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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Gene Probe Analysis Of Soil Microbial Populations Selected By Amendment With 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid, William Holben, B. M. Schroeter, V. G.M. Calabrese, R. H. Olsen, J. K. Kukor, V. O. Biederbeck, James M. Tiedje Dec 1992

Gene Probe Analysis Of Soil Microbial Populations Selected By Amendment With 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid, William Holben, B. M. Schroeter, V. G.M. Calabrese, R. H. Olsen, J. K. Kukor, V. O. Biederbeck, James M. Tiedje

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

Soils with a history of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) treatment at field application rates and control soils with no prior exposure to 2,4-D were amended with 2,4-D in the laboratory. Before and during these treatments, the populations of 2,4-D-degrading bacteria were monitored by most-probable-number (MPN) enumeration and hybridization analyses, using probes for the tfd genes of plasmid pJP4, which encode enzymes for 2,4-D degradation. Data obtained by these alternate methods were compared. Several months after the most recent field application of 2,4-D (approximately 1 ppm), soils with a 42-year history of 2,4-D treatment did not have significantly higher numbers of 2,4-D-degrading …


Avian Forelimb Muscles And Nonsteady Flight: Can Birds Fly Without Using The Muscles In Their Wings?, Kenneth P. Dial Oct 1992

Avian Forelimb Muscles And Nonsteady Flight: Can Birds Fly Without Using The Muscles In Their Wings?, Kenneth P. Dial

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

Intensity patterns of electromyographic (EMG) signals from selected muscles of the wing were studied during different modes of flight in trained Rock doves (Columba livia). Shoulder muscles exhibited a stereotypic pattern producing maximal EMG intensity during the deceleration phases of the upstroke and the downstroke, whereas the muscles of the brachium and antebrachium acted primarily as joint stabilizers during level flapping flight. During nonsteady flight (e.g. takeoff, landing, vertical ascending flight), the distal forelimb muscles exhibited maximal EMG intensity; their primary function appears to be associated with changing the camber and planform of the wing during rapid oscillation. During steady …


Multiple Phosphate Positions In The Catalytic Site Of Glycogen Phosphorylase, Stephen R. Sprang, Neil B. Madsen, Stephen G. Withers Sep 1992

Multiple Phosphate Positions In The Catalytic Site Of Glycogen Phosphorylase, Stephen R. Sprang, Neil B. Madsen, Stephen G. Withers

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

The three‐dimensional structure of an R‐state conformer of glycogen phosphorylase containing the coenzyme‐substrate analog pyridoxal‐5′‐diphosphate at the catalytic site (PLPP‐GPb) has been refined by X‐ray crystallography to a resolution of 2.87 Å. The molecule comprises four subunits of phosphorylase related by approximate 222 symmetry. Whereas the quaternary structure of R‐state PLPP‐GPb is similar to that of phosphorylase crystallized in the presence of ammonium sulfate (Barford, D. & Johnson, L.N., 1989, Nature 340, 609–616), the tertiary structures differ in that the two domains of the PLPP‐GPb subunits are rotated apart by 5° relative to the T‐state conformation. Global differences among the …


Intermediates In The Constitutive And Regulated Secretory Pathways Released In Vitro From Semi-Intact Cells, Mark L. Grimes, Regis B. Kelly May 1992

Intermediates In The Constitutive And Regulated Secretory Pathways Released In Vitro From Semi-Intact Cells, Mark L. Grimes, Regis B. Kelly

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

Regulated secretory cells have two pathways that transport secreted proteins from the Golgi complex to the cell surface. To identify carrier vesicles involved in regulated and constitutive secretion, PC12 pheochromocytoma cells were labeled with [35S]sulfate to identify markers for the two secretory pathways, then mechanically permeabilized and incubated in vitro. Small constitutive secretory vesicles, containing mostly sulfated proteoglycans, accumulated during an in vitro incubation with ATP. In the presence of GTP gamma S, the constitutive vesicles became significantly more dense, suggesting that a coated intermediate was stabilized. Larger immature regulated secretory granules, enriched in sulfated secretogranin II, also escaped from …


Evaluating Habitat Suitability Using Relative Abundance And Fledging Success Of Red-Naped Sapsuckers, Bret W. Tobalske May 1992

Evaluating Habitat Suitability Using Relative Abundance And Fledging Success Of Red-Naped Sapsuckers, Bret W. Tobalske

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


The Structure Of Human Lymphotoxin (Tumor Necrosis Factor-Β) At 1.9-Å Resolution, Michael J. Eckt, Mark Ultsch, Ernst Rinderknecht, Abraham M. De Vos, Stephen R. Sprang Feb 1992

The Structure Of Human Lymphotoxin (Tumor Necrosis Factor-Β) At 1.9-Å Resolution, Michael J. Eckt, Mark Ultsch, Ernst Rinderknecht, Abraham M. De Vos, Stephen R. Sprang

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

The three-dimensional structure of recombinant human lymphotoxin (residues 24-171 of the mature protein) has been determined by x-ray crystallography at 1.9-Å resolution (Rcryst = 0.215 for I > 3σ(I)). Phases were derived by molecular replacement using tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α) as a search model. Like TNF-α, lymphotoxin (LT) folds to form a "jellyroll" β-sheet sandwich. Three-fold related LT subunits form a trimer stabilized primarily by hydrophobic interactions. A cluster of 6 basic residues around the 3-fold axis may account for the acid lability of the trimer. Although the structural cores of TNF-α and LT are similar, insertions and …


The Latent Tendencies Of Pai-1, Stephen R. Sprang Feb 1992

The Latent Tendencies Of Pai-1, Stephen R. Sprang

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Spiny Lobster Recruitment In South Florida: Quantitative Experiments And Management Implications, Mark J. Butler Iv, William F. Herrnkind Jan 1992

Spiny Lobster Recruitment In South Florida: Quantitative Experiments And Management Implications, Mark J. Butler Iv, William F. Herrnkind

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

Understanding recruitment and identifying factors critical to that process are imperative if adult spiny lobster Panulirus argus stocks are to be conserved and properly managed. The goal of our research has been to obtain ecological information linking inshore postlarval spiny lobster recruitment to later life stages, thereby providing the basic framework for assessing and predicting adult stock. Since 1983, we have investigated various aspects of spiny lobster recruitment including: postlarval time-to-metamorphosis, postlarval/juvenile habitat selection and selection cues, postlarval/juvenile crypticity and susceptibility to predation, juvenile food preference and emigration, juvenile sociality, and the effect of habitat degradation (i.e., siltration) on postlarval/juvenile …


Seasonal Phytoplankton Development Within Three Rivers In The Lower Chesapeake Bay Region, Harold G. Marshall, Lewis F. Affronti Jan 1992

Seasonal Phytoplankton Development Within Three Rivers In The Lower Chesapeake Bay Region, Harold G. Marshall, Lewis F. Affronti

Biological Sciences Faculty Publications

The seasonal and inter-annual concentrations of phytoplankton were studied over a 50 month period in the lower James, York and Rappahannock Rivers (USA). Differences in the onset, duration and magnitude of major seasonal growth periods varied from year to year. There was a tendency for spring, summer and fall maxima, with a winter period of reduced abundance. An additional study of picoplankton over a 12 month period indicated greatest abundance during summer and fall, with least development in winter.