961 resultados para inorganic cations
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The aim of this study was to develop a fast capillary electrophoresis method for the determination of inorganic cations (Na(+), K(+), Ca(2+), Mg(2+)) in biodiesel samples, using barium (Ba(2+)) as the internal standard. The running electrolyte was optimized through effective mobility curves in order to select the co-ion and Peakmaster software was used to determine electromigration dispersion and buffer capacity. The optimum background electrolyte was composed of 10 mmol L(-1) imidazole and 40 mmol L(-1) of acetic acid. Separation was conducted in a fused-silica capillary (32 cm total length and 23.5 cm effective length, 50 mu m I.D.), with indirect UV detection at 214 nm. The migration time was only 36 s. In order to obtain the optimized conditions for extraction, a fractional factorial experimental design was used. The variables investigated were biodiesel mass, pH, extractant volume, agitation and sonication time. The optimum conditions were: biodiesel mass of 200 mg, extractant volume of 200 mu L. and agitation of 20 min. The method is characterized by good linearity in the concentration range of 0.5-20 mg kg(-1) (r > 0.999), limit of detection was equal to 0.3 mg kg(-1), inter-day precision was equal to 1.88% and recovery in the range of 88.0-120%. The developed method was successfully applied to the determination of cations in biodiesel samples. (c) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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We describe the measurement, at 100 K, of the SIMS relative sensitivity factors (RSFs) of the main physiological cations Na+, K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+ in frozen-hydrated (F-H) ionic solutions. Freezing was performed by either plunge freezing or high-pressure freezing. We also report the measurement of the RSFs in flax fibers, which are a model for ions in the plant cell wall, and in F-H ionic samples, which are a model for ions in the vacuole. RSFs were determined under bombardment with neutral oxygen (FAB) for both the fibers and the F-H samples. We show that referencing to ice-characteristic secondary ions is of little value in determining RSFs and that referencing to K is preferable. The RSFs of Na relative to K and of Ca relative to Mg in F-H samples are similar to their respective values in fiber samples, whereas the RSFs of both Ca and Mg relative to K are lower in fibers than in F-H samples. Our data show that the physical factors important for the determination of the RSFs are not the same in F-H samples and in homogeneous matrixes. Our data show that it is possible to perform a SIMS relative quantification of the cations in frozen-hydrated samples with an accuracy on the order of 15%. Referencing to K permits the quantification of the ionic ratios, even when the absolute concentration of the referencing ion is unknown. This is essential for physiological studies of F-H biological samples.
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Azadirachtin (Az), as a botanical insecticide, is relatively safe and biodegradable. It affects a wide vaariety of biological processes, including the reduction of feeding, suspension of molting, death of larvae and pupae, and sterility of emerged adults in a dose-dependent manner. However, the mode of action of this toxin remains obscure. By using ion chromatography, we analyzed changes in six inorganic cation (Li+, Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+) distributions of the whole body and hemolymph in Ostrinia furnacalis (G.) after exposure to sublethal doses of Az. The results showed that Az dramatically interfered with Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+ distributions in hemolymph of O. furnacalis (G.) and concentrations of these five cations dramatically increased. However, in the whole body, the levels of K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+ significantly, decreased after exposure to Az, except that Na+ and NH4+ remained constant. Li+ was undetected in both the control and treated groups in the whole body and hemolymph. It is suggested that Az exerts its insecticidal effects on O. furnacalis (G.) by interfering with the inorganic cation distributions related to ion channels.
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Inorganic–organic clays (IOCs), clays intercalated with both organic cations such as cationic surfactants and inorganic cations such as metal hydroxy polycations have the properties of both organic and pillared clays, and thereby the ability to remove both inorganic and organic contaminants from water simultaneously. In this study, IOCs were synthesised using three different methods with different surfactant concentrations. Octadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (ODTMA) and hydroxy aluminium ([Al13O4 (OH)24(H2O)12]7+ or Al13) are used as the organic and inorganic modifiers (intercalation agents). According to the results, the interlayer distance, the surfactant loading amount and the Al/Si ratio of IOCs strictly depend on the intercalation method and the intercalation agent ratio. Interlayers of IOCs synthesised by intercalating ODTMA before Al13 and IOCs synthesised by simultaneous intercalation of ODTMA and Al13 were increased with increasing the ODTMA concentration used in the synthesis procedure and comparatively high loading amounts could be observed in them. In contrast, Al/Si decreased with increasing ODTMA concentration in these two types of IOCs. The results suggest that Al-pillars can be fixed within the interlayers by calcination and any increment in the amount of ODTMA used in the synthesis procedure did not affect the interlayer distance of the IOCs. Overall the study provides valuable insights into the structure and properties of the IOCs and their potential environmental applications.
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The antifungal drug, miconazole nitrate, inhibits the growth of several species of Candida. Candida albicans, one of the pathogenic species, was totally inhibited at a concentration of approximately 10 μg/ml. Endogenous respiration was unaffected by the drug at a concentration as high as 100 μg/ml, whereas exogenous respiration was markedly sensitive and inhibited to an extent of 85%. The permeability of the cell membrane was changed as evidenced by the leakage of 260-nm absorbing materials, amino acids, proteins, and inorganic cations. The results we present clearly show that the drug alters the cellular permeability, and thus the exogenous respiration becomes sensitive to the drug.
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The antifungal drug, miconazole nitrate, inhibits the growth of several species of Candida. Candida albicans, one of the pathogenic species, was totally inhibited at a concentration of approximately 10 µg/ml. Endogenous respiration was unaffected by the drug at a concentration as high as 100 µg/ml, whereas exogenous respiration was markedly sensitive and inhibited to an extent of 85%. The permeability of the cell membrane was changed as evidenced by the leakage of 260-nm absorbing materials, amino acids, proteins, and inorganic cations. The results we present clearly show that the drug alters the cellular permeability, and thus the exogenous respiration becomes sensitive to the drug.
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A series of organically modified clays (OMCs) with a surfactant loading range from 0.625 to 2.5 times the cation exchange capacity (CEC) were melt-mixed with maleated polypropylene (PPMA). Wide-angle X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy results of these narrocomposites show that dispersion of clays becomes unfavorable in the PPMA matrix during melt intercalation as the surfactant loading increases in the process of modifying clays, though larger interlayer distances are obtained in their corresponding OMCs. It is even important that clays uniformly disperse at the nanoscale level in the PPMA matrix when the surfactant loadings are below the CEC, which implies that incomplete exchange of inorganic cations in the process of modifying clay benefits the dispersion of clays in the PPMA matrix.
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The authors have studied the chromatographic behavior of parenteral preparations for pediatric use containing inorganic cations. After separation and identification by thin-layer chromatography, Mn2+, Zn2+, and Cu2+ were analyzed by a method based on reaction with an appropriate reagent and extraction with an organic solvent which yielded elution and preconcentration, resulting in an appropriate solution for colorimetric quantitation. Cr3+ cation was determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry after appropriate chromatographic separation, using microcrystalline cellulose (adsorbent) and an acetone:water:hydrochloric acid mixture (80:5:8) as the mobile phase.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Zusammenfassung Die Arbeit beschreibt die Synthese und Eigenschaften von formtreuen organischen Makrocyclen mit intraannularen polaren Gruppen. Dabei wurden zunächst entsprechende bifunktionalisierte Acetylenbausteine (Halbringe) hergestellt, welche anschließend in einer oxidativen Glaser-Eglington Kupplung zu den Makrocyclen umgesetzt wurden.Am Anfang wurden Sulfonat-funktionalisierte Makrocyclen untersucht. Diese ließen sich mittels der Templatmethode in hohen Ausbeuten synthetisieren. Nach der Abspaltung des Templatbausteins, der gleichzeitig als Schutzgruppe für die Sulfonsäure diente, erhielt man den entsprechenden Makrocyclus als Tetra-n-butylammonium-Salz. Vor dem Hintergrund ionenleitfähige Materialien zu erhalten, wurde anschließend das organische Kation durch anorganische Kationen (z.B. Li+, Na+) ausgetauscht. Dies führte jedoch zur Bildung unlöslicher Produkte, die sich nicht eindeutig charakterisierten ließen.Ein anderer Ansatz zu löslichen Makrocyclen mit polarem Innenraum zu gelangen war die Synthese eines Dipeptid-funktionalisierten Makrocyclus. Dies geschah im Hinblick auf die eventuelle Eignung der Makrocyclen als Rezeptormoleküle für Gäste biologischen Ursprungs. Dabei ließen sich die entsprechenden Dipeptid-funktionalisierten Halbringe auf einfache Weise darstellen, jedoch trat bei der anschließenden Glaser-Kupplung, wahrscheinlich bedingt durch den hohen molaren Überschuß an Kupfersalzen, als Hauptreaktion die Abspaltung des Peptidrests auf. Daher wurde sich nun der Carbonsäuregruppe als polaren Baustein im Inneren der Ringe zugewandt. Diese sollten eine anschließende Peptidankupplung zulassen.Es wurden vier verschiedene Makrocyclen mit intraannularen Carboxylatgruppen synthetisiert. Auch hier waren die Makrocyclen in Form ihrer Methylester noch gut, in Form der Säuren oder deren Salze oftmals nur noch sehr gering löslich. Um die Löslichkeit zu verbessern, wurde dabei die Polaritätsverteilung am Ring (polarer Innenraum, unpolarer Außenraum) durch das Anbringen von löslichkeits-vermittelnden Gruppen zum Teil aufgegeben. Dabei hat sich gezeigt, daß es erst durch die Verwendung von verzweigten (S)-Methylbutoxy-Gruppen innerhalb des Rings oder langen Alkoxyketten außerhalb des Rings möglich war, zu löslichen Systemen zu gelangen. Im ersten Fall ist es zum ersten Mal gelungen, einen löslichen Makrocyclus mit zwei freien intra-annnularen Carbonsäuregruppen zu erhalten. Durch die Optimierung der Syntheseroute ist es nunmehr möglich, den Ring im Grammmaßstab herzustellen. Außerdem wurden als Testreaktion beide Säuregruppen mit Methylamin zum Säureamid vollständig umgesetzt. Somit wurde ein System entwickelt, an das sich in Zukunft beliebige Aminosäuren an den Ring anbinden lassen sollten. Zusätzlich sollte sich die Chiralität der (S)-Methylbutoxygruppen auf das Erkennen von chiralen Gästen auswirken.Im zweiten Fall wurden durch das Anbringen von vier Tris(hexadecyloxy)-benzol- oder Tris(dodecyloxy)-benzol- Gruppen an der Peripherie der Ringe nach Hydrolyse der Methylestergruppen ebenfalls lösliche, Carboxylat-funktionalisierte Makrocyclen erhalten. Eine eingehende Untersuchung der Methylester-geschützten Ringe ergab, daß diese beim Schmelzen das Auftreten einer thermotropen flüssigkristallinen Phase zeigen. Die Natur der Mesophase konnte mittels Polarisations-Lichtmikroskopie sowie Röntgenbeugungsmethoden eindeutig als kolumnar-schiefwinklig (colob) charakterisiert werden. Hierbei ist zu bemerken, daß bei ähnlichen Makrocyclen, die über keinen polar gefüllten Innenraum verfügen, keine Mesophase auftritt. Das bedeutet, daß die Raumerfüllung im Inneren der Makrocyclen, bedingt durch die polaren Gruppen, zur Ausbildung einer flüssigkristallinen Phase unbedingt notwendig ist.
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Lead compounds are known genotoxicants, principally affecting the integrity of chromosomes. Lead chloride and lead acetate induced concentration-dependent increases in micronucleus frequency in V79 cells, starting at 1.1 μM lead chloride and 0.05 μM lead acetate. The difference between the lead salts, which was expected based on their relative abilities to form complex acetato-cations, was confirmed in an independent experiment. CREST analyses of the micronuclei verified that lead chloride and acetate were predominantly aneugenic (CREST-positive response), which was consistent with the morphology of the micronuclei (larger micronuclei, compared with micronuclei induced by a clastogenic mechanism). The effects of high concentrations of lead salts on the microtubule network of V79 cells were also examined using immunofluorescence staining. The dose effects of these responses were consistent with the cytotoxicity of lead(II), as visualized in the neutral-red uptake assay. In a cell-free system, 20-60 μM lead salts inhibited tubulin assembly dose-dependently. The no-observed-effect concentration of lead(II) in this assay was 10 μM. This inhibitory effect was interpreted as a shift of the assembly/disassembly steady-state toward disassembly, e.g., by reducing the concentration of assembly-competent tubulin dimers. The effects of lead salts on microtubule-associated motor-protein functions were studied using a kinesin-gliding assay that mimics intracellular transport processes in vitro by quantifying the movement of paclitaxel-stabilized microtubules across a kinesin-coated glass surface. There was a dose-dependent effect of lead nitrate on microtubule motility. Lead nitrate affected the gliding velocities of microtubules starting at concentrations above 10 μM and reached half-maximal inhibition of motility at about 50 μM. The processes reported here point to relevant interactions of lead with tubulin and kinesin at low dose levels.
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t is shown that the charge-resonance contribution to binding of the radical dimer cations of aromatic hydrocarbon decreases as the size of the hydrocarbon molecule increases.
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Inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases, EC 3.6.1.1) hydrolyse pyrophosphate in a reaction that provides the thermodynamic 'push' for many reactions in the cell, including DNA and protein synthesis. Soluble PPases can be classified into two families that differ completely in both sequence and structure. While Family I PPases are found in all kingdoms, family II PPases occur only in certain prokaryotes. The enzyme from baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is very well characterised both kinetically and structurally, but the exact mechanism has remained elusive. The enzyme uses divalent cations as cofactors; in vivo the metal is magnesium. Two metals are permanently bound to the enzyme, while two come with the substrate. The reaction cycle involves the activation of the nucleophilic oxygen and allows different pathways for product release. In this thesis I have solved the crystal structures of wild type yeast PPase and seven active site variants in the presence of the native cofactor magnesium. These structures explain the effects of the mutations and have allowed me to describe each intermediate along the catalytic pathway with a structure. Although establishing the ʻchoreographyʼ of the heavy atoms is an important step in understanding the mechanism, hydrogen atoms are crucial for the mechanism. The most unambiguous method to determine the positions of these hydrogen atoms is neutron crystallography. In order to determine the neutron structure of yeast PPase I perdeuterated the enzyme and grew large crystals of it. Since the crystals were not stable at ambient temperature, a cooling device was developed to allow neutron data collection. In order to investigate the structural changes during the reaction in real time by time-resolved crystallography a photolysable substrate precursor is needed. I synthesised a candidate molecule and characterised its photolysis kinetics, but unfortunately it is hydrolysed by both yeast and Thermotoga maritima PPases. The mechanism of Family II PPases is subtly different from Family I. The native metal cofactor is manganese instead of magnesium, but the metal activation is more complex because the metal ions that arrive with the substrate are magnesium different from those permanently bound to the enzyme. I determined the crystal structures of wild type Bacillus subtilis PPase with the inhibitor imidodiphosphate and an inactive H98Q variant with the substrate pyrophosphate. These structures revealed a new trimetal site that activates the nucleophile. I also determined that the metal ion sites were partially occupied by manganese and iron using anomalous X- ray scattering.
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Planar triazinium cationic species, from VO2+-assisted cyclization of 1-(2-thiazolylazo)-2-naphthol, shows efficient DNA intercalative binding, visible light-induced anaerobic plasmid DNA photocleavage activity and photocytotoxicity in HeLa and MCF-7 cancer cells by an apoptotic pathway with selective localization of the compound in the nucleus as evidenced from the nuclear staining and confocal imaging.