Search results for "elements"

showing 10 items of 799 documents

Sustainable recovery of critical elements from seawater saltworks bitterns by integration of high selective sorbents and reactive precipitation and c…

2023

The availability of raw mineral resources containing elements included in the Critical Raw Materials (CRMs) list is a growing concern for the European Union. Sea mining has been identified as a promising secondary source. In particular, brines obtained in solar saltworks (bitterns) contain relevant amounts of valuable CRMs such as Mg(II), B(III), other alkaline/alkaline earth metals (Rb(I), Cs(I), Sr(II)) and transition/post-transition elements (Co(II), Ga(III), Ge(IV)). However, the low concentration of some of these elements (µg/L) requires an effort to develop recovery routes that are sustainable and economically feasible where the required chemicals and energy are produced on-site from …

Critical raw materialsSettore ING-IND/26 - Teoria Dello Sviluppo Dei Processi ChimiciTrace elementsCircular economyOligoelementsFiltration and SeparationBescanvi iònicAnalytical ChemistrySaltworks bitternsMatèries primeres:Enginyeria química::Impacte ambiental [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Sea miningRaw materialsIon exchangeIon exchangers
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Poplar rotation coppice at a trace element-contaminated phytomanagement site: A 10-year study revealing biomass production, element export and impact…

2019

Abstract Growing lignocellulosic crops on marginal lands could compose a substantial proportion of future energy resources. The potential of poplar was explored, by devising a field trial of two hectares in 2007 in a metal-contaminated site to quantify the genotypic variation in the growth traits of 14 poplar genotypes grown in short-rotation coppice and to assess element transfer and export by individual genotypes. Our data led us to conclusions about the genotypic variations in poplar growth on a moderately contaminated site, with the Vesten genotype being the most productive. This genotype also accumulated the least amounts of trace elements, whereas the Trichobel genotype accumulated up…

Crops AgriculturalEnvironmental EngineeringRotation010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesRange (biology)Biomass010501 environmental sciencesBiology01 natural sciencesTreesSoilCoppicingNutrientSoil PollutantsEnvironmental ChemistryBiomassWaste Management and DisposalHectareComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciences2. Zero hunger[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environmentTrace elementSalix15. Life on landWoodPollutionTrace ElementsPlant LeavesBiodegradation EnvironmentalPopulusAgronomyMetalsvisual_artField trial[SDE]Environmental Sciencesvisual_art.visual_art_mediumBark
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Regulation of ribonucleotide reductase in response to iron deficiency

2011

Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) is an essential enzyme required for DNA synthesis and repair. Although iron is necessary for class Ia RNR activity, little is known about the mechanisms that control RNR in response to iron deficiency. In this work, we demonstrate that yeast cells control RNR function during iron deficiency by redistributing the Rnr2–Rnr4 small subunit from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Our data support a Mec1/Rad53-independent mechanism in which the iron-regulated Cth1/Cth2 mRNA-binding proteins specifically interact with the WTM1 mRNA in response to iron scarcity, and promote its degradation. The resulting decrease in the nuclear-anchoring Wtm1 protein levels leads to the re…

CytoplasmSaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsDeoxyribonucleoside triphosphateRibonucleoside Diphosphate ReductaseRNA StabilityProtein subunitSaccharomyces cerevisiaeCell Cycle ProteinsSaccharomyces cerevisiaeProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesBiologyResponse ElementsArticleTristetraprolinGene Expression Regulation FungalRibonucleotide ReductasesHumansRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyTranscription factorCell NucleusDNA synthesisIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsFungal geneticsRNA-Binding ProteinsRNA FungalIron DeficienciesCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationDNA-Binding ProteinsRepressor ProteinsCheckpoint Kinase 2Protein SubunitsProtein TransportRibonucleotide reductaseBiochemistryCytoplasmTranscription Factors
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ENO1 gene product binds to the c-myc promoter and acts as a transcriptional repressor: relationship with Myc promoter-binding protein 1 (MBP-1).

2000

The Myc promoter-binding protein-1 (MBP-1) is a 37-38 kDa protein that binds to the c-myc P2 promoter and negatively regulates transcription of the protooncogene. MBP-1 cDNA shares 97% similarity with the cDNA encoding the glycolytic enzyme alpha-enolase and both genes have been mapped to the same region of human chromosome 1, suggesting the hypothesis that the two proteins might be encoded by the same gene. We show here data indicating that a 37 kDa protein is alternatively translated from the full-length alpha-enolase mRNA. This shorter form of alpha-enolase is able to bind the MBP-1 consensus sequence and to downregulate expression of a luciferase reporter gene under the control of the c…

CytoplasmTranscriptional repressionRecombinant Fusion ProteinsBiophysicsEnolaseCodon InitiatorDown-RegulationBiologyAlternative translationResponse ElementsTransfectionBiochemistryCell LineGene productHSPA4Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mycStructural BiologyHSPA2GeneticsBiomarkers TumorE2F1AnimalsHumansSOCS6Genes Tumor SuppressorDNA bindingPromoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyYY1Tumor Suppressor ProteinsNuclear ProteinsCell BiologyDNAMolecular biologyGPS2Neoplasm ProteinsDNA-Binding ProteinsMolecular WeightRepressor ProteinsAlternative SplicingGATAD2BChromosomes Human Pair 1Phosphopyruvate HydrataseProtein BiosynthesisPeptidesProtein BindingFEBS letters
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Gas cell studies of thorium using filament dispensers at IGISOL

2020

Abstract Filament-based dispensers of thorium have been investigated at the IGISOL facility, Jyvaskyla, for potential use as a thorium ion source for future collinear laser spectroscopy experiments. Several different filaments were manufactured in the Institute of Atomic and Subatomic Physics of TU Wien, with 232Th and 229Th prepared on tantalum substrates either by drying thorium nitrate solution or via molecular plating, while adding a layer of zirconium for oxide reduction. The filaments were characterized in a helium-filled gas cell by performing selective and efficient in-gas-cell resonance laser ionization and by analyzing the resulting ion beams by mass spectrometry. Additionally, th…

DECOMPOSITIONNuclear and High Energy PhysicsTechnologyEFFICIENCYAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementOFF-LINEPhysics Atomic Molecular & ChemicalMass spectrometry01 natural sciencesIonlaw.inventionProtein filamentlawIonization0103 physical sciences010306 general physicsNuclear Science & TechnologyLANTHANIDEInstrumentationInstruments & InstrumentationRESONANCE IONIZATIONScience & TechnologySPECTROSCOPYResonance laser ionization010308 nuclear & particles physicsPhysicsThoriumThoriumLASER ION-SOURCEActinideLaserIon sourceIon sourceWORK-FUNCTIONSPhysics NuclearchemistryACTINIDE ELEMENTSPhysical SciencesGas cellTRANSITION
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Dysregulation of DNA methylation induced by past arsenic treatment causes persistent genomic instability in mammalian cells

2015

The mechanisms by which arsenic-induced genomic instability is initiated and maintained are poorly understood. To investigate potential epigenetic mechanisms, in this study we evaluated global DNA methylation levels in V79 cells and human HaCaT keratinocytes at several time points during expanded growth of cell cultures following removal of arsenite exposures. We have found altered genomic methylation patterns that persisted up to 40 cell generations in HaCaT cells after the treatments were withdrawn. Moreover, mRNA expression levels were evaluated by RT-PCR for DNMT1, DNMT3A, DNMT3B, HMLH1, and HMSH2 genes, demonstrating that the down regulation of DNMT3A and DNMT3B genes, but not DNMT1, o…

DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferase 1KeratinocytesDNA methylationArsenitesarsenicNuclear ProteinsFibroblastsgenomic instabilityArticleDNA Methyltransferase 3ASettore BIO/18 - GeneticaCricetulusLong Interspersed Nucleotide ElementsMutS Homolog 2 Protein5-MethylcytosineAnimalsDNA (Cytosine-5-)-MethyltransferasesMutL Protein Homolog 1Promoter Regions GeneticCells CulturedAdaptor Proteins Signal Transducing
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The Physcomitrella genome reveals evolutionary insights into the conquest of land by plants

2008

We report the draft genome sequence of the model moss Physcomitrella patens and compare its features with those of flowering plants, from which it is separated by more than 400 million years, and unicellular aquatic algae. This comparison reveals genomic changes concomitant with the evolutionary movement to land, including a general increase in gene family complexity; loss of genes associated with aquatic environments (e.g., flagellar arms); acquisition of genes for tolerating terrestrial stresses (e.g., variation in temperature and water availability); and the development of the auxin and abscisic acid signaling pathways for coordinating multicellular growth and dehydration response. The …

DNA RepairRetroelementsPhyscomitrellaArabidopsisPhyscomitrella patensGenes PlantGenomeMagnoliopsidaPhylogeneticsGene DuplicationGene familyAnimalsGenePhylogenyPlant ProteinsRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidGeneticsWhole genome sequencingMultidisciplinarybiologyDehydrationfood and beveragesComputational BiologyOryzaSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionBryopsidaMulticellular organismMultigene FamilyChlamydomonas reinhardtiiGenome PlantMetabolic Networks and PathwaysSignal Transduction
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Synergism between the components of the bipartite major immediate-early transcriptional enhancer of murine cytomegalovirus does not accelerate virus …

2009

Major immediate-early (MIE) transcriptional enhancers of cytomegaloviruses are key regulators that are regarded as determinants of virus replicative fitness and pathogenicity. The MIE locus of murine cytomegalovirus (mCMV) shows bidirectional gene-pair architecture, with a bipartite enhancer flanked by divergent core promoters. Here, we have constructed recombinant viruses mCMV-ΔEnh1 and mCMV-ΔEnh2 to study the impact of either enhancer component on bidirectional MIE gene transcription and on virus replication in cell culture and various host tissues that are relevant to CMV disease. The data revealed that the two unipartite enhancers can operate independently, but synergize in enhancing MI…

DNA ReplicationGene Expression Regulation ViralTranscription GeneticvirusesEnhancer RNAsBiologyVirus ReplicationVirusImmediate-Early ProteinsImmunocompromised HostMiceTranscription (biology)VirologyGene expressionAnimalsEnhancerAntigens ViralCells CulturedGeneticsPromoterFibroblastsVirologyEnhancer Elements GeneticViral replicationCell cultureDNA ViralJournal of General Virology
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Detection and organization of atrazine-degrading genetic potential of seventeen bacterial isolates belonging to divergent taxa indicate a recent comm…

2007

A collection of 17 atrazine-degrading bacteria isolated from soils was studied to determine the composition of the atrazine-degrading genetic potential (i.e. trzN, trzD and atz) and the presence of IS1071. The characterization of seven new atrazine-degrading bacteria revealed for the first time the trzN-atzBC gene composition in Gram-negative bacteria such as Sinorhizobium sp. or Polaromonas sp. Three main atrazine-degrading gene combinations (i) trzN– atzBC, (ii) atzABC– trzD and (iii) atzABCDEF were observed. The atz and trz genes were often located on plasmids, suggesting that plasmid conjugation could play an important role in their dispersion. In addition, the observation of these gene…

DNA BacterialGene Transfer HorizontalATRAZINEMolecular Sequence DataBIODEGRADATIONatrazine; insertion sequences; biodegradation; atz genes; trz genesBiologyMicrobiologyMicrobiologyEvolution MolecularTransposition (music)03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPlasmidGram-Negative BacteriaATZ GENESGeneticsInsertion sequenceMolecular BiologyGeneSoil MicrobiologySEQUENCE D'INSERTION030304 developmental biologyRecombination GeneticGenetics0303 health sciencesINSERTION SEQUENCES030306 microbiologyCatabolismChromosomeSequence Analysis DNATRZ GENESbiology.organism_classification[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologychemistryGenes BacterialDNA Transposable ElementsMetabolic Networks and PathwaysDNABacteriaPlasmids
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Rapid 96-well plates DNA extraction and sequencing procedures to identify genome-wide transposon insertion sites in a difficult to lyse bacterium: La…

2014

International audience; Random transposon mutagenesis followed by adequate screening methods is an unavoidable procedure to characterize genetics of bacterial adaptation to environmental changes. We have recently constructed a mutant library of Lactobacillus casei and we aimed to fully annotate it. However, we have observed that, for L. casei which is a difficult to lyse bacterium, methods used to identify the transposon insertion site in a few mutants (transposon rescue by restriction and recircularization or PCR-based methods) were not transposable for a larger number because they are too time-consuming and sometimes not reliable. Here, we describe a method for large-scale and reliable id…

DNA BacterialGenetics MicrobialMicrobiology (medical)Transposable elementtransposon mutagenesisLactobacillus caseiSanger sequencingMutantMicrobiologyGenomeInsertional mutagenesis03 medical and health sciencesBacterial geneticsMESH: Gene LibraryLactic acid bacteriaMolecular BiologyDNA extractionMESH: High-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingGene Library030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesbiologyMESH: Lactobacillus casei030306 microbiologyHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingMESH: Genetics Microbialbiology.organism_classificationDNA extractionMESH: DNA Bacterial[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/BacteriologyLacticaseibacillus caseiMutagenesis Insertionalgenomic DNAMESH: DNA Transposable ElementsMESH: Mutagenesis InsertionalDNA Transposable ElementsTransposon mutagenesisLactobacillus casei
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