Search results for "yellow"

showing 10 items of 115 documents

Effects of a small seagull colony on trophic status and primary production in a Mediterranean coastal system (Marinello ponds, Italy)

2012

Abstract Colonies of seabirds have been shown to influence nutrient cycling and primary production of coastal areas, but knowledge is still limited above all for smaller colonies. This study evaluates the influence of a small resident seagull colony (Larus michahellis Naumann, 1840) on a Mediterranean coastal system (Marinello ponds, Sicily, Italy). The presence of ornithogenic organic matter from seagull guano was first assessed at increasing distances from the colony using δ15N to indicate the effects of guano on the trophic status and primary production. The pond directly affected by guano deposition showed an anomalous water and sediment chemistry, especially regarding physico-chemical …

Mediterranean climateSettore BIO/07 - EcologiaNutrient cyclebiologyEcologyfungiδ15NAquatic ScienceOceanographyLarus michahellisbiology.organism_classificationDeposition (geology)Fisherytransitional environments yellow-legged gull seabird trophic status primary production stable isotopesbiology.animalparasitic diseasesGuanoEnvironmental scienceSeabirdTrophic level
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Identification of Morphological Biosignatures in Martian Analogue Field Specimens Using In Situ Planetary Instrumentation

2008

International audience; We have investigated how morphological biosignatures (i.e., features related to life) might be identified with an array of viable instruments within the framework of robotic planetary surface operations at Mars. This is the first time such an integrated lab-based study has been conducted that incorporates space-qualified instrumentation designed for combined in situ imaging, analysis, and geotechnics ( sampling). Specimens were selected on the basis of feature morphology, scale, and analogy to Mars rocks. Two types of morphological criteria were considered: potential signatures of extinct life ( fossilized microbial filaments) and of extant life (crypto-chasmoendolit…

Meridiani PlanumIn situGeologic Sediments010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMOSSBAUER-SPECTROSCOPYInstrumentationOrigin of LifeAntarctic RegionsMarsGUSEV CRATERExploration of MarsCalcium Sulfate01 natural sciencesCRYPTOENDOLITHIC LICHENSCalcium CarbonateAstrobiologyRAMAN-SPECTROSCOPIC DETECTIONGermanyExobiology0103 physical sciences010303 astronomy & astrophysics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingMartianMineralsPlanetary surfaceSpectrometerMERIDIANI-PLANUMWESTERN-AUSTRALIAMars Exploration ProgramAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)YELLOWSTONE-NATIONAL-PARK13. Climate actionSpace and Planetary ScienceMARS EXPLORATIONAmericasANTARCTIC HABITATSIron CompoundsGeologyHAUGHTON IMPACT STRUCTUREAstrobiology
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The Importance of Environmentally Acquired Bacterial Symbionts for the Squash Bug (Anasa tristis), a Significant Agricultural Pest

2021

Most insects maintain associations with microbes that shape their ecology and evolution. Such symbioses have important applied implications when the associated insects are pests or vectors of disease. The squash bug, Anasa tristis (Coreoidea: Coreidae), is a significant pest of human agriculture in its own right and also causes damage to crops due to its capacity to transmit a bacterial plant pathogen. Here, we demonstrate that complete understanding of these insects requires consideration of their association with bacterial symbionts in the family Burkholderiaceae. Isolation and sequencing of bacteria housed in the insects’ midgut crypts indicates that these bacteria are consistent and dom…

Microbiology (medical)Anasa tristisBurkholderiaceaeCoreoideabiologyCoreidaemedia_common.quotation_subjectfungiZoologyfood and beveragesInsectbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologysymbiosisQR1-502SymbiosisEvolutionary ecologyPEST analysisCoreidaeCucurbit Yellow Vine Diseasesquash bugsCaballeroniamedia_commonFrontiers in Microbiology
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Epidemiological investigations and molecular characterization of ‘candidatus phytoplasma solani’ in grapevines, weeds, vectors and putative vectors i…

2020

Bois noir is caused by &lsquo

Microbiology (medical)EmpoascaPhytoplasmaVineyardArticleBotany<i>tuf</i> geneImmunology and AllergyCandidatus Phytoplasma solani<i>vmp</i>1 geneGrapevine yellowsMolecular BiologyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyMolecular epidemiologybiologySettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleGrapevine yellowsVectorsbiology.organism_classificationVmp1 geneInfectious Diseasesgrapevine yellowSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataPhytoplasmaTuf geneGrapevineRestriction fragment length polymorphismWeedvector
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Statistical Validation of the Identification of Tuna Species:  Bootstrap Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA Sequences

2002

Sequencing of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene has been used to differentiate three tuna species: Thunnus albacares (yellowfin tuna), Thunnus obesus (bigeye tuna), and Katsuwonus pelamis (skipjack). A PCR amplified 528 bp fragment from 30 frozen samples and a 171 bp fragment from 26 canned samples of the three species were analyzed to determine the intraspecific variation and the positions with diagnostic value. Polymorphic sites between the species that did not present intraspecific variation were given a diagnostic value. The genetic distance between the sequences was calculated, and a phylogenetic tree was constructed, showing that the sequences belonging to the same species clustered…

Mitochondrial DNAYellowfin tunaMeatMolecular Sequence DataZoologyBigeye tunaDNA MitochondrialSpecies SpecificityAnimalsPhylogenyPolymorphism GeneticBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidPhylogenetic treebiologyTunaCytochrome bReproducibility of ResultsGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationGenetic distanceEvolutionary biologyGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesTunaSequence Alignmenthuman activitiesThunnusJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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The Low Barrier Hydrogen Bond in the Photoactive Yellow Protein: A Vacuum Artifact Absent in the Crystal and Solution

2016

Journal of the American Chemical Society 138(51), 16620 - 16631 (2016). doi:10.1021/jacs.6b05609

Models Molecularphotoactive yellow proteinlow-barrier hydrogen bondVacuumHydrogenProtein ConformationLow-barrier hydrogen bondNeutron diffractionchemistry.chemical_elementProtonationCrystallography X-RayPhotoreceptors Microbial010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBiochemistryCatalysisColloid and Surface ChemistryProtein structureBacterial Proteins0103 physical sciencesta116Photoactive yellow proteinvetysidokset010304 chemical physicsHydrogen bondChemistryHydrogen BondingGeneral Chemistry5400104 chemical sciencesSolutionsCrystallographyhydrogen bondsddc:540Proton NMRArtifactsJournal of the American Chemical Society
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NG2-expressing cells in the nervous system revealed by the NG2-EYFP-knockin mouse.

2008

The NG2 glycoprotein is a type I membrane protein expressed by immature cells in the developing and adult mouse. NG2+ cells of the embryonic and adult brain have been principally viewed as oligodendrocyte precursor cells but have additionally been considered a fourth glial class. They are likely to be a heterogeneous population. In order to facilitate studies on the function of NG2+ cells and to characterize these cells in situ, we generated an enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP) “knockin mouse.” EYFP-expressing cells in heterozygous knockin mice expressed the NG2 protein in all regions and at all ages studied. The EYFP+ cells did not express markers of mature glia, developing or mat…

Nervous systemYellow fluorescent proteinTransgenePopulationHippocampusS100 Calcium Binding Protein beta SubunitHippocampusNervous SystemMiceEndocrinologyBacterial ProteinsGlutamate-Ammonia LigaseGeneticsmedicineAnimalsGene Knock-In TechniquesNerve Growth FactorsAntigenseducationPromoter Regions GeneticCells CulturedNeuronseducation.field_of_studyMicrogliabiologyS100 ProteinsBrainGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell BiologyEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyLuminescent ProteinsOligodendrogliamedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemMembrane proteinAstrocytesImmunologybiology.proteinProteoglycansMicrogliaGenesis (New York, N.Y. : 2000)
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With a Little Help from My Friends: The Role of Intraoperative Fluorescent Dyes in the Surgical Management of High-Grade Gliomas

2018

High-grade gliomas (HGGs) are the most frequent primary malignant brain tumors in adults, which lead to death within two years of diagnosis. Maximal safe resection of malignant gliomas as the first step of multimodal therapy is an accepted goal in malignant glioma surgery. Gross total resection has an important role in improving overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), but identification of tumor borders is particularly difficult in HGGS. For this reason, imaging adjuncts, such as 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) or fluorescein sodium (FS) have been proposed as superior strategies for better defining the limits of surgical resection for HGG. 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) is i…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyReviewlcsh:RC321-571Resection03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundHigh-grade glioma0302 clinical medicineGliomaInternal medicineYELLOW 560 filterMedicinefluorescein sodiumastrocytomalcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryProtoporphyrin IXSettore MED/27 - Neurochirurgiabusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceglioblastomaAstrocytomaMultimodal therapymedicine.diseaseFluorescenceextent of resectionchemistry5-aminolevulinic acid030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPrimary Malignant Brain TumorsSodium fluoresceinbusinesshigh-grade gliomas030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBrain Sciences
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Changes of colour and carotenoids contents during high intensity pulsed electric field treatment in orange juices

2005

Abstract Liquid chromatography (LC) was the method chosen to evaluate the effects of high intensity pulsed electric fields (HIPEF), with different electric field intensities (25, 30, 35 and 40 kV/cm) and different treatment times (30–340 μs), on orange juice cis / trans carotenoid contents. In parallel, a conventional heat treatment (90 °C, 20 s) was applied to the orange juice in order to compare the effect on the carotenoid contents. HIPEF processing of orange juice is an alternative to the thermal treatment of pasteurization, provided that it is kept refrigerated, because, when the most extreme conditions of this kind of treatment are applied, the decrease in the concentration of caroten…

Orange juicechemistry.chemical_classificationVitaminCitrusHigh intensityColorPasteurizationGeneral MedicineOrange (colour)ToxicologyCarotenoidslaw.inventionBeverageschemistry.chemical_compoundElectricitychemistrylawFood PreservationFruit juiceFood scienceColour yellowCarotenoidChromatography High Pressure LiquidFood ScienceFood and Chemical Toxicology
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From Maya Blue to “Maya Yellow”: A Connection between Ancient Nanostructured Materials from the Voltammetry of Microparticles

2011

The yellow hue of a series of samples from wall paintings in several Mayan archaeological sites can be attributed to the presence of indigoid compounds, including isatin and dehydroindigo, attached to palygorskite, a local phyllosilicate clay. SEM/EDX, TEM, UV/Vis spectroscopy, and voltammetry of microparticles show that the ancient Mayas could prepare indigo, Maya Blue, and "Maya Yellow" during successive stages. Copyright © 2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Palygorskitesmedia_common.quotation_subjectVoltammetry of microparticlesMineralogyCatalysisUV/ Vis spectroscopyPhyllosilicateSEM/EDXMayaIndigoid dyesDyesmedia_commonArchaeological siteNanostructured materialsGeneral ChemistryArtGeneral MedicineMaya yellowWall paintingsClay mineralsMaya bluePINTURAVoltammetryDyes/pigmentsHumanitiesAngewandte Chemie
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