The Fate of Spent Bleach Liquor Material in Receiving Waters: Characterization of Chloroorganics in Sediments

1988 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Filipe de Sousa ◽  
Lars M. Strömberg ◽  
Knut P. Kringstad

Sediments collected at various distances from pulp mills producing bleached chemical pulp were characterized with respect to the presence of chlorinated material extractable by hexane/isopropanol. Also the presence of chlorinated high molecular weight material from spent bleach liquors was investigated by oxidative degradation. The results show that the major part of the hexane/isopropanol soluble material in sediments differs from that in spent bleach liquors. This suggests that this material originates from sources other than spent bleach liquors or is formed by chemical and/or biological transformations of such material. However, the sediments do contain small quantities of chlorinated phenolic compounds and high molecular weight material originating from spent bleach liquors.

1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Müller-Berghaus ◽  
J-C Bernhard ◽  
I Mahn

In two consecutive steps, thrombin cleaves the fibrinopeptides A and B from fibrinogen producing des-A fibrin and des-AB fibrin. Labeled des-A fibrin was prepared by batroxobin and labeled des-AB fibrin by clotting of 125I-fibrinogen with thrombin. Fibrin solubilized in buffered urea was mixed with plasma containing 131I-fibrinogen (fibrin:fibrinogen ratio = 1:20). These fibrinfibrinogen mixtures were applied to sepharose CL- 6B columns eq ui librated with buffered plasma (0.0025 M EDTA, 0.1 M NaCl, 0.05 M tris, 0.005 M EACA, 2 AT U hirudin/ml, 500 KIU a protinin/ml, 0.003 M NaN3, pH 7.4). Plasma was used as an equilibration and elution medium to prevent precipitation of fibrin in the columns. At 20°C, labeled des-A fibrin as well as des-AB fibrin were eluted in the void volume as high-molecular weight aggregates (peak A) and separated from m onomeric labeled fibrinogen (peak B). At 37°C, however, des- A fibrin was eluted at the same position as monomeric fibrinogen (peak B), whereas des-AB fibrin was eluted in the void volume as at 20°C. Rechromatography of isolated fractions of peak A and peak B at different temperatures showed that monomeric fibrin isolated at 37°C formed high molecular weight material at 20°C, and high-molecular weight fibrin isolated at 20°C dissociated at 37 ° C. The results suggest that des-A fibrin solubilized in plasma in the absence of calcium ismonomeric at 37°C but forms high-molecular weight aggregates at lower temperature, whereas des-AB fibrin is oligomeric at 20°C as well as at 37°C.


1982 ◽  
Vol 47 (03) ◽  
pp. 197-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kurt Huber ◽  
Johannes Kirchheimer ◽  
Bernd R Binder

SummaryUrokinase (UK) could be purified to apparent homogeneity starting from crude urine by sequential adsorption and elution of the enzyme to gelatine-Sepharose and agmatine-Sepharose followed by gel filtration on Sephadex G-150. The purified product exhibited characteristics of the high molecular weight urokinase (HMW-UK) but did contain two distinct entities, one of which exhibited a two chain structure as reported for the HMW-UK while the other one exhibited an apparent single chain structure. The purification described is rapid and simple and results in an enzyme with probably no major alterations. Yields are high enough to obtain purified enzymes for characterization of UK from individual donors.


1992 ◽  
Vol 57 (10) ◽  
pp. 2151-2156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Chabreček ◽  
Ladislav Šoltés ◽  
Hynek Hradec ◽  
Jiří Filip ◽  
Eduard Orviský

Two methods for the preparation of high molecular weight [3H]hyaluronic acid were investigated. In the first one, hydrogen atoms in the molecule were replaced by tritium. This isotopic substitution was performed in aqueous solution using Pd/CaCO3 as the catalyst. In the second method, the high molecular weight hyaluronic acid was alkylated with [3H]methyl bromide in liquid ammonia at a temperature of -33.5 °C. High-performance gel permeation chromatographic separation method was used for the isolation and characterization of the high molecular weight [3H]hyaluronic acid. Molecular weight parameters for the labelled biopolymers were Mw = 128 kDa, Mw/Mn = 1.88 (first method) and Mw = 268 kDa, Mw/Mn = 1.55 (second method). The high molecular weight [3H]hyaluronic acid having Mw = 268 kDa was degraded further by specific hyaluronidase. Products of the enzymatic depolymerization were observed to be identical for both, labelled and cold biopolymer. This finding indicates that the described labelling procedure using [3H]methyl bromide does not induce any major structural rearrangements in the molecule.


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