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1.
Biomed Res Int ; 2020: 9860425, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32309445

ABSTRACT

Acanthopanax senticosus extract with excessive standard of Pb, Cd, Hg, and Cu was used as the research object, and the alkyl thiourea functionalised silica was used as a new heavy metal removal scavenger. The heavy metal removal process was optimised by orthogonal experiment with dynamic and static adsorption modes. Meanwhile, the content of Acanthopanax B and Acanthopanax E, the solid content, and the HPLC fingerprint similarity were used as quality monitoring indicators of Acanthopanax senticosus heavy metal removal before and after. Then, the technical adaptability of heavy metal removal by alkyl thiourea functionalised silica was evaluated. Under the optimal dynamic adsorption conditions, the average removal rates of Pb, Cd, Hg, and Cu were 91.64%, 93.04%, 81.77%, and 83.11%, respectively. Under the optimal static adsorption conditions, the average removal rates of Pb, Cd, Hg, and Cu were 82.22%, 89.95%, 81.26%, and 82.97%, respectively. During Acanthopanax senticosus extract heavy metal removal before and after, the change percentage of Acanthopanax B and Acanthopanax E was less than 2.00%, the solid content loss rate was only 0.18%, and the fingerprint similarity was over 99.9%. The method can be used to satisfy the high efficiency of selective removal of harmful elements in Acanthopanax senticosus extract and the effective composition of almost no effect; the method is simple and easy, so it can be recommended for pretreatment of heavy metals in Traditional Chinese Medicine extracts, and this way provides a new thought and research technique to decrease the contents of heavy metals.


Subject(s)
Eleutherococcus/chemistry , Metals, Heavy/chemistry , Plant Extracts/pharmacology , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Thiourea/chemistry , Adsorption , Cadmium , Copper , Lead , Mercury , Temperature
2.
Ecol Appl ; 24(2): 396-412, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24689150

ABSTRACT

With changing climate, delineation of protected areas for sensitive species must account for long-term variability and geographic shifts of key habitat elements. Projecting the future adequacy of protected areas requires knowing major factors that drive such changes, and how readily the animals adjust to altered resources. In the Arctic, the viability of habitats for marine birds and mammals often depends on sea ice to dissipate storm waves and provide platforms for resting. However, some wind conditions (including weak winds during extreme cold) can consolidate pack ice into cover so dense that air-breathing divers are excluded from the better feeding areas. Spectacled Eiders (Somateria fischeri) winter among leads (openings) in pack ice in areas where densities of their bivalve prey are quite high. During winter 2009, however, prevailing winds created a large region of continuous ice with inadequate leads to allow access to areas of dense preferred prey. Stable isotope and fatty acid biomarkers indicated that, under these conditions, the eiders did not diversify their diet to include abundant non-bivalve taxa but did add a smaller, less preferred, bivalve species. Consistent with a computer model of eider energy balance, the body fat of adult eiders in 2009 was 33-35% lower than on the same date (19 March) in 2001 when ice conditions allowed access to higher bivalve densities. Ice cover data suggest that the eiders were mostly excluded from areas of high bivalve density from January to March in about 30% of 14 winters from 1998 to 2011. Thus, even without change in total extent of ice, shifts in prevailing winds can alter the areal density of ice to reduce access to important habitats. Because changes in wind-driven currents can also rearrange the dispersion of prey, the potential for altered wind patterns should be an important concern in projecting effects of climate change on the adequacy of marine protected areas for diving endotherms in the Arctic.


Subject(s)
Bivalvia/physiology , Conservation of Natural Resources/methods , Ducks/physiology , Animals , Arctic Regions , Demography , Seasons , Wind
3.
Dalton Trans ; 43(2): 469-78, 2014 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24113810

ABSTRACT

Dispersion corrected density functional theory (DFT-D) has been applied to understand the performance of several palladium metal scavengers. Nine different sulfur-based ligands and three different palladium metal sets have been investigated in detail. Based on a thorough analysis of the thermodynamic binding parameters ΔH, ΔG and ΔS, we have identified the best binding modes for all scavenger ligands. Bis-monodentate coordination is favoured over chelation in ΔH and ΔG values for most of the scavenger ligands. Special attention has been paid to the ligand strain energies, which account for the structural changes of the ligands upon complexation indicating that small (5-membered) chelates are considerably less favourable than expected. Some ligands can use their longest chain (>7-atoms) to yield trans chelates, which ligands with shorter chains (≤6-atoms) are unable to form. A secondary amino nitrogen (RR'NH) is found to be the best donor with highest binding enthalpy for Pd(ii) metal systems. In terms of the strength of the initial binding interactions, -SMe > -SH; capping thiols (-SH) as thioethers (-SMe) is therefore suggested to be an effective strategy in scavenger design. These observations mark the beginning of a knowledge base of the full range of possible interactions, leading to the construction of a sulfur ligand database for the design of scavenger systems.

4.
Ecol Appl ; 24(6): 1525-42, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29160671

ABSTRACT

Climate warming in seasonally ice-covered seas is expected to reduce the extent and duration of annual sea ice. Resulting changes in sea ice related blooms of ice algae or phytoplankton may in turn alter the timing, magnitude, or quality of organic matter inputs to the sea floor. If benthic taxa rely differently on direct consumption of settling fresh microalgae for growth and reproduction, altered blooms may lead to reorganization of deposit-feeding assemblages. To assess the potential for such changes, we examined the diets of five abundant deposit-feeders (three infaunal bivalves, a polychaete, and a brittle star) with different feeding modes over the course of the spring bloom in May­June 2007 in the north-central Bering Sea (30­90 m depth). Short-term data from gut contents reflected feeding modes, with the bivalves Macoma calcarea, Ennucula tenuis, and Nuculana radiata, and the brittle star Ophiura sarsi, responding more quickly to deposition of fresh algae than did the head-down polychaete Pectinaria hyperborea. Fatty acid biomarkers also indicated rapid ingestion of settling algae by the bivalves (especially Macoma) and the brittle star, while Pectinaria continued to ingest mainly bacteria. Fatty acid biomarkers did not indicate any unique dietary importance of ice algae released from melting ice. Longer-term inference from stable isotopes suggested that fresh microalgae contributed little to overall carbon assimilated by any of these species. Instead, deposit-feeders appeared to select a consistent fraction from the pool of sediment organic matter, probably heterotrophic microbes, microbial products, and reworked phytodetritus that form a longer-term sediment "food bank." Redistribution of settled organic matter via scouring and accumulation by currents, as well as the multi-year life spans of macroinvertebrates, may further overwhelm effects of short-term variations in the timing, magnitude, and dispersion of blooms in the water column. More diet data are needed from midsummer to account for any lag in assimilation of fresh microalgae at these cold temperatures. Nevertheless, our results suggest that if annual sea ice cover is reduced, increased production of phytoplankton during longer ice-free periods could replace inputs of ice-associated microalgae to the sediment food bank used by deposit-feeders.


Subject(s)
Climate Change , Feeding Behavior , Ice Cover , Invertebrates/physiology , Microalgae/physiology , Oceans and Seas , Animals , Diet , Eutrophication
5.
BMJ ; 344: e432, 2012 Jan 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22252703
6.
Atherosclerosis ; 195(1): e181-90, 2007 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17482623

ABSTRACT

Familial combined hyperlipidaemia (FCHL) is a complex genetic disorder conferring high risk of premature atherosclerosis, characterized by high cholesterol and/or triglyceride, low high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and insulin resistance. We examined whether pioglitazone, added to conventional lipid-lowering therapy, would favourably affect metabolic parameters and alter body fat content. We undertook a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study in 22 male patients with FCHL treated with pioglitazone or matching placebo 30 mg daily for 4 weeks, increasing to 45 mg for 12 weeks. Magnetic resonance imaging and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy were performed to measure adipose tissue (AT) body content as well as intrahepatocellular lipids (IHCL) and intramyocellular lipids (IMCL) at baseline and after treatment. Significantly improved in the pioglitazone group were: triglyceride/HDL (atherogenic index of plasma) -32.3% (p=0.002), plasma glucose -4.4% (p=0.03), alanine-aminotransferase (ALT) -7.7% (p=0.005) and adiponectin 130.1% (p=0.001). Pioglitazone treatment resulted in a significant increase in total (5.3%, p=0.02) and subcutaneous (7.1%, p=0.003) adipose tissue as well as in soleus-IMCL levels (47.4%, p=0.02) without alteration in intra-abdominal AT or IHCL. Changes in ALT and AST and IHCL were strongly correlated (r=0.72, p<0.01; r=.0.86, p<0.01, respectively). In patients with FCHL on conventional lipid-lowering therapy, the addition of pioglitazone acts favourably on several metabolic parameters.


Subject(s)
Adipose Tissue/metabolism , Hyperlipidemias/drug therapy , Lipids/chemistry , Liver/metabolism , Muscles/metabolism , Thiazolidinediones/pharmacology , Adult , Double-Blind Method , Humans , Hypoglycemic Agents/pharmacology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Pioglitazone , Placebos
7.
Biochemistry ; 42(23): 7061-7, 2003 Jun 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12795601

ABSTRACT

Notch1 is a member of a conserved family of large modular heterodimeric type 1 transmembrane receptors that control differentiation in multicellular animals. Receptor maturation is accompanied by a furin-dependent cleavage that converts the Notch1 precursor polypeptide into a heterodimer consisting of an extracellular ligand-binding subunit (NEC) and a transmembrane signaling subunit (NTM). Binding of a physiologic ligand to NEC induces signaling by triggering additional proteolytic cleavages in NTM, which allow its intracellular region to translocate to the nucleus where it participates in a transcriptional activation complex. In the absence of ligand, the three conserved LNR modules of the NEC subunit participate in maintaining the receptor in its resting conformation. Here, we report the solution structure of the first LNR module (LNR_A) of human Notch1, and identify residues of LNR_A perturbed by the presence of the adjacent module LNR_B. LNR_A is held together by a unique arrangement of three disulfide bonds and a single bound Ca(2+) ion, and adopts a novel fold that falls in the general class of irregular disulfide-bonded structures. Residues perturbed by the presence of the adjacent LNR_B module are predominantly hydrophobic, and lie on one face of the module. These studies represent an initial step toward understanding the structural interrelationships among the three contiguous LNR modules required for proper regulation of Notch signaling.


Subject(s)
Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Receptors, Cell Surface , Transcription Factors , Amino Acid Sequence , Calcium/chemistry , Calcium/metabolism , Calorimetry/methods , Disulfides/chemistry , Disulfides/metabolism , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Tertiary/genetics , Protein Subunits/genetics , Receptor, Notch1 , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Signal Transduction , Static Electricity
8.
Br J Nurs ; 3(19): 1032-1033, 1994 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27915578

ABSTRACT

Access to psychiatric services for homeless mentally ill people Christopher North's reply Ethical and legal issues in suicide Judi Davis replies.

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