Microfossil vacuum picker—a new tool for micropaleontologists

1992 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 689-690
Author(s):  
Sándor Némethy ◽  
Björn A. Malmgren

A considerable part of micropaleontological work consists of picking microfossils for various types of analyses. Physical removal of specimens from a sample is necessary, for example, in morphometric, stable isotope, geochemical, and molecular studies of microfossils. The traditional method for picking microfossils involves transfer of each specimen from the picking tray to a slide using a moistened brush or a needle. This process requires a great deal of time and the risk of losing or damaging the specimen on the way from the picking tray to the slide is apparent. Furthermore, in geochemical analyses, the use of a moistened brush or needle for picking considerably increases the risk of contamination by undesirable organic substances, such as amino acids and polysaccharids. The brush-licking practised by some micropaleontologists results in anthropogenic contamination, which affects the results of molecular micropaleontologic analyses. We present a simple and effective device for microfossil picking, which may save about 60 percent of the time devoted to picking microfossils and prevent contamination during preparation.

2009 ◽  
Vol 285 (9) ◽  
pp. 6285-6297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Li ◽  
Jason M. Aliotta ◽  
John M. Asara ◽  
Qian Wu ◽  
Mark S. Dooner ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Fredrick J. Rosario ◽  
Sammy Pardo ◽  
Trond M. Michelsen ◽  
Kathryn Erickson ◽  
Lorna Moore ◽  
...  

The placental villus syncytiotrophoblast, the nutrient-transporting and hormone-producing epithelium of the human placenta, is a critical regulator of fetal development and maternal physiology. However, the identities of the proteins synthesized and secreted by primary human trophoblast (PHT) cells remain unknown. Stable Isotope Labeling with Amino Acids in Cell Culture followed by mass spectrometry analysis of the conditioned media was used to identify secreted proteins and obtain information about their relative rates of synthesis in syncytialized multinucleated PHT cells isolated from normal term placental villus tissue (n = 4/independent placenta). A total of 1,344 proteins were identified, most of which have not previously been reported to be secreted by the human placenta or trophoblast. The majority of secreted proteins are involved in energy and carbon metabolism, glycolysis, biosynthesis of amino acids, purine metabolism, and fatty acid degradation. Histone family proteins and mitochondrial proteins were among proteins with the slowest synthesis rate whereas proteins associated with signaling and the plasma membrane were synthesized rapidly. There was a significant overlap between the PHT secretome and proteins known be secreted to the fetal circulation by the human placenta in vivo. The generated data will guide future experiments to determine the function of individual secreted proteins and will help us better understand how the placenta controls maternal and fetal physiology.


Author(s):  
S.V. Sverguzova ◽  
I. Shayhiev ◽  
Tom Otiti ◽  
Zh.A. Sapronova

ways of production of ceramic materials with use as the plasticizing additive of the sulphitic and alcohol bards (SAB), the calcium citrate filtrate (CCF) which is liquid withdrawal of production of citric acid in the microbiological way are known. However introduction to raw mix of CoB reduces forming humidity and fall of the formed products insufficiently, and an essential lack of FTsK is the low durability of products on compression with a big volume mass of samples. In work the possibility of use as the plasticizing additive to a clay lot of withdrawal of the spirit industry – melasses bards is investigated. As a part of molasses the remains of amino acids and other organic substances which have the plasticizing effect on clay materials contain. On the example of natural clays of three various fields the plasticizing action melasses bards is proved, and the number of plasticity of the studied clays increases in direct ratio to increase in additive melassny bards in clay raw mix. It is shown that introduction to raw mix melasses bards leads to improvement of appearance of pottery, decrease in jointing, increase in durability for Veselovsky clay for 7%, for the Oryol clay for 67%, for Bessonovskaya – for 23%. Research of the received ceramic samples on frost resistance according to requirements of GOST bards unlike the products which aren’t containing additive bards showed high frost resistance of products with additive melass. Also lowered decrease in durability and loss of mass of the samples containing additive melassny bards is noted


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristian Klumpp ◽  
Claudia Marcolli ◽  
Thomas Peter

Abstract. Potassium-feldspars (K-feldspars), such as microcline, are considered key dust minerals inciting ice nucleation in mixed phase clouds. Besides the high ice nucleation activity of microcline, recent studies also revealed a high sensi-tivity of microcline towards interaction with solutes on its surface. Here, we investigate the effect of organic and bio-organic substances on the ice nucleation activity of microcline, with the aim to better understand the underlying sur-face interactions. We performed immersion freezing experiments with microcline in solutions of three carboxylic acids, five amino acids and two polyols to represent these compound classes. By means of a differential scanning calorimeter we investigated the freezing of emulsified droplets of microcline suspended in various solutions. Depend-ing on the type of solute, different effects were observed. In the case of carboxylic acids (acetic, oxalic and citric acid), the measured heterogeneous onset temperatures, Thet, showed no significant deviation from the behavior pre-dicted by the water activity criterion, Thet(aw) = Tmelt(aw+Δaw), which relates Thet with the melting point temperature Tmelt via a constant water activity offset Δaw. While this behavior could be interpreted as a lack of interaction of the solute molecules with the surface, the carboxylic acids caused the fraction of heterogeneously frozen water, Fhet(aw), to decrease by up to 40 % with increasing solute concentrations. In combination, unaltered Thet(aw) and reduced Fhet(aw) suggest that active sites were largely deactivated by the acid molecules, but amongst those remaining active are also the best sites with the highest Thet. A deviation from this behavior is citric acid, which showed not only a de-crease in Fhet, but also a decrease in Thet of up to 4 K for water activities below 0.99, pointing to a depletion of the best active sites by interactions with the citrate ions. When neutralized solutions of the acids were used instead, the de-crease in Fhet became even more pronounced. The slope of Thet(aw) was different for each of the neutralized acid solu-tions. In the case of amino acid solutions, we found a decrease in Thet (up to 10 K), significantly below the Δaw-criterion, as well as a reduction in Fhet (up to 60 %). Finally, in case of the investigated polyols, no significant devia-tion of Thet from the Δaw-criterion was observed, and no significant deviation of Fhet in comparison to a pure water suspension was found. Furthermore, we measured the effects of aging on the ice nucleation activity in experiments with microcline suspended in solutions for up to seven days, and tested the reversibility of the interaction with the solutes after aging for 10 days. For citric acid, an ongoing irreversible degradation of the ice nucleation activity was observed, whereas the amino acids showed completely reversible effects. In summary, our experiments demonstrate a remarkable sensitivity of microcline ice nucleation activity to surface interactions with various solutes, underscoring the importance of the history of such particles from source to frozen cloud droplet in the atmosphere.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junki Uchiyama ◽  
Yasushi Ishihama ◽  
Koshi Imami

SummaryMonitoring translational regulation in response to environmental signals is crucial for understanding cellular proteostasis. However, only limited approaches are currently available for quantifying acute changes in protein synthesis induced by stimuli. Recently, a clickable puromycin analog, O-propargyl-puromycin (OPP), was developed and applied to label the C-termini of nascent polypeptide chains (NPCs). Following affinity purification via a click reaction, OPP allows for a proteomic analysis of NPCs. Despite its advantage, the affinity purification of NPCs using magnetic beads or resins inherently suffers from significant non-specific protein binding, which hinders accurate quantification of the nascent proteins. To address this issue, we employed dual pulse labeling of NPCs with both OPP and stable isotope labeled amino acids to distinguish bona fide NPCs from non-specific proteins, thereby enabling the accurate quantitative profiling of NPCs. We applied this method to dissecting the transcription-coupled translation responses and quantified ~3,000 nascent proteins. We found that the translation of a subset of ribosomal proteins (e.g., RPSA, RPLP0) as well as signaling proteins (e.g., BCAR3, EFNA1, DUSP1) was significantly repressed by transcription inhibition. Together, the present method provides an accurate and broadly applicable nascent proteome profiling for many biological applications at the level of translation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document