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2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (9) ◽  
pp. e2018342118
Author(s):  
Rebecca A. Ellwood ◽  
Jennifer E. Hewitt ◽  
Roberta Torregrossa ◽  
Ashleigh M. Philp ◽  
Justin P. Hardee ◽  
...  

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an X-linked recessive disorder characterized by progressive muscle degeneration and weakness due to mutations in the dystrophin gene. The symptoms of DMD share similarities with those of accelerated aging. Recently, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) supplementation has been suggested to modulate the effects of age-related decline in muscle function, and metabolic H2S deficiencies have been implicated in affecting muscle mass in conditions such as phenylketonuria. We therefore evaluated the use of sodium GYY4137 (NaGYY), a H2S-releasing molecule, as a possible approach for DMD treatment. Using the dys-1(eg33) Caenorhabditis elegans DMD model, we found that NaGYY treatment (100 µM) improved movement, strength, gait, and muscle mitochondrial structure, similar to the gold-standard therapeutic treatment, prednisone (370 µM). The health improvements of either treatment required the action of the kinase JNK-1, the transcription factor SKN-1, and the NAD-dependent deacetylase SIR-2.1. The transcription factor DAF-16 was required for the health benefits of NaGYY treatment, but not prednisone treatment. AP39 (100 pM), a mitochondria-targeted H2S compound, also improved movement and strength in the dys-1(eg33) model, further implying that these improvements are mitochondria-based. Additionally, we found a decline in total sulfide and H2S-producing enzymes in dystrophin/utrophin knockout mice. Overall, our results suggest that H2S deficit may contribute to DMD pathology, and rectifying/overcoming the deficit with H2S delivery compounds has potential as a therapeutic approach to DMD treatment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 843-855
Author(s):  
Jeff P. Jaderborg ◽  
Mindy J. Spiehs ◽  
Bryan L. Woodbury ◽  
Alfredo DiCostanzo ◽  
David B. Parker

HighlightsAromatic compounds generated 72.6% of the total odor activity values (OAVs) over time.Cold treatments had significantly lower total OAVs than hot treatments regardless of the age of the bedded pack.Abstract. Beef cattle producers are beginning to raise cattle in confinement facilities such as slatted-floor barns, hoop barns, and mono-slope facilities. Hoop and mono-slope facilities typically use bedding packs as part of their manure management system, with crop residues being the most commonly used bedding material. This study was conducted to determine the effects of bedding material, i.e., corn stover (CS), bean stover (BS), wheat straw (WS), or pine wood chips (PC), and environmental ambient temperature, i.e., cold (15°C) or hot (30°C), on the concentrations of odorous volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in air samples collected in the headspace above lab-scale bedded packs over a 42-day period. Total aromatic compounds, sulfide compounds, straight-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), and branched-chain fatty acids (BCFAs) were measured and used to calculate total odor activity values (OAVs) for each bedding and temperature effect. No significant three-way interactions for bedding material × ambient temperature × age of bedded pack were observed. Significant bedding material × ambient temperature interactions were observed for total aromatic compounds and total sulfide compounds (p = 0.0455 and p = 0.0083, respectively). The concentration of total aromatic compounds was greater for all hot treatments compared to cold treatments, with hot-CS and hot-WS bedding types (389.83 and 365.5 ng L-1, respectively) significantly (p < 0.05) greater than all other bedding types, while total aromatic compounds were lowest (87.09 ng L-1) for BS across cold treatments. Total sulfide compounds from cold-PC (51.69 ng L-1) were significantly (p = 0.0143) greater than all other treatments. Within hot treatments, total sulfide compounds were similar across all bedding materials. Total SCFAs for both cold and hot treatments decreased significantly from weeks 4 to 6. Total SCFA concentrations within weeks were significantly (p < 0.0001) greater for WS and CS compared to BS and PC but similar across bedding materials at week 6. Total BCFA concentrations from bedded packs containing CS and WS were significantly (p < 0.0001) higher at week 4 compared to concentrations from bedded packs containing BS or PC. As bedded packs aged, total BCFA concentrations for all bedding materials were similar at week 6. Total OAVs decreased over time for both hot and cold treatments, although cold treatments had significantly (p < 0.0001) lower total OAVs regardless of the age of the bedded pack. Aromatic compounds generated 72.6% of the total OAV over the 42-day study. Bedding types BS and PC had the lowest total OAVs across all weeks. The results indicate that feedlot operators maintaining bedded pack facilities will achieve the greatest overall odor reduction when using BS or PC bedding material, no matter the ambient temperature. Keywords: Bedding, Beef, Odor, Volatile organic compounds.


2020 ◽  
Vol 242 ◽  
pp. 218
Author(s):  
Pavel FEDOTOV ◽  
Arkadiy SENCHENKO ◽  
Konstantin FEDOTOV ◽  
Aleksander BURDONOV

The paper presents the analysis of studies of the enrichment of sulfide and oxidized ores in Yakutia deposits. The ore of the deposit is a mixture of primary, mixed and oxidized ores. The main useful component of the studied ore samples is gold with a content of 1.5 to 2.8 g/t, the silver content is low – 5-17 g/t. Ore minerals are represented by sulfides, among which pyrite predominates. The total sulfide content does not exceed 3-5 %. The presence in the ore of free and associated gold with a grain size from fractions of a micron to 1.5 mm. Gold is represented by nuggets in intergrowth with sulfides and also forms independent inclusions. Ores are classified as easily cyanidable. It was found that the content of amalgamable gold is 10-49, the share of cyanidable gold ranges from 66.67-91, the share of refractory gold is 9.0-33.33 %, which in absolute amount equals to 0.24-0.8 g/t. The extraction of gold in gravitation concentrate varies depending on the gold content in the ore and the yield of concentrate and for ores with a gold content of 1.5-2.8 g/t from 40 to 60 %. The direct cyanidation of all studied ore samples established the possibility of extracting gold into solution up to 86.7-92.9 %, the gold content in cyanidation cakes is 0.2-0.3 g/t. Investigations of the gravitation concentrate by the method of intensive cyanidation showed that with an initial gold content of ~ 500 g/t, up to 98.9 % is extracted into the solution. The gold content in intensive cyanide cakes will be 6-15 g/t. A set of studies carried out by the authors of the article at various institutes showed that it is advisable to process ore from the deposit using cyanidation technology with preliminary gravitational extraction of gold.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 1026-1038 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eleftheria Ntagia ◽  
Ioanna Chatzigiannidou ◽  
Adam J. Williamson ◽  
Jan B. A. Arends ◽  
Korneel Rabaey

2013 ◽  
Vol 85 (19) ◽  
pp. 9288-9295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang Su Lim ◽  
Sajal Kumar Das ◽  
Sun Young Yang ◽  
Eun Sun Kim ◽  
Hoon Jai Chun ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 294 (6) ◽  
pp. R1930-R1937 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan L. Whitfield ◽  
Edward L. Kreimier ◽  
Francys C. Verdial ◽  
Nini Skovgaard ◽  
Kenneth R. Olson

Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is rapidly emerging as a biologically significant signaling molecule. Studies published before 2000 report low or undetectable H2S (usually as total sulfide) levels in blood or plasma, whereas recent work has reported sulfide concentrations between 10 and 300 μM, suggesting it acts as a circulating signal. In the first series of experiments, we used a recently developed polarographic sensor to measure the baseline level of endogenous H2S gas and turnover of exogenous H2S gas in real time in blood from numerous animals, including lamprey, trout, mouse, rat, pig, and cow. We found that, contrary to recent reports, H2S gas was essentially undetectable (<100 nM total sulfide) in all animals. Furthermore, exogenous sulfide was rapidly removed from blood, plasma, or 5% bovine serum albumin in vitro and from intact trout in vivo. To determine if blood H2S could transiently increase, we measured oxygen-dependent H2S production by trout hearts in vitro and in vivo. H2S has been shown to mediate ischemic preconditioning (IPC) in mammals. IPC is present in trout and, unlike mammals, the trout myocardium obtains its oxygen from relatively hypoxic systemic venous blood. In vitro, myocardial H2S production was inversely related to Po2, whereas we failed to detect H2S in ventral aortic blood from either normoxic or hypoxic fish in vivo. These results provide an autocrine or paracrine mechanism for myocardial coupling of hypoxia to H2S in IPC, i.e., oxygen sensing, but they fail to provide any evidence that H2S signaling is mediated by the circulation.


2007 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuichi Sasayama ◽  
Yukimasa Higashide ◽  
Masahiko Sakai ◽  
Masahiro Matada ◽  
Yoshihiro Fukumori

Geophysics ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. M1-M9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jilu Feng ◽  
Benoit Rivard ◽  
E. Ann Gallie ◽  
Arturo Sanchez

In this study, core samples of sulfide-rich zones were delineated from their host rock and a quantitative estimation of sulfide content on cut-rock faces was made using thermal infrared reflectance (TIR; [Formula: see text] region) spectroscopy. Core sections and rocks were collected from mines in the Sudbury basin, Ontario, Canada. The TSC% (areal percentage of total sulfide content) of each sample was then estimated by summing the modal abundance of all sulfide minerals (chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, and pentlandite). TIR at [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] is linearly related to TSC%. The average of the spectral ratios [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] is related exponentially to TSC%. The coefficients of determination [Formula: see text] based on a calibration data set are 0.90 and 0.87, respectively. Two models were tested, the [Formula: see text] model and the [Formula: see text] model; the latter combines [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. The value for [Formula: see text] for predicted TSC% versus observed TSC% (from thin sections) is 0.98 and 0.97, respectively, with little or no bias. The standard deviation of the residuals is 3.1 and 3.5 TSC%, respectively. The [Formula: see text] model is preferred over the [Formula: see text] model because it is linear and therefore does not have the problem with insensitivity at low TSC% that the exponential [Formula: see text] model has. In addition, from the viewpoint of developing an instrument for automated core logging, the [Formula: see text] model requires measurements at only one wavelength rather than three and hence requires a less expensive instrument.


Geophysics ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 1691-1698 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benoit Rivard ◽  
Jilu Feng ◽  
E. Ann Gallie ◽  
Helen Francis

This pilot study investigated the usefulness of thermal infrared reflectance (TIR) spectroscopy to estimate ore grade in an underground environment and to separate ore‐bearing samples from their host rocks. Work was carried out under laboratory conditions to test the initial concept; all samples had naturally broken faces to mimic the situation in a freshly blasted underground opening. A total of 26 samples, including massive and disseminated ores, were collected from eight mines around the Sudbury basin in Ontario. Rock surfaces were measured wet and dry to address environmental conditions encountered underground. To separate barren rocks from ores and for ore‐grade estimation, an important finding of this research is that, in the region of [Formula: see text], most known silicate minerals converge to a common reflectance minima (<1.5%), but massive and disseminated sulfides have distinctly higher reflectance. Individual sulfide minerals (chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, pentlandite), however, do not reveal diagnostic features in this spectral region. When sulfides are disseminated in the host rock, the average reflectance of the rock increases but the correlation with abundance is not systematic. However, sulfide concentration as a function of continuum‐removed reflectance (CRR) is systematic. The empirical correlation between CRR at [Formula: see text] versus the total sulfide concentration, estimated via thin‐section point counts, gives a coefficient of determination value [Formula: see text] of 0.93 for measurement of dry and wet surfaces when averaged. Similar results are observed when dry and wet locations are analyzed separately. The relationship demonstrates the feasibility to estimate total sulfide concentration from TIR reflectance data even when samples are wet.


2001 ◽  
Vol 73 (14) ◽  
pp. 3481-3487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth A. Guenther ◽  
Kenneth S. Johnson ◽  
Kenneth H. Coale

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