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Infrared spectroscopy in combination with a specially developed attenuated total reflection (ATR) flow cell and multivariate analysis was used for the quantitative analysis of beer and other beverages. IR spectra of samples were obtained in the range from below 1000 cm-1 to 4000 cm-1 and subjected to a multivariate analysis based on calibration sets with laboratory reference standards. In the case of beer, this calibration set included 240 beer samples spanning the entire range of ethanol content, extract and CO2. Based on this calibration, an infrared and UV/Vis spectroscopy-based sensor for the quick and quantitative quality control of beer was developed and subjected to extensive tests in breweries. This sensor meets and exceeds all requirements from brewers for the routine control in the production and bottling. Its use for other beverages, for example wine, juices or apple wine, requires only another set of calibration data for the specific beverage.
Background: ClC-7 is a ubiquitous transporter which is broadly expressed in mammalian tissues. It is implied in the pathogenesis of lysosomal storage disease and osteopetrosis. Because of its endosomal/lysosomal localization it is still poorly characterized. Methodology/Principal Findings: An electrophysiological characterization of rat ClC-7 using solid-supported membrane-based electrophysiology is presented. The measured currents show the characteristics of ClC-7 and confirm its function as a Cl−/H+-antiporter. We have used rat ClC-7 in CHO cells as a model system to investigate the functionality and cellular localization of the wt transporter and its variant G213R ClC-7 which is the analogue of human G215R ClC-7 responsible for autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type II. Our study shows that rat G213R ClC-7 is functional but has a localization defect in CHO cells which prevents it from being correctly targeted to the lysosomal membrane. The electrophysiological assay is tested as a tool for drug discovery. The assay is validated with a number of drug candidates. It is shown that ClC-7 is inhibited by DIDS, NPPB and NS5818 at micromolar concentrations. Conclusions/Significance: It is suggested that the scenario found in the CHO model system also applies to the human transporter and that mislocalization rather than impaired functionality of G215R ClC-7 is the primary cause of the related autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type II. Furthermore, the robust solid-supported membrane-based electrophysiological assay is proposed for rapid screening for potential ClC-7 inhibitors which are discussed for treatment of osteoporosis.
The relations of the theory of real gases which have first been derived by Mayer and his co-workers can be obtained in a simple way by the functional method. In this case the assumption of the pairwise additivity of the intermolecular potential can be dropped. Apart from some new relations for distributions functions the expansion of the direct correlation functions is obtained as a power series in density with coefficients consisting of integrals over Husimi functions.
The on-surface synthesis of bisheptahelicene by Ullmann coupling of 9-bromoheptahelicene on Au(111) and its temperature-induced dehydrogenation is studied using temperature-programmed reaction spectroscopy and time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Specific dehydrogenation products of bisheptahelicene after loss of 6, 8 and 10 hydrogen atoms are identified, corresponding to molecules having undergone Diels–Alder transformations and intramolecular C–C coupling reactions. By combining with atomic hydrogen produced by dehydrogenation, the Ullmann coupling side-product bromine desorbs as HBr. H2 desorption emerges only after all Br has desorbed. Such characteristic behavior is explained by a kinetic model which explicitly considers the coverage of transient atomic H on the surface. Heating experiments performed with saturated layers of different Br-containing molecules reveal that the onset of HBr desorption depends strictly on the dehydrogenation step and therefore on the structure of the molecules.
Although often depicted as rigid structures, proteins are highly dynamic systems, whose motions are essential to their functions. Despite this, it is difficult to investigate protein dynamics due to the rapid timescale at which they sample their conformational space, leading most NMR-determined structures to represent only an averaged snapshot of the dynamic picture. While NMR relaxation measurements can help to determine local dynamics, it is difficult to detect translational or concerted motion, and only recently have significant advances been made to make it possible to acquire a more holistic representation of the dynamics and structural landscapes of proteins. Here, we briefly revisit our most recent progress in the theory and use of exact nuclear Overhauser enhancements (eNOEs) for the calculation of structural ensembles that describe their conformational space. New developments are primarily targeted at increasing the number and improving the quality of extracted eNOE distance restraints, such that the multi-state structure calculation can be applied to proteins of higher molecular weights. We then review the implications of the exact NOE to the protein dynamics and function of cyclophilin A and the WW domain of Pin1, and finally discuss our current research and future directions.
The cooperative problem for a lattice gas on a plane, square lattice and on a simple cubic lattice is solved by a system of two coupled, transcendental equations, derived by a combinatorial method, which describes a homogeneous or periodical particle density on the lattice as a function of the temperature and the chemical potential of the lattice-gas.
For the particle interaction a Hard-Core potential (nearest neighbour exclusion) with a soft long-range tail is assumed. The zero-component of the Fourier-transform of this long-range interaction part can be positive or negative.
The system of transcendental equations is solved by a graphic method. As a result, the complete pressure-density state diagram and the pressure-temperature phase diagram can be drawn.
The lattice-gas exists in three stable phases: gas, liquid and solid. Three phase changes are possible: condensation, crystallization and sublimation.
Critical points of condensation and freezing are examined. The number of possible phases and phase changes at a fixed temperature depends on the geometric structure of the particle interaction.
The thermal and the photochemical reactions of the endoperoxide of Tetrabenzo(bc,fg.lm,pq)- pentacene have been investigated with respect to its photochromic properties. The thermal yield of irreversible rearrangement reactions was determined to be Adec = 0.045. From the activation parameters of the thermal cycloreversion. forming the parent hydrocarbon and oxygen, a half life time of 114 years at 20 °C has been extrapolated. For the quantum yield of the irreversible photochemical rearrangement a value of Qdec = 0.03 was obtained. As can be seen from the wavelength dependence of the photocycloreversion quantum yield Q1, cycloreversion occurs not only from the thermalized S2(πccπ*cc) but from higher excited states too. The maximum quantum yield was found at 302 nm to be (Q1 = 0.15. From our results it follows that this endoperoxide is of high quality in respect to the colour change colourless/blue and to thermal stability, whereas the reversibility is only moderate.
The structural analysis of the redox complex between the soluble cytochrome c552 and the membrane-integral cytochrome ba3 oxidase of Thermus thermophilus is complicated by the transient nature of this protein-protein interaction. Using NMR-based chemical shift perturbation mapping, however, we identified the contact regions between cytochrome c552 and the CuA domain, the fully functional water-soluble fragment of subunit II of the ba3 oxidase. First we determined the complete backbone resonance assignments of both proteins for each redox state. Subsequently, two-dimensional [15N,1H]TROSY spectra recorded for each redox partner both in free and complexed state indicated those surface residues affected by complex formation between the two proteins. This chemical shift analysis performed for both redox states provided a topological description of the contact surface on each partner molecule. Remarkably, very pronounced indirect effects, which were observed on the back side of the heme cleft only in the reduced state, suggested that alterations of the electron distribution in the porphyrin ring due to formation of the protein-protein complex are apparently sensed even beyond the heme propionate groups. The contact residues of each redox partner, as derived from the chemical shift perturbation mapping, were employed for a protein-protein docking calculation that provided a structure ensemble of 10 closely related conformers representing the complex between cytochrome c552 and the CuA domain. Based on these structures, the electron transfer pathway from the heme of cytochrome c552 to the CuA center of the ba3 oxidase has been predicted.
The effect of NH4Cl on the kinetics of the back reaction of photosystem II as derived from luminescence measurements was investigated in dark adapted Chlorella in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) at different temperatures. The kinetics of the back reaction which, under these conditions, leads to the reduction of the S2 state by the primary electron acceptor Q- of photosystem II was observed to be considerably slowed down in the presence of NH4Cl.
Analysis of the kinetic results in the light of the theory of the back reaction developed by Mar and Roy (J. Theor. Biol. 48, 257-281 (1974)) revealed two opposite effects of NH4Cl to be present simultaneously:
1) The enthalpy of activation of the back reaction was lowered (catalyzing effect of NH4Cl)
2) The frequenca factor which indicates the number of collisions of the reacting molecules in the membrane per second is largely decreased (inhibitory effect of NH4Cl).
This reduction of the mobility of the recombining species of the back reaction is the predominant effect of NH4Cl. It is suggested that this effect is due to a change of the conformational state of the membrane induced by dissolution of relative large amounts of NH? within the lipid phase of the thylakoid membrane. This hypothesis is supported by the observation that the value of the exciton yield of the back reaction changes upon addition of NH4Cl.
Photosystem II
Ataxia represents a pathological coordination failure that often involves functional disturbances in cerebellar circuits. Purkinje cells (PCs) characterize the only output neurons of the cerebellar cortex and critically participate in regulating motor coordination. Although different genetic mutations are known that cause ataxia, little is known about the underlying cellular mechanisms. Here we show that a mutated axJ gene locus, encoding the ubiquitin-specific protease 14 (Usp14), negatively influences synaptic receptor turnover. AxJ mouse mutants, characterized by cerebellar ataxia, display both increased GABAA receptor (GABAAR) levels at PC surface membranes accompanied by enlarged IPSCs. Accordingly, we identify physical interaction of Usp14 and the GABAAR alpha 1 subunit. Although other currently unknown changes might be involved, our data show that ubiquitin-dependent GABAAR turnover at cerebellar synapses contributes to axJ-mediated behavioural impairment.