An ESR Study of Secondary Radical Reactions in an Irradiated Sulfur-Containing Glycoprotein

1976 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 190
Author(s):  
Edmund S. Copeland
2016 ◽  
Vol 52 (55) ◽  
pp. 8608-8611 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Verstraeten ◽  
R. Göstl ◽  
R. P. Sijbesma

Subjecting hexaarylbiimidazole in polymer architectures to stress generates coloured triphenylimidazolyl radicals that initiate secondary radical reactions unifying stress-sensing and damage-repair.


1977 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 650-659 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. H. Weinstein

Abstract Methods for incorporation of effective antioxidant groups into both emulsion diene homo- or copolymers and stereospecific diene homopolymers via free radical reactions of sulfur-containing compounds were described. They involved either chain transfer reactions of phenol- or amine-substituted mercaptans or disulfides in emulsion diene polymerization systems or free-radical additions of phenol- or amine-substituted alkyl mercaptans to polydienes after polymerization. The latter reactions were applicable both to polydiene latexes and to solutions of stereospecific polydienes. The potential effectiveness of certain phenol- or amine-substituted mercaptans and disulfides to interact with polymer radicals was determined by measurement of chain transfer constants in bulk styrene polymerization. The efficiency of conferment of antioxidant activity upon polydienes by sulfur-containing compounds via chain transfer or addition reactions was determined by oxygen absorption studies of preextracted polymers. In some instances the relationship between the degree of oxidation resistance conferred upon a polymer with its concentration of chemically bound antioxidant function was determined by colorimetric or uv spectrophotometric analysis.


Author(s):  
E.M. Kuhn ◽  
K.D. Marenus ◽  
M. Beer

Fibers composed of different types of collagen cannot be differentiated by conventional electron microscopic stains. We are developing staining procedures aimed at identifying collagen fibers of different types.Pt(Gly-L-Met)Cl binds specifically to sulfur-containing amino acids. Different collagens have methionine (met) residues at somewhat different positions. A good correspondence has been reported between known met positions and Pt(GLM) bands in rat Type I SLS (collagen aggregates in which molecules lie adjacent to each other in exact register). We have confirmed this relationship in Type III collagen SLS (Fig. 1).


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 613-620
Author(s):  
Clara Ortegón Salas ◽  
Katharina Schneider ◽  
Christopher Horst Lillig ◽  
Manuela Gellert

Processing of and responding to various signals is an essential cellular function that influences survival, homeostasis, development, and cell death. Extra- or intracellular signals are perceived via specific receptors and transduced in a particular signalling pathway that results in a precise response. Reversible post-translational redox modifications of cysteinyl and methionyl residues have been characterised in countless signal transduction pathways. Due to the low reactivity of most sulfur-containing amino acid side chains with hydrogen peroxide, for instance, and also to ensure specificity, redox signalling requires catalysis, just like phosphorylation signalling requires kinases and phosphatases. While reducing enzymes of both cysteinyl- and methionyl-derivates have been characterised in great detail before, the discovery and characterisation of MICAL proteins evinced the first examples of specific oxidases in signal transduction. This article provides an overview of the functions of MICAL proteins in the redox regulation of cellular functions.


2003 ◽  
Vol 766 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Sekiguchi ◽  
J. Koike ◽  
K. Ueoka ◽  
J. Ye ◽  
H. Okamura ◽  
...  

AbstractAdhesion strength in sputter-deposited Cu thin films on various types of barrier layers was investigated by scratch test. The barrier layers were Ta1-xNx with varied nitrogen concentration of 0, 0.2, 0.3, and 0.5. Microstructure observation by TEM indicated that each layer consists of mixed phases of β;-Ta, bcc-TaN0.1, hexagonal-TaN, and fcc-TaN, depending on the nitrogen concentration. A sulfur- containing amorphous phase was also present discontinuously at the Cu/barrier interfaces in all samples. Scratch test showed that delamination occurred at the Cu/barrier interface and that the overall adhesion strength increased with increasing the nitrogen concentration. A good correlation was found between the measured adhesion strength and the composing phases in the barrier layer.


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