The transformation of arsenicals by Candida humicola

1979 ◽  
Vol 25 (10) ◽  
pp. 1201-1205 ◽  
Author(s):  
William R. Cullen ◽  
Barry C. McBride ◽  
A. Wendy Pickett

An analytical procedure for the separation, detection, and identification of some of the compounds produced by a cell preparation of the fungus Candida humicola from 74As-arsenate, [14C]-methylarsonate, and [14C]-dimethylarsinate has been devised and tested. It has been possible to detect five distinct 74As-containing compounds following the incubation of 74As-arsenate with a broken cell homogenate, three of which have been identified as arsenite, methylarsonate, and dimethylarsinate. With [14C]methylarsonate as substrate, [14C]dimethylarsinate and [14C]trimethylarsine oxide are produced. Products from [14C|dimethylarsinate include [14C]methylarsonate and [14C]trimethylarsine oxide as well as an unknown species. The absence of any transformation when buffer replaces the cell preparation implicates these various compounds as intermediates in a biological synthesis of trimethylarsine.

2003 ◽  
Vol 30 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 87-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Håkan Nygren ◽  
Cecilia Eriksson ◽  
Per Malmberg ◽  
Herman Sahlin ◽  
Lennart Carlsson ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 123 (8) ◽  
pp. 693-697
Author(s):  
John C. Cate ◽  
Nancy Reilly

Abstract Background.—The gel test, developed by Lapierre in 1984, was designed to standardize antiglobulin testing while improving sensitivity and specificity of the method. Principle.—Anti–human serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) mixed with Sephadex G100 (gel phase) in a microtube traps red cell–IgG agglutination complexes during migration through the gel in a centrifugation step. Agglutination complexes are visibly detectable at various levels in the microtube as an inverse function of antibody coated on red cells. Unsensitized red cells form a cell pellet at the base of the microtube. Objective.—To determine if indirect anti–human globulin testing could be standardized and simplified by replacing the tube test with the gel test without compromising quality or increasing costs. Setting.—A medium-sized community hospital. Results.—In a blinded retrospective study, we used patient sera (n = 40), which included 10 positive specimens containing 18 known antibodies. Sixteen antibodies were detected and identified with the tube method (1 anti-D and 1 anti-C not detected). By the gel test, 18 antibodies were detected and identified. All negative samples showed 100% concordance. Favorable results were obtained in a nonblinded prospective correlation study (n = 121). Our technologists found the gel test easier to read and more reproducible and reliable than the tube method; they also found increased sensitivity for detecting weakly reacting antibodies. We successfully introduced the gel test into our laboratory as the standard method for indirect antiglobulin testing. Following implementation, improved personnel management was achieved. Conclusions.—The gel test is a reliable and advantageous method and is appropriate for routine use for detection and identification of alloantibodies in a community hospital transfusion service laboratory.


1970 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 613-622 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. V. Emes ◽  
L. C. Vining

Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (EC 4.3.1.5) was purified 40-fold from a cell homogenate of Streptomyces verticillatus. In many respects the enzyme was similar to phenylalanine ammonia-lyases isolated from plants and fungi. It was most active at pH 9.0 and the Km for L-phenylalanine was 1.6 × 10−4 M. It showed no requirement for metal ions but was inhibited by heavy metals, some sulfhydryl reagents, and carbonyl reagents. The Stokes' radius was estimated by gel filtration to be 5.45 nm. Sucrose gradient centrifugation gave an s20,w of 10.0, leading to calculated values of 226 000 and 1.61 for the molecular weight and frictional ratio, respectively, if a partial specific volume of 0.725 ml/g is assumed. The enzyme deaminated o-, m-, and p-fluoro-, p-chloro-, and p-methyl-phenylalanine but was without action on L-tyrosine. It was inhibited by trans-cinnamic acid and certain phenylalanine derivatives, as well as by some less closely related aromatic compounds, but not by trans-cinnamamide.


1995 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. S68
Author(s):  
J. Michael McGee ◽  
Joseph A. Price ◽  
Diane Snyder ◽  
Marion Patten

1982 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 559-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Haga ◽  
M Forte ◽  
Y Saimi ◽  
C Kung

Mutants in Paramecium tetraurelia, unable to generate action potentials, have been isolated as cells which show no backward swimming in response to ionic stimulation. These "pawn" mutants belong to at least three complementation groups designated pwA, pwB, and pwC. We have found that microinjection of cytoplasm from a wild-type donor into a pawn recipient of any of the three complementation groups restores the ability of the pawn to generate action potentials and hence swim backward. In addition, the cytoplasm from a pawn cannot restore a recipient of the same complementation group, but that from a pawn of a different group can. Electrophysiological analysis had demonstrated that the restoration of backward swimming is not due to a simple addition of ions but represents a profound change in the excitable membrane of the recipient pawn cells. Using known pawn mutants and those which had previously been unclassified, we have been able to establish a perfect concordance of genetic complementation and complementation by cytoplasmic transfer through microinjection. This method has been used to classify pawn mutants that are sterile or hard-to-mate and to examine the ability of cytoplasms from different species of ciliated protozoa to restore the ability to swim backward in the pawn mutants of P. tetraurelia. A cell homogenate has also been fractionated by centrifugation to further purify the active components. These results demonstrate that transfer of cytoplasm between cells by microinjection can be a valid and systematic method to classify mutants. This test is simpler to perform than the genetic complementation test and can be used under favorable conditions in mutants that are sterile and in cells of different species.


Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 196-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Rott ◽  
A.-M. Schmidt ◽  
V. Joshi ◽  
C. Masters ◽  
S. Godkin ◽  
...  

Colombian datura virus (CDV) was first described in 1968 (3) and has since been reported in Europe (4), Japan (see 4 for additional references), and the United States (1,2). CDV is a member of the family Potyviridae with flexuous, filamentous nucleocapsids that can be transmitted by mechanical inoculation and grafting and is known to be vectored by the common aphid Myzus persicae. In the fall of 2007, five Brugmansia plants of unknown species from a Parks Board Collection in a Lower Mainland nursery, British Columbia, Canada, were found to be displaying symptoms typical of a viral infection: chlorotic flecking and mottling on leaves, leaf shrivel, and vein banding. Symptomatic leaves from these five plants were tested by ELISA (Immuno Strip Test, Agdia, Elkhart, IN) for several common viruses including Impatiens necrotic spot, Tobacco mosaic, Cucumber mosaic, and Tomato spotted wilt viruses and found to be negative for all. However, rub inoculations onto the herbaceous indicators Nicotiana occidentalis and N. benthamiana resulted in severe symptom formation including necrosis, wilting, shriveling, stunted growth, petiole and stem tip collapse, as well as collapse from the base of the plants, and plant death within 2 weeks after inoculation. A leaf dip assay of the original infected Brugmansia sample and infected N. benthamiana tissue revealed flexuous, potyvirus-like particles with the electron microscope (EM). On the basis of the Brugmansia leaf symptoms and the EM results, a possible infection with CDV was suspected. Primers CDV-3 and CDV-NIb5, specific to CDV (4), were used in a reverse transcription (RT)-PCR assay that amplified an approximate 1,600-bp fragment from the original Brugmansia sample and inoculated N. bentamiana and N. occidentalis plants. The amplified portion of the genome is the extreme 3′ terminus and includes the 3′ noncoding sequence, the viral coat protein gene, and part of the viral replicase gene. Fragments were cloned into pCR2.1-TOPO (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) and two clones from each plant (total of six clones) were sequenced in both directions. Sequences of all clones were essentially identical, with only three nucleotide differences among the clones (GenBank Accession No. EU571230). BLASTn analysis revealed the highest match to several CDV isolates ranging from 98.7 to 99.5% nucleotide sequence identity. BLASTp analysis of the 451 amino acid viral polyprotein translation product gave a similarly high match with CDV isolates, with the highest match to a Hungarian isolate of CDV (GenBank Accession No. CAD26690) of 99.8% identity, or only one mismatch out of 451 amino acids. An additional group of 15 large symptomless Brugmansia plants, located approximately 6 m from the five symptomatic plants, were also tested by RT-PCR and found to be positive. These 15 plants were of a different but also unknown species of Brugmansia. In conclusion, analysis of symptomatic Brugmansia from a Canadian collection by transfer of disease to herbaceous indicators, EM, RT-PCR, and genomic sequence comparisons, are consistent with the detection and identification of the potyvirus Colombian datura virus. To our knowledge, this is the first report of this viral pathogen in Canada. References: (1) S. Adkins et al. Phytopathology (Abstr.) 95(suppl.):S2, 2005. (2) C. R. Fry et al. J. Phytopathol. 152:200, 2004. (3) R. P. Kahn and R. Bartels. Phytopathology 58:58, 1968. (4) J. Schubert et al. J. Phytopathol. 154:343, 2006.


1995 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 130
Author(s):  
J. Michael McGee ◽  
Joseph A ◽  
Price ◽  
Diane Snyder ◽  
Marion Patten ◽  
...  

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