scholarly journals Studies on the Dna Content, Dry Mass and Optical Area of Ejaculated Spermatozoal Heads From Bulls with Normal and Lowered Fertility

1966 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 166-174
Author(s):  
Barton L. Gledhill
Keyword(s):  
2014 ◽  
Vol 62 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 149-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanna Kuran

DNA, NYS and DNFB protein contents were measured cytophotometrically using the Feulgen method in the nuclei of the epidermis from. the basal zone of young leaves and from the basal and apical zones of old leaves in two perennial monocotyledonous species, <i>Clivia miniata</i> and <i>Rhoeo discolor</i>. Dry mass was determined interferometrically. It was shown that nuclei with a 2C DNA content dominated in both zones of old leaves, and that a significant percentage of cells with a DNA content below 2C were present. The ratio between euchromatin DNA and heterochromatin DNA indicates a greater decrease in euchromatin during aging. Changes in DNA due to real DNA loss are accompanied by decreases in NYS and DNFB stained proteins and a decrease in dry mass content correlated mainly with the decrease in the amount of NYS proteins.


1965 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 415-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Pia Viola-Magni

In the adrenal medulla of rats exposed intermittently to cold (+4°C) for 100 and 300 hours, a considerable decrease (24 to 40 per cent) of the DNA content per nucleus was observed, followed by restoration to normal or above normal values within 10 days after the withdrawal of the stimulus. The findings were obtained with a scanning integrating histophotometer, and confirmed by microinterferometric investigations (on the basis of the measurement of total dry mass of nuclei isolated in aqueous medium before and after treatment with DNase) and by microchemical determinations, combined with the count of the nuclei in the homogenates. The observed decrease of DNA content cannot be attributed to errors of the methods used, nor to consequences of cellular degeneration. The available evidence seems to indicate a real decrease rather than a change in the state of a part of DNA in the nucleus in vivo whereby it becomes extractable by aqueous solutions. The restoration cannot be due to mitotic processes, which were actually never detected even with the use of colchicine, since the adrenal medulla cells in the adult rat are known to be irreversible, postmitotic cells. A correlation between the functional activity of the adrenal medulla cells and the content or state of DNA in their nuclei is demonstrated.


Chromosoma ◽  
1956 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilie Leuchtenberger ◽  
Imants Murmanis ◽  
Lydia Murmanis ◽  
Susumu Ito ◽  
David R. Weir
Keyword(s):  
Dry Mass ◽  

Author(s):  
Fred Eiserling ◽  
A. H. Doermann ◽  
Linde Boehner

The control of form or shape inheritance can be approached by studying the morphogenesis of bacterial viruses. Shape variants of bacteriophage T4 with altered protein shell (capsid) size and nucleic acid (DNA) content have been found by electron microscopy, and a mutant (E920g in gene 66) controlling head size has been described. This mutant produces short-headed particles which contain 2/3 the normal DNA content and which are non-viable when only one particle infects a cell (Fig. 1).We report here the isolation of a new mutant (191c) which also appears to be in gene 66 but at a site distinct from E920g. The most striking phenotype of the mutant is the production of about 10% of the phage yield as “giant” virus particles, from 3 to 8 times longer than normal phage (Fig. 2).


Author(s):  
R.D. Leapman ◽  
S.Q. Sun ◽  
S-L. Shi ◽  
R.A. Buchanan ◽  
S.B. Andrews

Recent advances in rapid-freezing and cryosectioning techniques coupled with use of the quantitative signals available in the scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) can provide us with new methods for determining the water distributions of subcellular compartments. The water content is an important physiological quantity that reflects how fluid and electrolytes are regulated in the cell; it is also required to convert dry weight concentrations of ions obtained from x-ray microanalysis into the more relevant molar ionic concentrations. Here we compare the information about water concentrations from both elastic (annular dark-field) and inelastic (electron energy loss) scattering measurements.In order to utilize the elastic signal it is first necessary to increase contrast by removing the water from the cryosection. After dehydration the tissue can be digitally imaged under low-dose conditions, in the same way that STEM mass mapping of macromolecules is performed. The resulting pixel intensities are then converted into dry mass fractions by using an internal standard, e.g., the mean intensity of the whole image may be taken as representative of the bulk water content of the tissue.


TAPPI Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (05) ◽  
pp. 295-305
Author(s):  
Wesley Gilbert ◽  
Ivan Trush ◽  
Bruce Allison ◽  
Randy Reimer ◽  
Howard Mason

Normal practice in continuous digester operation is to set the production rate through the chip meter speed. This speed is seldom, if ever, adjusted except to change production, and most of the other digester inputs are ratioed to it. The inherent assumption is that constant chip meter speed equates to constant dry mass flow of chips. This is seldom, if ever, true. As a result, the actual production rate, effective alkali (EA)-to-wood and liquor-to-wood ratios may vary substantially from assumed values. This increases process variability and decreases profits. In this report, a new continuous digester production rate control strategy is developed that addresses this shortcoming. A new noncontacting near infrared–based chip moisture sensor is combined with the existing weightometer signal to estimate the actual dry chip mass feedrate entering the digester. The estimated feedrate is then used to implement a novel feedback control strategy that adjusts the chip meter speed to maintain the dry chip feedrate at the target value. The report details the results of applying the new measurements and control strategy to a dual vessel continuous digester.


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