Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Supplementary material to this book contains the following Adobe-Writer (.pdf) files: an overview of the material, the color coding for the map on the title page), and supporting information for chapter 1, 14, 20, 22 and 30. Some of the files contain further links to materials on this server, in particular is there a collection of structural formulas accessible from the material to chapter 1. Please, click on the respective files for downloading. Any reference should cite the full title of the book.
Polarization pump-probe femtosecond spectroscopy was used to investigate photoinduced optical density changes in allophycocyanin (APC) trimers at 635–690 nm after excitation with 230-fs pulses at 618 nm. The initial bleaching observed at λ < 645 nm is followed by subpicosecond absorption recovery corresponding to 430 ± 40 fs recovery kinetics measured at 615 nm with 70-fs pulses. Only the red part of the APC absorption band remains strongly bleached at 3 ps after excitation. The spectral and kinetic results can be described in terms of two different models of interaction between neighbouring α-80 and β-81 chromophores of APC trimers. According to the first one, the observed subpicosecond kinetics corresponds to relaxation between the levels of excitonically coupled, spectrally identical α-80 and β-81 chromophores. Excited state absorption to doubly excited excitonic state should in this case contribute to the measured difference spectra. According to the second one, the femtosecond excitation energy transfer in APC trimers takes place between a donor chromophore absorbing predominantly at 620 nm and an acceptor chromophore absorbing at 650 nm. The high anisotropy value observed at 615 nm during the first 1.2 ps is in good agreement with the donor-acceptor model. Anisotropy values calculated in the 635–675 nm spectral region at 3 ps after excitation are in the 0.1–0.25 range corresponding to an angle of 30°–45° between donor and acceptor transition dipole orientations. The high anisotropy obtained at 658 nm during the excitation is probably due to stimulated emission of the donor chromophore.
After a short summary on the ecology and rhizosphere biology of symbiotic bacteria and vesicular-arbuscular (VA) mycorrhiza fungi and their application as microbial inocula, results on competitiveness and communication are summarized. Stress factors such as high temperature, low soil pH, aluminium concentrations and phytoalexins produced by the host plants were studied withRhizobium leguminosarum bv.phaseoli andRhizobium tropici onPhaseolus beans. Quantitative data for competitiveness were obtained by usinggus + (glucoronidase) labelled strains, which produce blue-coloured nodules. ForPhaseolus-nodulating rhizobia, a group specific DNA probe was also developed, which did not hybridize with more than 20 other common soil and rhizosphere bacteria. Results from several laboratories contributing to knowledge of signal exchange and communication in theRhizobium/Bradyrhizobium legume system are summarized in a new scheme, including also defense reactions at the early stages of legume nodule initiation. Stimulating effects of flavonoids on germination and growth of VA mycorrhiza fungi were also found. A constitutive antifungal compound in pea roots, -isoxazolinonyl-alanine, was characterized.
Abstract A dense population of the purple sulfur bacterium Amoebobacter purpureus in the chemocline of meromictic Mahoney Lake (British Columbia, Canada) underwent consistent changes in biomass over a two year study period. The integrated amount of bacteriochlorophyll reached maxima in August and declined markedly during early fall. Bacteriochlorophyll was only weakly correlated with the light intensity and water temperature in the chemocline. In the summer, bacterial photosynthesis was limited by sulfide availability. During this period the intracellular sulfur concentration of A. purpureus cells decreased. A minimum concentration was measured at the top of the bacterial layer in August, when specific photosynthetic rates of A. purpureus indicated that only 14% of the cells were photosynthetically active. With the exception of a time period between August and September, the specific growth rates calculated from CO2 fixation rates of A. purpureus were similar to growth rates calculated from actual biomass changes in the bacterial layer. Between August and September 86% of the A. purpureus biomass disappeared from the chemocline and were deposited on the littoral sediment of Mahoney Lake or degraded within the mixolimnion. This rise of cells to the lake surface was not mediated by an increase in the specific gas vesicle content which remained constant between April and November. The upwelling phenomenon was related to the low sulfur content of A. purpureus cells and a low resistance of surface water layers against vertical mixing by wind.
A new comprehensive communication concept in the Rhizobium/Bradyrhizobium legume symbiosis was developed. It includes a root zone specific flavonoid exudation, the differential activity of phenylpropane/acetate pathway derivatives on chemotaxis, nod-gene inducing activity and phytoalexin resistance induction on the microsymbiont side (Bradyrhizobium). Nod factor production from the microsymbiont affects the host plant in root hair curling and meristem induction. Phytoalexin production in the host plant is also an early response, however repressed to a low level after a few hours. Another strategy of the microsymbiont to overcome phytoalexin effects is degradation of phytoalexins in Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. vicieae. Competitiveness within the same infection group of the microsymbiont was studied with gus-gene fusion, using the blue coloured nodules to easily discriminate marked strains from unmarked competitors. New exopolysaccharide (EPS) mutants of Bradyrhizobium japonicum were reconstructed homologous with a DNA region to exoB gene of Rhizobium meliloti. Their clearly reduced competitiveness of nodulation, demonstrates that exopolysaccharides of Bradyrhizohium japonicum also have an important function during the early stages of this symbiotic interaction.
By means of fluorescence spectroscopy and nonlinear absorption experiments, excited-state processes of the modified pigments [3-acetyl]-chlorophyll a, [31-OH]-bacteriochlorophyll a and [3-vinyl]-bacteriochlorophyll a were investigated and compared with those of chlorophyll a and bacteriochlorophyll a.
15N-substituted bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) was extracted from the cells of Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1 grown in a medium containing 15N-ammonium sulfate and yeast concentrate. The T1 Raman spectra of 14N-and 15N-BChl a were obtained as the difference spectra of high-power minus low-power of one-color, pump-and-probe measurements using 420 nm, 5 ns pulses. A set of empirical assignments of the T1 Raman lines was made, based on shifts upon 14N→15N substitution. The S0 Raman spectra of the two BChls were also obtained by using the 457.9 nm cw beam, and a set of assignments of the S0 Raman lines was given for comparison.
A purification process for the monclonal anti-CD4 antibody MAX.16H5 was developed on an analytical scale using (NH&SO, precipitation, anion-exchange chromatography on MonoQ or Q-Sepharose, hydrophobic interaction chromatography on phenyl- Sepharose and gel filtration chromatography on Superdex 200. The purification schedule was scaled up and gram amounts of MAX.16H5 were produced on corresponding BioPilot columns. Studies of the identity, purity and possible contamination by a broad range of methods showed that the product was highly purified and free from contaminants such as mouse DNA, viruses, pyrogens and irritants. Overall, the analytical data confirm that the monoclonal antibody MAX.16H5 prepared by this protocol is suitable for human therapy.
The mechanism of formation of the formyl group of chlorophyll b has long been obscure but, in this paper, the origin of the 7-formyl-group oxygen of chlorophyll b in higher plants was determined by greening etiolated maize leaves, excised from dark-grown plants, by illumination under white light in the presence of either H218O or 18O2 and examining the newly synthesized chlorophylls by mass spectroscopy. To minimize the possible loss of 18O label from the 7-formyl substituent by reversible formation of chlorophyll b-71-gem-diol (hydrate) with unlabelled water in the cell, the formyl group was reduced to a hydroxymethyl group during extraction with methanol containing NaBH4: chlorophyll a remained unchanged during this rapid reductive extraction process. Mass spectra of chlorophyll a and [7-hydroxymethyl]-chlorophyll b extracted from leaves greened in the presence of either H218O or 18O2 revealed that 18O was incorporated only from molecular oxygen but into both chlorophylls: the mass spectra were consistent with molecular oxygen providing an oxygen atom not only for incorporation into the 7-formyl group of chlorophyll b but also for the well-documented incorporation into the 131-oxo group of both chlorophylls a and b [see Walker, C. J., Mansfield, K. E., Smith, K. M. & Castelfranco, P. A. (1989) Biochem. J. 257, 599–602]. The incorporation of isotope led to as much as 77% enrichment of the 131-oxo group of chlorophyll a: assuming identical incorporation into the 131 oxygen of chlorophyll b, then enrichment of the 7-formyl oxygen was as much as 93%. Isotope dilution by re-incorporation of photosynthetically produced oxygen from unlabelled water was negligible as shown by a greening experiment in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The high enrichment using 18O2, and the absence of labelling by H218O, unequivocally demonstrates that molecular oxygen is the sole precursor of the 7-formyl oxygen of chlorophyll b in higher plants and strongly suggests a single pathway for the formation of the chlorophyll b formyl group involving the participation of an oxygenase-type enzyme.
A series of substituted bacteriochlorophyll molecules, all used in reconstitution experiments of reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides (Struck et al. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1991, 1060, 262-270), were characterized by EPR, electron-nuclear double (ENDOR), and electron-nuclear-nuclear triple (TRIPLE) resonance spectroscopy in their monomeric radical cation states. Effects of different substituents at position 3 in the porphyrin macrocycle were considered, especially for two «crosslinks» between plant and bacterial chlorophylls. These are 3-vinylbacteriochlorophyll where the «bacteria» acetyl group at position 3 was substituted by vinyl and 3-acetylchlorophyll where the «plant» vinyl group was substituted by acetyl
An expressed beta-tubulin gene (TUBB) has previously been localized to chromosome region 6pter-p21 in man. By using a panel of deletion mutant cell lines and radiation-reduced hybrids containing fragments of chromosome 6, the TUBB locus could be mapped to the HLA class I region at 6p21.3. A long range restriction map including TUBB and several HLA class I genes was then generated by rotating field gel electrophoresis. The results show that TUBB maps to a segment 170-370 kb telomeric of HLA-C. This location suggests that a mutation at the TUBB locus could be the cause for certain forms of HLAlinked microtubule dysfunction, including immotile cilia syndrome.