Search results for "cycle"

showing 10 items of 3119 documents

Effect of wastewater management on phosphorus content and sedimentary fractionation in Mediterranean saline lakes

2019

The La Mancha Húmeda Biosphere Reserve is the largest wetland district in the Iberian Peninsula, containing many temporary saline lakes undergoing different anthropogenic pressures. Eleven of these lakes were selected to assess phosphorus (P) burial, fractionation and mobilization in their sediments. Wastewater inputs, wherever they occurred, favored accumulation of all P sedimentary fractions, which took place mainly via precipitation with divalent cations (i.e. calcium or magnesium) and as buried organic matter, both representing relatively occluded P forms, although they can also be involved in P release. P immobilization would be partially restrained in the volcanic lakes of the region,…

chemistry.chemical_classificationBiogeochemical cyclegeographyEnvironmental Engineeringgeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPhosphorusfood and beverageschemistry.chemical_elementBiogeochemistryWetland010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesPollutionchemistryWastewaterEnvironmental chemistryEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterWater pollutionEutrophicationWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesScience of The Total Environment
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Effect of auxin on the mitotic cell cycle in cultured leaf segments at different stages of development in wheat

1987

Young leaves of Triticum timopheevi Zukh. show a defined gradient of development. One-mm-long sections from such leaves were cultured in vitro. At a low concentration of exogenous auxin, cells in the most basal, highly meristematic explants divided readily in culture, but in the absence of auxin they soon ceased dividing and were arrested in G1 and G2 of the mitotic cell cycle. In the region adjoining the meristem, where most cells were arrested in G1, very high concentrations of auxin had to be applied to reinitiate cell division, i.e. stimulate transitions from G1 to S-phase and from G2 to mitosis. Above this potentially auxin-responsive region, which represented less than 50% of the tota…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCell divisionPhysiologyfungifood and beveragesCell BiologyPlant ScienceGeneral MedicineCell cycleMeristemBiologyCell biologyTissue cultureMitotic cell cycleBiochemistrychemistryAuxinGeneticsheterocyclic compoundsMitosisExplant culturePhysiologia Plantarum
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A Co2O2 metallacycle exclusively supported by l-valine

2008

Abstract [Co2(OH)2( l -valine)4]·2.5H2O has been prepared under hydrothermal conditions and constitutes the first example of a [Co2O2] core supported exclusively by aminoacids. This synthetic dimetallic model for redox active metalloenzymes is one of the few binary aminoacid compounds of biologically relevant metal ions that has been structurally characterized, showing the possibilities of this synthetic approach for preparation of models in bioinorganic chemistry.

chemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryStereochemistryMetal ions in aqueous solutionBioinorganic chemistryGeneral ChemistryMetallacycleCondensed Matter PhysicsAmino acidValineHydrothermal synthesisGeneral Materials ScienceChirality (chemistry)Group 2 organometallic chemistrySolid State Sciences
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Chloramphenicol effects on adventitious root production by radish hypocotyls

1990

Abstract The excision of the root accelerates greatly the formation of adventitious roots in the hypocotyl of etiolated radish seedlings, but if the seedlings develop in CAP 1×10−4M, no adventitious root are induced after cutting. IAA either alone or associated with CAP, significantly increases the number of primordia in normal hypocotyls if given at the moment of cutting, while it has not stimulatory effect on the hypocotyls of seedlings grown in CAP. IAA has significant effect on both elongation and tickening of hypocotyl segments prepared from seedlings grown in CAP, and this could indicate a specific action of the inhibitor either on a particular process or on particular cells. The endo…

chemistry.chemical_classificationChloramphenicolfungifood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologyHypocotylPericyclechemistryAuxinEtiolationBotanymedicinePrimordiumEndodermisElongationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedicine.drugGiornale botanico italiano
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Performance-based characterization of recycled polymer modified asphalt mixture

2021

Due to the introduction of secondary materials, the asphalt mixtures to be designed and tested in our laboratories are constantly becoming much more complex than traditional asphalt mixtures making difficult to use conventional laboratory procedure and/or predict expected results. This study proposes a comprehensive characterization of asphalt mixture modified with recycled polymer compound by using both wet and dry process proposing adjustments to laboratory mixing and sample compaction procedure. Accordingly, three AC20 Hot Asphalt Mixture (HMA) were designed and their conventional and performance related properties were assessed by looking at a) Indirect Tensile test (ITS) a) moisture da…

chemistry.chemical_classificationDry proceMaterials scienceDry processRutPioneering mixing processCompactionMixing (process engineering)Pioneering mixing proceBuilding and ConstructionPolymerModified asphalt mixturesModified asphalt mixtureRecycled polymer compoundCrackingchemistryAsphaltPlastic wasteUltimate tensile strengthPMBGeneral Materials ScienceComposite materialCivil and Structural EngineeringTensile testingConstruction and Building Materials
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Effect of storage and composting on the properties and degradability of cattle manure

1995

Abstract Stockpiling or thermophilic composting of cattle manure resulted in significant carbon losses of 17% and 26.4% and relative nitrogen gains of 25% and 32.7% for stockpiled and composted manure, respectively. As a consequence, C/N ratios decreased with increasing time of storage or composting. However, neither the pH nor the mineral nitrogen and organic carbon contents of the 0–50 μm fractions were significant indicators of the transformations of these materials. The degradability of the manure was measured by incubation for 2 weeks in a brown calcareous soil, following 1 week of preincubation. The biodegradation index (BI) or the proportion of CO 2 released from the amended soil in …

chemistry.chemical_classificationEcologyCompostSoil organic matterMineralization (soil science)engineering.materialcomplex mixturesManureHumuschemistryAgronomyengineeringAnimal Science and ZoologyOrganic matterAgronomy and Crop ScienceCalcareousNitrogen cycleAgriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
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Anaerobic batch degradation of solid poultry slaughterhouse waste

2000

We studied anaerobic batch degradation of solid poultry slaughterhouse wastes with different initial waste and inoculum concentrations and waste-to-inoculum ratios and simulated the dynamics of the process with a new generation <METHANE> model. Our modelling results suggest that inhibited propionate degradation by long-chain fatty acids (LCFA) and inhibited hydrolysis by a high propionate concentration constituted the rate-limiting step in the waste degradation. Palmitate was the most abundant LCFA in the assays. Within 27 days of incubation, up to 0.55 to 0.67 m3 of methane (STP)/kg VS added was produced under the studied conditions. Lower waste-to-inoculum ratios exhibited a…

chemistry.chemical_classificationEnvironmental EngineeringWaste managementChemistryBiodegradationMethanechemistry.chemical_compoundHydrolysisPropionateDegradation (geology)Food scienceNitrogen cycleAnaerobic exerciseIncubationWater Science and TechnologyWater Science and Technology
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RNase H1 and H2 are differentially regulated to eliminate RNA-DNA hybrids

2019

SUMMARYRNA-DNA hybrids are tightly regulated to ensure genome integrity. The RNase H enzymes, RNase H1 and H2, contribute to chromosomal stability through the removal of RNA-DNA hybrids. Loss of RNase H2 function is implicated in human diseases of the nervous system and cancer. To better understand RNA-DNA hybrid dynamics, we have focused on elucidating the regulation of the RNase H enzymes themselves. Using yeast as a model system, we demonstrate that RNase H1 and H2 are controlled in different manners. RNase H2 is regulated in a strict cell cycle dependent manner, both in terms of its R-loop removal, and ribonucleotide excision repair functions. RNase H1, however, can function independent…

chemistry.chemical_classificationEnzymechemistrybiologyRNase PRibonucleotide excision repairbiology.proteinRna dna hybridsCell cycleRNase HYeastFunction (biology)Cell biology
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Heterogeneously catalyzed Suzuki-Miyaura conversion of broad scope

2012

The reaction tolerates a broad range of functional groups in the coupling partners and is usually performed in solution under homogeneous conditions at T ¢ 60 uC using 2–3 mol% catalytic amounts. The catalyst is often a Pd(0) complex with triarylphosphane ligands. 2 The catalytic cycle (Scheme 2) begins with the oxidative addition of an aryl halide to a Pd(0) species formed in situ to form an arylpalladium(II) halide intermediate. 3 Chloroarenes, especially nonactivated aryl chlorides, are notoriously less reactive due to the stability of the C–Cl bond (the relative reactivity of Ar–X is correlated to the respective bond dissociation energy: Ph–Cl: 96 kcal mol 21 ,P h–Br: 81 kcal mol 21 ,P …

chemistry.chemical_classificationGeneral Chemical EngineeringAryl halideArylchemistry.chemical_elementHomogeneous catalysisGeneral ChemistryOxidative additionCatalysiscross-coupling heterogeneous catalysis palladium Suzuki–Miyaurachemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCatalytic cycleOrganic chemistryReactivity (chemistry)Palladium
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Distinct and diverse anaerobic bacterial communities in boreal lakes dominated by candidate division OD1

2012

Lakes have a central role in the carbon cycle of the boreal landscape. These systems typically stratify in summer and their hypolimnetic microbial communities influence burial of biogenic organic matter in sediments. The composition of bacterial communities in these suboxic habitats was studied by pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA amplicons from five lakes with variable dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations. Bacterioplankton communities in the hypolimnetic waters were clearly different from the surface layer with candidate division OD1, Chlorobi and Bacteroidetes as dominant community members. Several operational taxonomic units (OTUs) affiliated with candidate division OD1 were abundant a…

chemistry.chemical_classificationGeomicrobiologyEcologyBiodiversityBacterioplanktonBiologyMicrobiologyCarbon cycleBacteria AnaerobicLakeschemistryBorealRNA Ribosomal 16SDissolved organic carbonOriginal ArticleOrganic matterEcosystemHypolimnionEcosystemFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsThe ISME Journal
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