scholarly journals Molecular-mass distribution of humus acids of taiga soils

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
E. D. Lodygin ◽  
R. S. Vasilevich

Purpose of the study: to reveal the influence of hydromorphism and agricultural use on the molecular-mass distribution (MMD) of humic (HAs) and fulvic acids (FAs) isolated from the soils of the European northeast of Russia. To assess the influence of the acidity of the medium on the MWD of FAs. Place and time of the event. The studies were carried out on the territory of the middle taiga (Maksimovsky station of the Institute of Biology of the Federal Research Center of the KSC UB RAS, located 8 km west of the city of Syktyvkar and the field of the Syktyvkar state farm, 5 km south-west of Syktyvkar, on the watershed of the Sysola and Vazhel-yu rivers) and northern taiga (3 km west of the Troitsko-Pechorsk station). The objects of the study were humic substances isolated from typical podzolic (Eutric Albic Retisol (Loamic)), gleypodzolic (Eutric Albic Stagnic Retisol (Loamic)), peaty-podzolic surface-gleyed (Eutric Albic Stagnic Histic) Retisol (Loamic Eutric Albic Retisol (Loamic)) soils. The soil sampling period is from 1 to 30 August 2014. Methodology. Quantitative analysis of the MMD of HA and FA preparations was performed using liquid size exclusion chromatography (gel chromatography) on Sephadex G-25 and G-100 gels with continuous automatic registration of the optical density of the eluate (λ = 280 nm) in a quartz flow cell, K 9 × 60 cm column (Pharmacia, Sweden). Distilled water, 0.05 M NaOH solution, and Tris-HCl buffer with pH = 8.2 were used as the eluent. Main results. Studies of the MMD of humic substances have been carried out. It was found that HAs contain three fractions with different molecular weights: ≥ 150 kDa, 73–80 kDa, and 13–23 kDa; FAs – two fractions: ≥ 5 kDa, 1–2 kDa. The low molecular weight of FAs, together with a large amount of oxygen-containing functional groups, contributes to their better solubility and migration ability in soils. The HAs of automorphic soils are characterized by a high content of low molecular weight fractions, and the proportion of the high molecular weight fraction in the HAs of the litter is 1.5–2.0 times higher than in the HAs of the podzolic horizon, which may be due to the migration of the low molecular weight fraction down the profile. The high proportion of the acidic low molecular weight fraction in the podzolic horizon promotes the decomposition of soil minerals and their leaching into the illuvial horizon. The influence of agricultural use of soils on the fractional composition of humic compounds is estimated. A sharp increase in the share of the high molecular weight fraction in the preparations of HAs of arable podzolic soil by 2–4 times compared with the HAs of virgin podzolic soils was noted, which is due to the cultivation of the arable horizon, the nature of the incoming plant residues and the increased microbiological activity of the developed soils. The effect of acidity of the medium on the character of chromatograms of FA preparations isolated from the main types of soils of the Komi Republic was studied. It has been shown that in the region of high pH values of the eluent 9–13, the absence of fractionation is associated with the association of FAs, a change in their conformation, and the effect of “over-exclusion”. Elution with distilled water (pH = 6.5) allows the separation of FAs into two fractions with molecular weights ≥ 5 kDa and 1–2 kDa.

1981 ◽  
Vol 46 (03) ◽  
pp. 612-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
U Schmitz-Huebner ◽  
L Balleisen ◽  
F Asbeck ◽  
J van de Loo

SummaryHigh and low molecular weight heparin fractions obtained by gel filtration chromatography of sodium mucosal heparin were injected subcutaneously into six healthy volunteers and compared with the unfractionated substance in a cross-over trial. Equal doses of 5,000 U were administered twice daily over a period of three days and heparin activity was repeatedly controlled before and 2, 4, 8 hrs after injection by means of the APTT, the anti-Xa clotting test and a chromogenic substrate assay. In addition, the in vivo effect of subcutaneously administered fractionated heparin on platelet function was examined on three of the volunteers. The results show that s.c. injections of the low molecular weight fraction induced markedly higher anti-Xa activity than injections of the other preparations. At the same time, APTT results did not significantly differ. Unfractionated heparin and the high molecular weight fraction enhanced ADP-induced platelet aggregation and collagen-mediated MDA production, while the low molecular weight fraction hardly affected these assays, but potently inhibited thrombin-induced MDA production. All heparin preparations stimulated the release of platelet Factor 4 in plasma. During the three-day treatment periods, no side-effects and no significant changes in the response to heparin injections were detected.


1953 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 102-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. M. Kolthoff ◽  
R. G. Gutmacher

Abstract The sorption capacities toward GR-S five commercial carbon blacks are in decreasing order: Spheron-6, Vulcan-1, Philblack-0, Sterling-105, Philblack-A. Apparently, the sorption is not related to surface area. The sorption on Vulcan-1 of GR-S from its solutions in seven different solvents or mixtures of solvents increases with decreasing solvent power for the rubber. The sorption curves of two “cold rubbers,” polymerized at −10 and +5° respectively, showed little difference from that of 50° GR-S. Previous heating of carbon black in nitrogen at 500 or 1100° increased the sorption by about 20 per cent over unheated carbon. Air-heating of carbon black at 425° did not cause a difference in the sorption from benzene solution, but produced an increase in the sorption of rubber from n-heptane solution. In the range 75% butadiene-25% styrene to 5% butadiene-95% styrene, there is practically no effect of the degree of unsaturation on the sorption. Polystyrene of high intrinsic viscosity exhibits a peculiar behavior with furnace blacks. Vulcan-1 sorbed microgel as well as the sol fraction from n-heptane solutions of GR-S containing microgel (conversion 74.7 and 81.5 per cent). There was no appreciable difference in the amount of sorption of rubber fractions having average molecular weights varying from 433,000 to 85,000. There is little change in the amount sorbed after two hours of shaking, but the intrinsic viscosity of the residual rubber decreases with time. The low molecular-weight rubber is sorbed more rapidly, but is slowly replaced by the more tightly sorbed high molecular weight fraction. Partial fractionation of a rubber sample can be achieved by allowing the rubber solution to flow through a column of weakly sorbing carbon black. A large portion of the sorbed rubber can be recovered from the column by washing it with a good solvent such as xylene. Bound rubber is produced by intimate mixing of equal parts of carbon black and rubber swollen in chloroform, when the mixture is dried in vacuum at 80° or at room temperature. Milling is not essential to get bound rubber.


1974 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 355-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
JENNIFER M. DEHNEL ◽  
P. D. McCONAGHEY ◽  
M. J. O. FRANCIS

SUMMARY Plasma somatomedin is the intermediary through which growth hormone (GH) exerts its effects on the growing skeleton. Somatomedin activity may be produced in vitro by perfusion of the liver and kidneys of rats with Waymouth's medium containing GH. The relationship between the activity of plasma somatomedin and somatomedin of hepatic and renal origin has yet to be clarified. Somatomedin from plasma can be separated into active fractions of both high and low molecular weight. Similarly, ultrafiltration of medium containing somatomedin of hepatic origin indicates the existence of two active fractions, one of high molecular weight (greater than 50000) and one of low molecular weight (less than 1000). The latter can be attributed to the release of amino acids, such as serine and glutamine, by the perfused tissue. The high molecular weight fraction is believed to represent GH-dependent somatomedin. Fractions that inhibit production of cartilage matrix are present in liver perfusates as well as in plasma. These results provide further evidence that the liver is a source of GH-dependent somatomedin in vivo. Furthermore, cartilage growth may be controlled not only by the GH-stimulated release of somatomedin by the liver, but also by its release of acid-labile somatomedin inhibitors.


1981 ◽  
Vol 196 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Duncan ◽  
M K Pratten ◽  
H C Cable ◽  
H Ringsdorf ◽  
J B Lloyd

Rates of pinocytosis of different molecular-weight distributions of 125I-labelled poly(vinylpyrrolidone) by rat visceral yolk sacs and rat peritoneal macrophages were measured in vitro. Four preparations of mean molecular weights 50 000, 84 000, 700 000 and 7 000 000, were used. Macrophages captured the highest-molecular-weight preparation more rapidly than the other preparations. In contrast, rate of capture by the yolk sac decreased with increasing molecular weight. Incubations with a very-high-molecular-weight fraction derived from the 7 000 000-average-mol. wt. preparation clearly demonstrated that very large polymer molecules are not accumulated by the yolk sac, but are preferentially captured by macrophages. Analysis of the 125I-labelled poly(vinylpyrrolidone) internalized by the two cell types confirmed that low-molecular-weight material is preferred by the yolk sac, whereas the macrophage is less discriminating.


1981 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 229-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Clamp ◽  
G. Fraser ◽  
A. E. Read

1. Mucus samples obtained from colectomy colons from 10 patients with ulcerative colitis and four patients with Crohn's disease of the colon, together with samples from 10 normal postmortem colons, have been studied. 2. Two glycoprotein fractions were isolated from mucosal scrapings by gel-permeation chromatography. The high-molecular-weight fraction consisted largely of mucus glycoproteins and was further purified to the glycopolypeptides. The low-molecular-weight fraction contained a glycoprotein with a high mannose content. The carbohydrate content of both the mucus glycoprotein and glycopolypeptide fractions were significantly reduced in active colitis. 3. Oligosaccharides were prepared from the mucus glycoprotein material. In the normal material more than half the units contained eight or more monosaccharide residues, whereas in the disease material the bulk of the units were smaller than this.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (46) ◽  
pp. 18-18
Author(s):  
Alexander Saakian ◽  
◽  

polydisperse compounds. Under the influence of agricultural use, the dispersion of LHS increases, and the molecular weight composition of LHS is trans-formed towards the accumulation of fractions with lower molecular weights in their composition. As a result, the number average molecular weight of LHS decreases from 15230 amu. in LHS virgin chernozem up to 11180-12770 amu. near LHS chernozem under permanent crops and fallow. The replacement of permanent steam with a deposit does not fundamentally affect the degree of dispersion of LHS and the values of the molecular weights of the fractions. There is only a tendency towards an increase in the relative content of fractions with high molecular weights. This is reflected in the value of the average molecular mass of LHS, which increased from 11180 amu in the variant with permanent vapor to 12530 amu. LHS has deposits. Keywords: TYPICAL CHERNOZEM, GEL-CHROMATOGRAM, FRACTION, MOLECULAR MASS OF FRACTION, AVERAGE MOLECULAR MASS, LGS (LABILE HUMUS SUBSTANCES)


Author(s):  
Roman Vasilevitch ◽  
Evgeniy Lodygin ◽  
Vasiliy Beznosikov

It is established that the humic acids (HA) of tundra soils contain three fractions with a different molecular weight: ≥600, 62–83 and 2,6–5,3 kDa; fulvic acids (FA) — one fraction — 1,5–4,4 kDa. The maintenance of a low molecular weight fraction of HA considerably exceeds a share of medium and high molecular weight fractions. Reclamation of tundra surface-gley soils leads to decrease of a share of high molecular weight and to increase of a share of low molecular weight fraction as a part of HA. Correlative dependences between the contents of HA molecular weight fractions with parameters of HA are established. Refs 16. Figs 1. Tables 3.


2008 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 1934578X0800300
Author(s):  
Asmita V. Patel ◽  
David C. Wright ◽  
Maricela Adrian Romero ◽  
Gerald Blunden ◽  
Michael D. Guiry

The aqueous fractions of the dry methanol extracts (500 ppm) of sixty marine algal species were screened for molluscicidal activity against Biomphalaria glabrata, which is an important host of the bilharzia-causing Schistosoma species. The majority of the extracts tested were inactive at the concentration used, but those of Fucus serratus, F. vesiculosus, Pelvetia canaliculata, Ascophyllum nodosum, Halidrys siliquosa, Bifurcaria bifurcata, Dictyota dichotoma and Halopithys incurva all showed significant molluscicidal activity. Treatment with polyvinylpolypyrrolidone (PVPP) either removed or drastically reduced the activity of the extracts of F. serratus, F. vesiculosus, P. canaliculata, A. nodosum, Halidrys siliquosa and Halopithys incurva, which suggested that the active compounds in the extracts of these species were polyphenolic in nature. The active extracts of the other two seaweed species did not appear to be affected by treatment with PVPP. Dialysis of the active extracts against distilled water separated them into high and low molecular weight fractions. In the case of the two Fucus species, P. canaliculata and A. nodosum, the activity resided in the high molecular weight fraction, whereas with all the other species, the activity was found in the low molecular weight fraction. 1H NMR spectroscopic examination of the active extracts confirmed that the molluscicidal components of the extracts of the Fucus species, P. canaliculata and A. nodosum were high molecular weight polyphenols.


1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (4) ◽  
pp. 280-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Michael Bowness

Slices of various types of cartilage were incubated with either L-[6-3H]fucose or [1,4-3H(N)]putrescine. Homogenization of the slices and fractionation of the homogenates showed for both labels that an insoluble collagenase-resistant fraction had the highest specific activity (dpm/mg dry weight). Examination of an exhaustive proteolytic digest of this insoluble fraction by ion-exchange high performance liquid chromatography showed the presence of γ-glutamyl[3H]putrescine. Chromatography of solubilized [3H]fucoprotein fractions showed the presence of several low molecular weight peaks, as well as high molecular weight material. Incubation of [3H]fucoprotein extracts with transglutaminase increased the high molecular weight peaks and decreased the low molecular weight ones. Incubation of the cartilage slices with L-[3H]fucose plus 0.5 mM dansylcadaverine, an inhibitor of transglutaminase, caused a decrease in the insoluble and high molecular weight fraction relative to the low molecular weight peaks. It is hypothesized that this is due to inhibition of cross-link formation between fucoprotein components of the cartilage which are transglutaminase substrates. One major low molecular weight peak, which labels with both fucose and putrescine, corresponds in size with the 15 000 subunit of collagen III aminopropeptide, which is known to be a substrate for transglutaminase.


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