 and pH 8.5 but not at pH 7.0. Studies, both in the presence of urea and GdnHCl indicate that the denaturation process consists of a dissociation of the oligomeric s…

chemistry.chemical_classificationHofmeister seriesStereochemistryProtein subunitmedicine.medical_treatmentSpectrum AnalysisBiophysicsHemocyaninBiochemistryDissociation (chemistry)Divalentchemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistrychemistryStructural BiologyHemocyaninsUreamedicineAnimalsProtein quaternary structureEurypelma californicumMolecular BiologyArthropodsBiochimica et biophysica acta
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Copper Proteins with Dinuclear Active SitesBased in part on the article Copper Proteins with Dinuclear Active Sites by Konrad Lerch which appeared in…

2006

Copper proteins with dinuclear active sites comprise proteins with different structures and functions. The phenoloxidase, tyrosinase, and catecholoxidase are responsible for browning by starting the synthesis of melanin. These enzymes are involved in the primary immune response in invertebrates, plants, fungi as well as in the sclerotization of arthropods. The respiratory proteins hemocyanins are responsible for oxygen transport in some arthropods and molluscs. However, they can be converted to enzymes exhibiting phenoloxidase activity. Based on X-ray structures of hemocyanins and a catecholoxidase, large parts of folding motifs are very similar although the sequence identities are far belo…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyCopper proteinChemistryStereochemistryTyrosinasemedicine.medical_treatmentOxygen transportHemocyaninbiology.organism_classificationMelaninEnzymeBiochemistryPrimary immune responseBotanymedicineArthropod
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