Search results for "carbon isotopes"

showing 10 items of 111 documents

Dental disease and dietary isotopes of individuals from St Gertrude Church cemetery, Riga, Latvia.

2018

This research explores oral health indicators and stable carbon and nitrogen isotope data to explore diet, and differences in diet, between people buried in the four different contexts of the St Gertrude Church cemetery (15th– 17th centuries AD): the general cemetery, two mass graves, and a collective mass burial pit within the general cemetery. The main aim is to assess whether people buried in the mass graves were rural immigrants, or if they were more likely to be the victims of plague (or another epidemic) who lived in Riga and its suburbs. The data produced (from dental disease assessments and isotope analyses) were compared within, as well as between, the contexts. Most differences em…

Bacterial DiseasesTeethPhysiologyImmigrationDigestive PhysiologyPrevalencelcsh:MedicineMarine and Aquatic SciencesOral DiseasesCariesMedicine and Health Sciences0601 history and archaeologyCemeteriesMarine Fishlcsh:Sciencemedia_commonCarbon IsotopesMultidisciplinaryCalculus060102 archaeologyStomatognathic DiseasesMarine fishEukaryota06 humanities and the artsGeographyInfectious DiseasesPhysical SciencesVertebratesAnatomyResearch Articlemedia_common.quotation_subjectOral MedicineMarine BiologyOral healthPlague (disease)Research and Analysis MethodsOral and maxillofacial pathologymedicineHumansAnimalsDentitionChemical CharacterizationPeriodontal DiseasesNutritionIsotope Analysis060101 anthropologyNitrogen Isotopeslcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life Sciencesmedicine.diseaseLatviaDietFishJawEarth Scienceslcsh:QRural areaDigestive SystemHeadMathematicsDemographyPloS one
researchProduct

Complementary methods assessing short and long-term prey of a marine top predator ‒ Application to the grey seal-fishery conflict in the Baltic Sea.

2019

The growing grey seal (Halichoerus grypus) population in the Baltic Sea has created conflicts with local fisheries, comparable to similar emerging problems worldwide. Adequate information on the foraging habits is a requirement for responsible management of the seal population. We investigated the applicability of available dietary assessment methods by comparing morphological analysis and DNA metabarcoding of gut contents (short-term diet; n = 129/125 seals, respectively), and tissue chemical markers i.e. fatty acid (FA) profiles of blubber and stable isotopes (SIs) of liver and muscle (mid- or long-term diet; n = 108 seals for the FA and SI markers). The methods provided complementary inf…

Baltic StatespredatorsMolecular biologyTroutSeals EarlessMarine and Aquatic SciencesPredationSocial Sciencespredator populationMolecular biology assays and analysis techniquesFATTY-ACID-COMPOSITIONDIET COMPOSITIONPsychologyForagingpetokannatMammalssaaliseläimetSealsEcologyAnimal BehaviorNucleic acid analysisDatabase and informatics methodsFatty AcidsQSequence analysisREukaryotaTrophic InteractionsCommunity EcologyOsteichthyesVertebrates1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyMedicinepreyHALICHOERUS-GRYPUSDNA analysisFOOD-WEBResearch Articlegrey sealBioinformaticsECOLOGICAL REGIME SHIFTSScienceFisheriesMarine BiologyPHOCA-HISPIDA-BOTNICAfisherypetoeläimetGeneticsAnimalsGenetikMarine MammalsDNA sequence analysisEcosystemRINGED SEALSEkologiBehaviorSTABLE-ISOTOPE ANALYSISDNA-analyysiBLUBBEREcology and Environmental SciencesOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesCARBON ISOTOPESResearch and analysis methodskalatalousMolecular biology techniquesFishAmniotesEarth Sciences1182 Biochemistry cell and molecular biologyhalli (hylkeet)ZoologyPLoS ONE
researchProduct

Regulatory factor for the transcription of the ribosomal genes in amphibian oocytes.

1970

AMPHIBIAN oocytes provide very convenient material for the study of the mechanisms that control ribosomal RNA synthesis because their pattern of ribosomal RNA synthesis does not change greatly during oogenesis. During the lampbrush stage of oogenesis (stage 4) more than 97 per cent of the RNA synthesized per unit time in the oocytes is ribosomal. This happens because the genes for ribosomal RNA are specifically amplified3–5 to such an extent that the oocyte nucleus (germinal vesicle) has an rDNA content approximately 1,500 times more than the haploid amount4. On the other hand, in mature oocytes (stage 6) no ribosomal RNA is synthesized1,2, although the extra copies of the ribosomal cistron…

BiologyTritiumRibosomeTranscription (biology)Genes RegulatorAnimalsGeneUridineOvumCarbon IsotopesMultidisciplinaryGerminal vesicleRNARibosomal RNAGenetic codeChromatography Ion ExchangeMolecular biologyCell biologyNeurulaGenetic Codeembryonic structuresRNAFemaleAnuraRibosomesProtein BindingNature
researchProduct

Isotopic composition of cattle pancreatic stones: biological and geochemical implications.

1977

Latitudinal variations of the O18/O16-ratios of carbonate and phosphate of cattle pancreatic stones parallel a similar pattern of oxygen isotope values in rain water. C13/C12-ratios were virtually identical for the 7 cases studied. Isotopic measurements of mammalian hard tissues may be used for studying short-term climatic variations through Quaternary.

Calcium PhosphatesGeological PhenomenaClimateDenmarkMineralogyCattle DiseasesOxygen IsotopesIsotopes of oxygenCalculiCalcium CarbonateCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundAnimalsPancreatic stonesMolecular BiologyFinlandPharmacologyCarbon IsotopesChemistryGeologyCell BiologyPhosphateIsotopic compositionEnglandPancreatitisEnvironmental chemistryMolecular MedicineCarbonateCattleFranceQuaternaryExperientia
researchProduct

Comparison of δ(13)C and δ(18)O from cellulose, whole wood, and resin-free whole wood from an old high elevation Pinus uncinata in the Spanish centra…

2016

δ(13)C and δ(18)O values from sapwood of a single Pinus uncinata tree, from a high elevation site in the Spanish Pyrenees, were determined to evaluate the differences between whole wood and resin-free whole wood. This issue is addressed for the first time with P. uncinata over a 38-year long period. Results are also compared with published isotope values of α-cellulose samples from the same tree. The differences in δ(13)C and δ(18)O between whole wood and resin-free whole wood vary within the analytical uncertainty of 0.3 and 0.5 ‰, respectively, indicating that resin extraction is not necessary for sapwood of P. uncinata. Mean differences between cellulose and whole wood are 0.9 ‰ (δ(13)C)…

Carbon Isotopes010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesδ13Cδ18O010401 analytical chemistryOxygen IsotopesPinus01 natural sciencesWood0104 chemical sciencesInorganic ChemistryPinus <genus>chemistry.chemical_compoundHorticulturechemistryResin extractionSpainHigh elevationLong periodEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceCelluloseCellulose0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceIsotopes in environmental and health studies
researchProduct

QM/MM Determination of Kinetic Isotope Effects for COMT-Catalyzed Methyl Transfer Does Not Support Compression Hypothesis

2004

Secondary alpha-D3 kinetic isotope effects calculated by the hybrid AM1/TIP3P/CHARMM method for the reaction of S-adenosylmethionine with catecholate anion in aqueous solution and catalyzed by rat liver catechol O-methyltransferase at 298 K are 0.94 and 0.85, respectively, in good accord with experiment. The large inverse effect for the enzymatic reaction is not due to compression but arises from significant increases in the stretching and bending force constants involving the isotopically substituted atoms of the transferring methyl group as between the reactant complex and the transition structure, larger than for the reaction in water.

Carbon IsotopesCatecholAqueous solutionMolecular StructureStereochemistryGeneral ChemistryCatechol O-MethyltransferaseMethylationBiochemistryCatalysisCatalysisIonEnzyme catalysisQM/MMKineticschemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistryModels ChemicalchemistryKinetic isotope effectQuantum TheoryPhysical chemistryComputer SimulationOxidation-ReductionMethyl groupJournal of the American Chemical Society
researchProduct

RIBOSOMAL SUBUNIT EXCHANGE IN DICTYOSTELIUM PURPUREUM

1970

Carbon IsotopesCell divisionbiologyProtein subunitCell BiologyRibosomal RNATritiumbiology.organism_classificationBrief NotesRibosomeArticleDictyostelium purpureumBotanyMyxomycetesRibosomesCell DivisionJournal of Cell Biology
researchProduct

Tracing the fate of microplastic carbon in the aquatic food web by compound-specific isotope analysis

2019

Increasing abundance of microplastics (MP) in marine and freshwaters is currently one of the greatest environmental concerns. Since plastics are fairly resistant to chemical decomposition, breakdown and reutilization of MP carbon complexes requires microbial activity. Currently, only a few microbial isolates have been shown to degrade MPs, and direct measurements of the fate of the MP carbon are still lacking. We used compound-specific isotope analysis to track the fate of fully labelled 13C-polyethylene (PE) MP carbon across the aquatic microbial-animal interface. Isotopic values of respired CO2 and membrane lipids showed that MP carbon was partly mineralized and partly used for cell growt…

Carbon IsotopesFood ChainMicroplasticshiilen kiertolcsh:Rplanktonvesiekosysteemitlcsh:MedicineArticleZooplanktonmikroroskatEnvironmental impactmikrobistoDaphniaMicroalgaeFreshwater ecologyAnimalslcsh:Qpolyeteenilcsh:ScienceCryptophytaravintoverkot1172 Environmental sciences
researchProduct

Dietary ontogeny and niche shift to piscivory in lacustrine brown trout Salmo trutta revealed by stomach content and stable isotope analyses

2012

The feeding ecology and ontogeny of a large size range of brown trout Salmo trutta in Lake Fyresvatnet, southern Norway, were examined by stomach content and stable isotope analyses. According to the stomach contents, the S. trutta changed their diet at c. 30 cm total length (L(T) ). The smaller size classes fed on benthic invertebrates and surface insects, whereas larger S. trutta (30 cm) fed mainly on whitefish Coregonus lavaretus. A similar, but more gradual shift to piscivory in the size range 25-30 cm was found when using the stable isotope mixing model SIAR to reveal dietary ontogeny. The δ¹³C isotopic signature confirmed that S. trutta independent of size predominantly relied upon be…

Carbon IsotopesFood ChainNitrogen IsotopesbiologyTroutStable isotope ratioEcologyOntogenyZoologyFeeding BehaviorAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationGastrointestinal ContentsPiscivoreDietBrown troutBenthic zonePredatory BehaviorAnimalsSalmoEnergy sourceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTrophic levelJournal of Fish Biology
researchProduct

1H, 13C and 15N NMR spectral characterization of twenty-seven 1,2-diaryl-(4E)-arylidene-2-imidazolin-5-ones.

2006

1H, 13C and 15N NMR chemical shifts and couplings nJ(H,C) in DMSO-d6 at 30 °C have been determined for 1,2-diaryl-(4E)-arylidene-2-imidazolin-5-one derivatives 1–27. Their chemical shift assignments are based on PFG DQF 1H,1H COSY, PFG 1H,13C HMQC as well as PFG 1H,13C and 1H,15N HMBC experiments. For compounds 1–10 including aryl fluorine substituent(s) also the couplings nJ(F,C) (n = 1 − 4) are reported. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Carbon IsotopesMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyMolecular StructureNitrogen IsotopesStereochemistryArylChemical shiftSubstituentchemistry.chemical_elementGeneral ChemistryCarbon-13 NMRchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryProton NMRFluorineGeneral Materials ScienceImidazolinesHydrogenMagnetic resonance in chemistry : MRC
researchProduct