Search results for "herbicides"

showing 10 items of 181 documents

Biochemical bases for a widespread tolerance of cyanobacteria to the phosphonate herbicide glyphosate

2008

Possible non-target effects of the widely used, non-selective herbicide glyphosate were examined in six cyanobacterial strains, and the basis of their resistance was investigated. All cyanobacteria showed a remarkable tolerance to the herbicide up to millimolar levels. Two of them were found to possess an insensitive form of glyphosate target, the shikimate pathway enzyme 5-enol-pyruvyl-shikimate-3-phosphate synthase. Four strains were able to use the phosphonate as the only phosphorus source. Low uptake rates were measured only under phosphorus deprivation. Experimental evidence for glyphosate metabolism was also obtained in strains apparently unable to use the phosphonate. Results suggest…

CyanobacteriaTime Factorsherbicide tolerancePhysiologytarget enzyme-based resistanceGlycineOrganophosphonateschemistry.chemical_elementPlant ScienceBiologycyanobacteriaPhosphorus metabolismchemistry.chemical_compoundglyphosateShikimate pathwayEPSP synthasecyanobacteria; EPSP synthase; glyphosate; herbicide tolerance; phosphonate/phoshate uptake; target enzyme-based resistance; xenobiotic metabolismchemistry.chemical_classificationHerbicidesPhosphorusPhosphorusEPSP synthaseCell BiologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationxenobiotic metabolismPhosphonateEnzymeBiochemistrychemistryGlyphosateMutationphosphonate/phoshate uptake3-Phosphoshikimate 1-CarboxyvinyltransferaseHerbicide ResistancePlant and Cell Physiology
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Taxonomic and functional diversity of atrazine‐degrading bacterial communities enriched from agrochemical factory soil

2010

Aims: To characterize atrazine-degrading potential of bacterial communities enriched from agrochemical factory soil by analysing diversity and organization of catabolic genes. Methods and Results: The bacterial communities enriched from three different sites of varying atrazine contamination mineralized 65–80% of 14C ring-labelled atrazine. The presence of trzN-atzBC-trzD, trzN-atzABC-trzD and trzN-atzABCDEF-trzD gene combinations was determined by PCR. In all enriched communities, trzN-atzBC genes were located on a 165-kb plasmid, while atzBC or atzC genes were located on separated plasmids. Quantitative PCR revealed that catabolic genes were present in up to 4% of the community. Restricti…

DNA BacterialATRAZINEDIVERSITYBACTERIAL COMMUNITYBIODEGRADATIONPolymerase Chain ReactionApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyActinobacteriaMicrobiologySoil03 medical and health sciencesPlasmidATZ GENESSoil PollutantsRibosomal DNAGenePhylogenySoil MicrobiologyGene Library030304 developmental biology2. Zero hunger0303 health sciencesBacteriabiologyHerbicides030306 microbiologyBacteroidetesSequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineAtrazine ; Biodegradation ; Bacterial community ; Diversity ; atz genes ; trz genesTRZ GENESbiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNA[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyGenes Bacterial13. Climate actionProteobacteriaBacteriaPlasmidsBiotechnologyJournal of Applied Microbiology
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Genetic potential, diversity and activity of an atrazine-degrading community enriched from a herbicide factory effluent

2008

Aims:  To characterize an atrazine-degrading bacterial community enriched from the wastewater of a herbicide factory. Methods and Results:  The community mineralized 81·4 ± 1·9% of [14C-ring]atrazine and 31·0 ± 1·8% of [14C-ethyl]atrazine within 6 days of batch cultivation in mineral salts medium containing atrazine as the sole nitrogen source. Degradation activity of the community towards different chloro- and methylthio-substituted s-triazine compounds was also demonstrated. Restriction analysis of amplified 16S rDNA revealed high diversity of bacterial populations forming the community, with Pseudomonas species dominating in the clone library. Atrazine-degrading genetic potential of the …

DNA BacterialCOMMUNAUTE BACTERIENNEBioaugmentationWASTEWATERLibraryATRAZINEIndustrial WasteBACTERIAL COMMUNITYBIODEGRADATIONQUANTITATIVE PCRBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionApplied Microbiology and Biotechnology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundBiotransformationPseudomonasRNA Ribosomal 16STRZAtrazineGenetic variabilityFood science030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesGenetic diversityBacteriaHerbicidesTriazines030306 microbiologybusiness.industryGeneral Medicine16S ribosomal RNAbiology.organism_classification6. Clean waterBiotechnology[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitologyatrazine ; biodegradation ; atz ; trz ; bacterial community ; wastewater ; quantitative PCRchemistryATZbusinessBacteriaPlasmidsBiotechnologyJournal of Applied Microbiology
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Impact of maize mucilage on atrazine mineralization andatzC abundance

2005

Soil was amended with maize mucilage, a major rhizodeposit, to study its role on the number of culturable soil micro-organisms, the structure of the bacterial community, atrazine mineralization and atzC abundance. The maximal percentage of atrazine mineralization was lower for mucilage-amended than for water-amended soil. Total culturable soil bacteria and 16S rDNA copy number, measured by RT-PCR, presented similar values and were not significantly (P < 0.05) different among treatments. Mucilage applied at a rate of 70 mu g C g(-1) dry soil day(-1) over two weeks did not modify the abundance of the total soil microflora. Global structure of soil bacterial communities revealed by RISA analys…

DNA Bacterial[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]AmendmentBiologyZea mayscomplex mixturesAmidohydrolaseschemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsAdhesivesSoil PollutantsPoaceaeAtrazinereal-time pcrSoil MicrobiologymucilageBacteriaHerbicidesPesticide ResiduesBiodiversityGeneral MedicineMineralization (soil science)Biodegradation EnvironmentalMucilagechemistryAgronomyatzc geneInsect Science[SDE]Environmental SciencesSoil waterSoil PollutantsAgronomy and Crop ScienceSoil microbiologyatrazinePest Management Science
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A multicommuted flow system with solenoid micro-pumps for paraquat determination in natural waters.

2007

A flow system designed with solenoid micro-pumps is proposed for the determination of paraquat in natural waters. The procedure involves the reaction of paraquat with dehydroascorbic acid followed by spectrophotometric measurements. The proposed procedure minimizes the main drawbacks related to the standard chromatographic procedure and to flow analysis and manual methods with spectrophotometric detection based on the reaction with sodium dithionite, i.e. high solvent consumption and waste generation and low sampling rate for chromatography and high instability of the reagent in the spectrophotometric procedures. A home-made 10-cm optical-path flow cell was employed for improving sensitivit…

Detection limitFlow injection analysisParaquatChromatographyAutoanalysismedicine.diagnostic_testHerbicidesCoefficient of variationAnalytical chemistryWaterHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationDehydroascorbic AcidAnalytical ChemistrySolventSodium dithionitechemistry.chemical_compoundKineticschemistryParaquatSpectrophotometryReagentSpectrophotometryFlow Injection AnalysismedicineTechnology PharmaceuticalTalanta
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Use of gold nanoparticle-coated sorbent materials for the selective preconcentration of sulfonylurea herbicides in water samples and determination by…

2012

Abstract Two new gold nanoparticle (NP) coated materials (silica supported on gold NP with and without ionic liquid) were synthesized for solid phase extraction of sulfonylurea herbicides (SUHs), such as bensulfuron-methyl (BSM), metsulfuron-methyl (MSM), pyrazosulfuron-methyl (PSM), thifensulfuron-methyl (TFM) and triasulfuron (TS), from water samples, followed by capillary liquid chromatography coupled to diode array detection (CLC–DAD). Several factors influencing the preconcentration efficiency of SUHs and its subsequent determination, such as pH of the sample, eluent and reusability of sorbents, have been investigated. Under the optimum conditions, the developed method allowed the dete…

Detection limitSorbentChromatographyCapillary actionHerbicidesNanoparticleMetal NanoparticlesAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundColumn chromatographySulfonylurea CompoundschemistryLinear rangeMicroscopy Electron TransmissionIonic liquidSolid phase extractionGoldWater Pollutants ChemicalTalanta
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Herbicidal Activity of Peumus boldus and Drimys winterii Essential Oils from Chile

2011

[EN] The essential oil composition of Peumus boldus and Drimys winterii was analyzed by means of capillary GC-FID and GC-MS. More than 96% of the total oil components (43 and 54 compounds, respectively) were identified, with ascaridole (51.17 ± 9.51), p-cymene (16.31 ± 2.52) and 1,8-cineole (14.45 ± 2.99) as the main compounds in P. boldus and ¿-eudesmol (21.65 ± 0.41), followed of elemol (12.03 ± 0.34) and terpinen-4-ol (11.56 ± 1.06) in D. winterii. The herbicidal activity was tested against Amaranthus hybridus and Portulaca oleracea. P. boldus essential oil was the most phytotoxic against both weeds, inhibiting seed germination and seedling growth at all concentrations assayed (0.125-1 ¿…

DrimysChromatography GasAmaranthus hybridusBOTANICAPharmaceutical ScienceGerminationPortulacaEssential oilArticleAnalytical Chemistrylaw.inventionlcsh:QD241-441chemistry.chemical_compoundlcsh:Organic chemistrylawDrug DiscoveryBotanyOils VolatilePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryChileSeedling growthEssential oilBIOLOGIA VEGETALGas chromatographybiologyMass spectrometryHerbicidesOrganic Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationDrimysChemistrychemistryIsolation and purificationChemistry (miscellaneous)GerminationSeedlingEssential oilsPhytotoxicityPeumusMonoterpenesMolecular MedicinePhytotoxicityHerbicideAscaridoleessential oils; phytotoxicity; germination; seedling growth; monoterpenesPeumus boldus
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Biomonitoring of glyphosate and AMPA in the urine of Spanish lactating mothers

2021

The objectives of this study were to evaluate the urinary levels of Glyphosate (Gly) and its metabolite aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA) in Spanish breastfeeding mothers (n = 97), to identify the main predictors of exposure and to perform a risk assessment. Urine samples were analyzed using a method based on solid phase extraction and liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) determination. The developed method showed limits of quantification of 0.1 μg/L for both analytes. The detection frequencies (DFs) were 54% for Gly and 60% for AMPA, with geometric means (GMs) of 0.12 μg/L and 0.14 μg/L, respectively. In the statistical analysis, no relationship was found between the u…

Environmental EngineeringAcceptable daily intakeMetabolitePopulationGlycineOrganophosphonatesMothersUrinechemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal scienceTandem Mass SpectrometryLiquid chromatography–mass spectrometryBiomonitoringHumansLactationEnvironmental ChemistryAminomethylphosphonic acidSolid phase extractioneducationalpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic AcidWaste Management and Disposaleducation.field_of_studyHerbicidesChemistryPollutionFemaleBiological MonitoringChromatography LiquidScience of The Total Environment
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Acute, chronic and sublethal effects of the herbicide propanil on Daphnia magna.

2003

Acute and chronic toxicity tests with propanil were conducted on Daphnia magna. The 24 and 48 h LC50 were 43.74 and 5.01 mg/l respectively. Chronic toxicity tests were carried out using sublethal propanil concentrations (0.07, 0.10, 0.21 and 0.55 mg/l) during 21 days. The effect of propanil on survival, reproduction and growth of D. magna organisms was monitored. The parameters used to evaluate herbicide effect on reproduction were: mean total young ones per female, mean brood size, time to first reproduction, mean number broods per female and intrinsic rate of natural increase (r). Survival and growth (body length) were also determined after 21 days of exposure to the herbicide. Reproducti…

Environmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisDaphnia magnaPropanilToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundEatingAnimal sciencePropanilToxicity Tests AcuteEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsToxicity Tests ChronicChronic toxicityEC50biologyHerbicidesReproductionPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationPollutionchemistryCladoceraDaphniaMaximum acceptable toxicant concentrationToxicityToxicantChemosphere
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Energy reserves mobilization in the yellow eel as herbicide exposure effect.

2015

Abstract Thiobencarb and propanil are two of the most extensive used herbicides worldwide in rice cultivation. Especially scanty is the available information regarding the effect of herbicides on fish energy resources. In the present study, the effect of sublethal exposure to these herbicides on the energy reserves of juvenile eel Anguilla anguilla was compared. Eels were exposed to 72 h to the herbicide thiobencarb (0.22 mg L −1 ) or Propanil (0.63 mg L −1 ), and allowed to recover in clean water (144 h). Caloric content was determined in liver and skeletal muscle. Fish exposed to thiobencarb rapidly mobilized energy. Reserves from liver were depleted (21%) compared to control values (2.50…

Environmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisEnergy resourcesEnergy reservesFresh WaterBiologyPropanilchemistry.chemical_compoundRecovery periodAnimal scienceThiocarbamatesPropanilBotanymedicineEnvironmental ChemistryJuvenileAnimalsMuscle SkeletalMobilizationHerbicidesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthClean waterSkeletal muscleGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryAnguillaPollutionmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryLiverWater Pollutants ChemicalChemosphere
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