scholarly journals Rapid In Situ Enumeration of Physiologically Active Bacteria in River Waters using Fluorescent Probes.

1997 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
NOBUYASU YAMAGUCHI ◽  
TAKEHIKO KENZAKA ◽  
MASAO NASU
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Li ◽  
Zheng Lv ◽  
Zhongwei Man ◽  
Zhenzhen Xu ◽  
YuLing Wei ◽  
...  

Amyloid fibrils are associated with many neurodegenerative diseases. In-situ and in-vivo visualization of amyloid fibrils is important for medical diagnostic and requires fluorescent probes with both excitation and emission wavelengths in...


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria Khoroshevskaya

The article is devoted to the study of vanadium, a metal capable of stimulating the growth of phytoplankton in situ and has the greatest biological activity in dissolved form. The pattern of an increase in the concentration of vanadium dissolved forms in the mixing zones during the transition from river waters to seawaters is known. In this article, we examine the behavior, ratio and change in the concentrations of vanadium dissolved and suspended forms during the passage of geochemical barriers. The estuarine zone of the Razdolnaya River–Amur Bay (Sea of Japan) is considered as "river-sea" mixing zone. Modelling of physicochemical processes was carried out using the Selector-S and MINTEQA2/PRODEFA2 software systems. Ion-associative models of sea and river water were built and the modelling of the process of their mixing was carried out using the Selector-S software package. The sorption process was simulated using the MINTEQA2/PRODEFA2 software package. The results of modelling physicochemical processes occurring at geochemical barriers help to understand the reasons for changes in concentrations, both total vanadium and biologically active dissolved vanadium forms, during the passage of geochemical barriers in the "river-sea" mixing zones. The results showed that there is a change in the dissolved forms of vanadium migration, their transformation and an increase in the concentration of dissolved forms of vanadium at the geochemical barrier


1999 ◽  
Vol 65 (4) ◽  
pp. 1753-1761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henrik Christensen ◽  
Michael Hansen ◽  
Jan Sørensen

ABSTRACT A fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique based on binding of a rhodamine-labelled oligonucleotide probe to 16S rRNA was used to estimate the numbers of ribosome-rich bacteria in soil samples. Such bacteria, which have high cellular rRNA contents, were assumed to be active (and growing) in the soil. Hybridization to an rRNA probe, EUB338, for the domain Bacteria was performed with a soil slurry, and this was followed by collection of the bacteria by membrane filtration (pore size, 0.2 μm). A nonsense probe, NONEUB338 (which has a nucleotide sequence complementary to the nucleotide sequence of probe EUB338), was used as a control for nonspecific staining. Counting and size classification into groups of small, medium, and large bacteria were performed by fluorescence microscopy. To compensate for a difference in the relative staining intensities of the probes and for binding by the rhodamine part of the probe, control experiments in which excess unlabelled probe was added were performed. This resulted in lower counts with EUB338 but not with NONEUB338, indicating that nonspecific staining was due to binding of rhodamine to the bacteria. A value of 4.8 × 108 active bacteria per g of dry soil was obtained for bulk soil incubated for 2 days with 0.3% glucose. In comparison, a value of 3.8 × 108 active bacteria per g of dry soil was obtained for soil which had been air dried and subsequently rewetted. In both soils, the majority (68 to 77%) of actively growing bacteria were members of the smallest size class (cell width, 0.25 to 0.5 μm), but the active (and growing) bacteria still represented only approximately 5% of the total bacterial population determined by DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining. The FISH technique in which slurry hybridization is used holds great promise for use with phylogenetic probes and for automatic counting of soil bacteria.


1997 ◽  
Vol 35 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 81-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Joret ◽  
V. Mennecart ◽  
C. Robert ◽  
B. Compagnon ◽  
P. Cervantes

The aim of this study was to compare the level of removal and inactivation of indigenous bacteria during drinking water production as evaluated by culture techniques and epifluorescent microscopic counts of metabolically active bacteria (in situ respiring bacteria i.e. able to metabolise CTC: cyano 2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride). Two sets of experiments were designed: a) bacterial counts through a full scale drinking water treatment plant (multibarrier treatment including coagulation-flocculation-settling, sand filtration, ozonation, biological GAC filtration, post-chlorination) and distribution system; b) benchscale disinfection studies in order to re-evaluate the C.t values necessary to inactivate laboratory grown E. coli or indigenous bacteria from water by ozone and chlorine. Main conclusions of this study are: a) significant amounts of in situ respiring bacteria (undetected by the classical culture techniques) are detected in finished water; b) the efficiency of ozone and chlorine recorded by microscopic counts of active bacteria is much less than supposed by classical enumerations of culturable bacteria; c) previous results reported in the literature may have largely overestimated the bactericidal efficiency of disinfectants used for producing drinking water.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 2101-2110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Plamena R. Angelova ◽  
Bikram Keshari Agrawalla ◽  
Pia A. Elustondo ◽  
Jacob Gordon ◽  
Toshikazu Shiba ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (19) ◽  
pp. eaba2556 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingjie Wu ◽  
Haitao Zhao ◽  
Auginia Natalia ◽  
Carine Z. J. Lim ◽  
Nicholas R. Y. Ho ◽  
...  

Exosomes are nanoscale vesicles distinguished by characteristic biophysical and biomolecular features; current analytical approaches, however, remain univariate. Here, we develop a dedicated platform for multiparametric exosome analysis—through simultaneous biophysical and biomolecular evaluation of the same vesicles—directly in clinical biofluids. Termed templated plasmonics for exosomes, the technology leverages in situ growth of gold nanoshells on vesicles to achieve multiselectivity. For biophysical selectivity, the nanoshell formation is templated by and tuned to distinguish exosome dimensions. For biomolecular selectivity, the nanoshell plasmonics locally quenches fluorescent probes only if they are target-bound on the same vesicle. The technology thus achieves multiplexed analysis of diverse exosomal biomarkers (e.g., proteins and microRNAs) but remains unresponsive to nonvesicle biomarkers. When implemented on a microfluidic, smartphone-based sensor, the platform is rapid, sensitive, and wash-free. It not only distinguished biomarker organizational states in native clinical samples but also showed that the exosomal subpopulation could more accurately differentiate patient prognosis.


2017 ◽  
Vol 89 (15) ◽  
pp. 7861-7868 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan Ding ◽  
Houyu Wang ◽  
Bin Song ◽  
Xiaoyuan Ji ◽  
Yuanyuan Su ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 1495-1503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bixia Lin ◽  
Ying Yu ◽  
Fangfei Liu ◽  
Yujuan Cao ◽  
Manli Guo

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