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1.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 11669, 2019 08 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31406148

ABSTRACT

Oxygen is a prerequisite for all large and motile animals. It is a puzzling paradox that fossils of benthic animals are often found in black shales with geochemical evidence for deposition in marine environments with anoxic and sulfidic bottom waters. It is debated whether the geochemical proxies are unreliable, affected by diagenesis, or whether the fossils are transported from afar or perhaps were not benthic. Here, we improved the stratigraphic resolution of marine anoxia records 100-1000 fold using core-scanning X-Ray Fluorescence and established a centennial resolution record of oxygen availability at the seafloor in an epicontinental sea that existed ~501-494 million years ago. The study reveals that anoxic bottom-water conditions, often with toxic hydrogen sulfide present, were interrupted by brief oxygenation events of 600-3000 years duration, corresponding to 1-5 mm stratigraphic thickness. Fossil shells occur in some of these oxygenated intervals suggesting that animals invaded when conditions permitted an aerobic life style at the seafloor. Although the fauna evidently comprised opportunistic species adapted to low oxygen environments, these findings reconcile a long-standing debate between paleontologists and geochemists, and shows the potential of ultra-high resolution analyses for reconstructing redox conditions in past oceans.


Subject(s)
Fossils/history , Geologic Sediments/analysis , Hydrogen Sulfide/history , Oxygen/history , Seawater/analysis , Animals , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , History, Ancient , Hydrogen Sulfide/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/chemistry , Respiration , Seawater/chemistry , Spectrometry, X-Ray Emission
2.
Biochem Pharmacol ; 149: 5-19, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28947277

ABSTRACT

The history of H2S - as an environmental toxin - dates back to 1700, to the observations of the Italian physician Bernardino Ramazzini, whose book "De Morbis Artificum Diatriba" described the painful eye irritation and inflammation of "sewer gas" in sewer workers. The gas has subsequently been identified as hydrogen sulfide (H2S), and opened three centuries of research into the biological roles of H2S. The current article highlights the key discoveries in the field of H2S research, including (a) the toxicological studies, which characterized H2S as an environmental toxin, and identified some of its modes of action, including the inhibition of mitochondrial respiration; (b) work in the field of bacteriology, which, starting in the early 1900s, identified H2S as a bacterial product - with subsequently defined roles in the regulation of periodontal disease (oral bacterial flora), intestinal epithelial cell function (enteral bacterial flora) as well as in the regulation of bacterial resistance to antibiotics; and (c), work in diverse fields of mammalian biology, which, starting in the 1940s, identified H2S as an endogenous mammalian enzymatic product, the functions of which - among others, in the cardiovascular and nervous system - have become subjects of intensive investigation for the last decade. The current review not only enumerates the key discoveries related to H2S made over the last three centuries, but also compiles the most frequently cited papers in the field which have been published over the last decade and highlights some of the current 'hot topics' in the field of H2S biology.


Subject(s)
Environmental Pollutants/toxicity , Hydrogen Sulfide/metabolism , Hydrogen Sulfide/toxicity , Signal Transduction/physiology , Animals , Environmental Pollutants/chemistry , Environmental Pollutants/history , Gasotransmitters/history , Gasotransmitters/metabolism , Gasotransmitters/toxicity , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Hydrogen Sulfide/history
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