2 resultados para Protein thermal stability
em Publishing Network for Geoscientific
Resumo:
Sediment and interstitial water from Sites 651 and 653 (ODP Leg 107) were investigated by organic geochemical methods to characterize labile organic compound classes (amino compounds and carbohydrates) and to evaluate their progressive diagenetic and thermal degradation in deep-sea sediments. Downhole distribution of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) appears related to redox zones associated with bacterial activity and of diagenetic recrystallization of biogenic tests and not so much to organic matter concentrations in ambient sediments. DOC ranges from 250 to 8300 µmol/L (3-100.1 ppm). Amino acids contribute 10%-0.3% of DOC; carbohydrates range from 78 to 5 µmol/L. Rate of degradation of amino acids by thermal effects and/or bacterial activity at both sites (significantly different in sedimentation rates: average 41 cm/1000 yr in the top 300 m at Site 651, average 3.9 cm/1000 yr in the Pliocene/Quaternary sequence at Site 653 to 220 mbsf) is more dependent on exposure time rather than on the depth within the sediment column. Variability in neutral, acidic, and basic amino acid fractions of total amino acids (with a range of 1.1-0.02 µmol/g sediment; up to 2.5% of organic carbon) varies with carbonate content and by differences in thermal stability of amino acids. Distribution patterns of monosaccharides are interpreted to result from differences in organic matter sources, sedimentation rates, and the degree of organic matter decomposition prior to and subsequent to burial. Total particulate carbohydrates range from 1.82 to 0.21 µmol/g sediment and contribute about 8% to the sedimentary organic matter. Investigation of trace metals in the interstitial waters did not show any correlation of either DOC, amino compounds, or carbohydrates.
Resumo:
ESR-spectra of foraminifera in arctic sediment cores display the [CO2]- -signal (g=2.0006). Research on the thermal behaviour of the [CO2]- -signal shows that both natural and artificial irradiation generates a precursor and a thermal unstable component of the [CO2]- -signal. The precursor can be transfered to the stable radical, and unstable radicals can be removed by heating. The signal-change by heating depends on the irradiation dose. Because of the varying response on thermal treatment, the dose-response curves show systematic differences depending on the applied procedure (single- or multi-aliquot method with or without heating). A model for the description of the [CO2]- -signal-change is presented. The combination of two exponential saturation functions seems to be an adequate analytical description of the dose-response curve of the [CO2]- -signal in foraminifera. Due to the limited thermal stability this signal can be used for dating foraminifera with ages up to about 190 ka.