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result(s) for
"Phosphorus Isotopes"
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Mycorrhizal Networks: Common Goods of Plants Shared under Unequal Terms of Trade
by
Walder, Florian
,
Niemann, Helge
,
Lehmann, Moritz F.
in
Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
,
analysis
,
Biological and medical sciences
2012
Plants commonly live in a symbiotic association with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). They invest photosynthetic products to feed their fungal partners, which, in return, provide mineral nutrients foraged in the soil by their intricate hyphal networks. Intriguingly, AMF can link neighboring plants, forming common mycorrhizal networks (CMNs). What are the terms of trade in such CMNs between plants and their shared fungal partners? To address this question, we set up microcosms containing a pair of test plants, interlinked by a CMN of Glomus intraradices or Glomus mosseae. The plants were flax (Linum usitatissimum; a C₃ plant) and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor; a C₄ plant), which display distinctly different ¹³C/¹²C isotope compositions. This allowed us to differentially assess the carbon investment of the two plants into the CMN through stable isotope tracing. In parallel, we determined the plants' \"return of investment\" (i.e. the acquisition of nutrients via CMN) using ¹⁵N and ³³P as tracers. Depending on the AMF species, we found a strong asymmetry in the terms of trade: flax invested little carbon but gained up to 94% of the nitrogen and phosphorus provided by the CMN, which highly facilitated growth, whereas the neighboring sorghum invested massive amounts of carbon with little return but was barely affected in growth. Overall biomass production in the mixed culture surpassed the mean of the two monocultures. Thus, CMNs may contribute to interplant facilitation and the productivity boosts often found with intercropping compared with conventional monocropping.
Journal Article
Increased brain radioactivity by intranasal P-labeled siRNA dendriplexes within in situ-forming mucoadhesive gels
by
Perez, Ana Paula
,
Morilla, Maria Jose
,
Mundiña-Weilenmann, Cecilia
in
Administration, Intranasal - methods
,
Animals
,
Brain - metabolism
2012
Molecules taken up by olfactory and trigeminal nerve neurons directly access the brain by the nose-to-brain pathway. In situ-forming mucoadhesive gels would increase the residence time of intranasal material, favoring the nose-to-brain delivery. In this first approach, brain radioactivity after intranasal administration of (32)P-small interference RNA (siRNA) complexed with poly(amidoamine) G7 dendrimers (siRNA dendriplexes) within in situ-forming mucoadhesive gels, was determined.
(32)P-siRNA dendriplexes were incorporated into in situ-forming mucoadhesive gels prepared by blending thermosensitive poloxamer (23% w/w) with mucoadhesive chitosan (1% w/w, PxChi) or carbopol (0.25% w/w, PxBCP). Rheological properties, radiolabel release profile, and local toxicity in rat nasal mucosa were determined. The best-suited formulation was intranasally administered to rats, and blood absorption and brain distribution of radioactivity were measured.
The gelation temperature of both formulations was 23°C. The PxChi liquid showed non-Newtonian pseudoplastic behavior of high consistency and difficult manipulation, and the gel retained 100% of radiolabel after 150 minutes. The PxCBP liquid showed a Newtonian behavior of low viscosity and easy manipulation, while in the gel phase showed apparent viscosity similar to that of the mucus but higher than that of aqueous solution. The gel released 35% of radiolabel and the released material showed silencing activity in vitro. Three intranasal doses of dendriplexes in PxCBP gel did not damage the rat nasal mucosa. A combination of (32)P-siRNA complexation with dendrimers, incorporation of the dendriplexes into PxCBP gel, and administration of two intranasal doses was necessary to achieve higher brain radioactivity than that achieved by intravenous dendriplexes or intranasal naked siRNA.
The increased radioactivity within the olfactory bulb suggested that the combination above mentioned favored the mediation of a direct brain delivery.
Journal Article
A novel role for the root cap in phosphate uptake and homeostasis
by
Nakanishi, Tomoko, M
,
ANR-11-RSNR-0005,DEMETERRES,Développement de Méthodes bio-et Eco-Technologiques pour la Remédiation Raisonnée des Effluents et des Sols en appui à une stratégie de réhabilitation agricole post-accidentelle
,
Delannoy, Etienne
in
33P imaging
,
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis - metabolism
2016
The root cap has a fundamental role in sensing environmental cues as well as regulating root growth via altered meristem activity. Despite this well-established role in the control of developmental processes in roots, the root cap's function in nutrition remains obscure. Here, we uncover its role in phosphate nutrition by targeted cellular inactivation or phosphate transport complementation in Arabidopsis, using a transactivation strategy with an innovative high-resolution real-time 33 P imaging technique. Remarkably, the diminutive size of the root cap cells at the root-to-soil exchange surface accounts for a significant amount of the total seedling phosphate uptake (approximately 20%). This level of Pi absorption is sufficient for shoot biomass production (up to a 180% gain in soil), as well as repression of Pi starvation-induced genes. These results extend our understanding of this important tissue from its previously described roles in environmental perception to novel functions in mineral nutrition and homeostasis control.
Journal Article
Phosphorus Forms and Chemistry in the Soil Profile under Long-Term Conservation Tillage: A Phosphorus-31 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study
by
Liu, Corey W
,
James, Dean C
,
Cade-Menun, Barbara J
in
Agricultural practices
,
analysis
,
calcium
2010
In many regions, conservation tillage has replaced conventional tilling practices to reduce soil erosion, improve water conservation, and increase soil organic matter. However, tillage can have marked effects on soil properties, specifically nutrient redistribution or stratification in the soil profile. The objective of this research was to examine soil phosphorus (P) forms and concentrations in a long-term study comparing conservation tillage (direct drilling, “No Till”) and conventional tillage (moldboard plowing to 20 cm depth, “Till”) established on a fine sandy loam (Orthic Humo-Ferric Podzol) in Prince Edward Island, Canada. No significant differences in total carbon (C), total nitrogen (N), total P, or total organic P concentrations were detected between the tillage systems at any depth in the 0- to 60-cm depth range analyzed. However, analysis with phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed differences in P forms in the plow layer. In particular, the concentration of orthophosphate was significantly higher under No Till than Till at 5 to 10 cm, but the reverse was true at 10 to 20 cm. Mehlich 3–extractable P was also significantly higher in No Till at 5 to 10 cm and significantly higher in Till at 20 to 30 cm. This P stratification appears to be caused by a lack of mixing of applied fertilizer in No Till because the same trends were observed for pH and Mehlich 3–extractable Ca (significantly higher in the Till treatment at 20 to 30 cm), reflecting mixing of applied lime. The P saturation ratio was significantly higher under No Till at 0 to 5 cm and exceeded the recommended limits, suggesting that P stratification under No Till had increased the potential for P loss in runoff from these sites.
Journal Article
Anodal transcranial direct current stimulation increases brain intracellular pH and modulates bioenergetics
by
Lee, Vincent H.-C.
,
Alonzo, Angelo
,
Rae, Caroline D.
in
Adenosine Triphosphate - metabolism
,
Adult
,
Bioenergetics
2013
Transcranial direct current stimulation is an emerging treatment for brain disorders but its mode of action is not well understood. We applied 10 min 1 mA anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) inside the bore of a 3 T MRI scanner to the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of 13 healthy volunteers (aged 19–28 yr) in a blinded, sham-controlled, cross-over design. Brain bioenergetics were measured from the left temporo-frontal region using 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy before, during and for 20 min following tDCS. Brain pH rose during tDCS and remained elevated afterwards. Phosphomonoesters were significantly decreased while inorganic phosphate (Pi) also fell. Partial-least squares discriminant analysis of the data revealed two significantly different subject groups: one where phosphocreatine (PCr), ATP and Pi fell along with a larger increase in pH and one where PCr and ATP increased along with a smaller increase in pH and a slower and more sustained decrease in Pi. Group membership was predicted by baseline pH and ATP. We interpreted the effects of tDCS as driving two biochemical processes: cellular consumption of ATP causing hydrolysis of PCr via the creatine kinase reaction driving the increase in pH; synthesis of ATP and PCr by mitochondria with concomitant drop in Pi and phosphomonoester levels.
Journal Article
Comparison of Phosphorus Forms in Wet and Dried Animal Manures by Solution Phosphorus‐31 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and Enzymatic Hydrolysis
by
Toor, Gurpal S.
,
Sims, J. Thomas
,
Honeycutt, C. Wayne
in
analysis
,
Animals
,
Best management practices
2007
Both enzymatic hydrolysis and solution 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy have been used to characterize P compounds in animal manures. In this study, we comparatively investigated P forms in 0.25 M NaOH/0.05 M EDTA extracts of dairy and poultry manures by the two methods. For the dairy manure, enzymatic hydrolysis revealed that the majority of extracted P was inorganic P (56%), with 10% phytate‐like P, 9% simple monoester P, 6% polynucleotide‐like P, and 18% non‐hydrolyzable P. Similar results were obtained by NMR spectroscopy, which showed that inorganic P was the major P fraction (64–73%), followed by 6% phytic acid, 14 to 22% other monoesters, and 7% phosphodiesters. In the poultry manure, enzymatic hydrolysis showed that inorganic P was the largest fraction (71%), followed by 15% phytate‐like P and 1% other monoesters, and 3% polynucleotide‐like P. NMR spectroscopy revealed that orthophosphate was 51 to 63% of extracted P, phytic acid 24 to 33%, other phosphomonoesters 6 to 12%, and phospholipids and DNA 2% each. Drying process increased orthophosphate (8.4% of total P) in dairy manure, but decreased orthophosphate (13.3% of total P) in poultry manure, suggesting that drying treatment caused the hydrolysis of some organic P to orthophosphate in dairy manure, but less recovery of orthophosphate in poultry manure. Comparison of these data indicates that the distribution patterns of major P forms in animal manure determined by the two methods were similar. Researchers can utilize the method that best fits their specific research goals or use both methods to obtain a full spectrum of manure P characterization.
Journal Article
Selective Detection of Peptide-Oligonucleotide Heteroconjugates Utilizing Capillary HPLC-ICPMS
by
Catron, Brittany
,
Caruso, Joseph A.
,
Limbach, Patrick A.
in
Analytical Chemistry
,
Analytical, structural and metabolic biochemistry
,
Animals
2012
A method for the selective detection and quantification of peptide:oligonucleotide heteroconjugates, such as those generated by protein:nucleic acid cross-links, using capillary reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (cap-RPHPLC) coupled with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry detection (ICPMS) is described. The selective detection of phosphorus as
31
P
+
, the only natural isotope, in peptide-oligonucleotide heteroconjugates is enabled by the elemental detection capabilities of the ICPMS. Mobile phase conditions that allow separation of heteroconjugates while maintaining ICPMS compatibility were investigated. We found that trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) mobile phases, used in conventional peptide separations, and hexafluoroisopropanol/triethylamine (HFIP/TEA) mobile phases, used in conventional oligonucleotide separations, both are compatible with ICPMS and enable heteroconjugate separation. The TFA-based separations yielded limits of detection (LOD) of ~40 ppb phosphorus, which is nearly seven times lower than the LOD for HFIP/TEA-based separations. Using the TFA mobile phase, 1–2 pmol of a model heteroconjugate were routinely separated and detected by this optimized capLC-ICPMS method.
Journal Article
Modern Quantum Chemistry Methodology for Predicting 31 P Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Chemical Shifts
by
Rusakova, Irina L
,
Rusakov, Yuriy Yu
in
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy - methods
,
Organophosphorus Compounds - chemistry
,
Phosphorus - chemistry
2026
Phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (
P NMR) spectroscopy is a powerful analytical physical chemistry experimental technique that is widely used to study the structure and dynamics of phosphorus-containing compounds today. Accurate calculation of
P NMR chemical shifts lies in the basis of the proper assignment of NMR signals, as they can be closely spaced to each other in the NMR spectra of systems that bear nuclei with subtly different electron environments, like complex organophosphorus compounds, nucleic acids, and phosphates, etc. The most advanced quantum chemistry (QC) methods allow us to reach the agreement between theoretical values of
P NMR chemical shifts and experiments within a few ppm, which makes them a useful tool for studying chemical structure, reaction mechanisms, and catalyst design with the aid of the NMR method. This review surveys the application of both density functional and wave function methods of electron structure to the calculation of
P NMR chemical shifts and proposes a thorough discussion of the latest findings related to the factors affecting the final accuracy of the
P NMR chemical shifts prediction, including basis sets, the geometry factor effect, solvent, vibrational, and relativistic corrections.
Journal Article
Mapping Age Differences in Brain Energy Metabolites and Metabolic Markers of Cellular Membrane Production and Degradation With 31 P Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
by
Zajac‐Benitez, Caroline
,
Khatib, Dalal
,
Dahle, Cheryl L.
in
Adenosine Triphosphate - metabolism
,
Adolescent
,
Aged
2024
Using Phosphorus Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ( 31 P MRS), we examined five metabolites associated with brain energy cycle, and cellular membrane production and degradation in 11 brain regions of 48 children (age 6–15), and 80 middle‐aged and older adults (age 52–87). Levels of phosphomonoesters (PMEs) and phosphodiesters (PDEs), gamma plus alpha adenosine triphosphate (γαATP), phosphocreatine (PCr) and inorganic phosphate (Pi), were residualized on the total amplitude value. PMEs were greater in children compared to adults, whereas PDEs showed the opposite age difference. Higher γαATP and lower Pi were found in children compared to adults. The age group differences were particularly salient in the association cortices and anterior white matter. Among children, age correlated negatively with PMEs and positively with PDEs in association cortices. Compared to children, adults had lower intracellular pH. The results suggest reduction in membrane synthesis and increase in membrane degradation in adolescents and to a greater degree in adults compared to younger children. Concomitant reduction in γαATP and increase in Pi are consistent with reduced energy consumption in adolescents and further drop in middle‐aged and older adults, although it is impossible to distinguish declines in energy supply from reduced demand due to shrinking neuropil, without longitudinal studies.
Journal Article
Brain mitochondrial oxidative metabolism during and after cerebral hypoxia–ischemia studied by simultaneous phosphorus magnetic-resonance and broadband near-infrared spectroscopy
2014
Multimodal measurements combining broadband near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P MRS) assessed associations between changes in the oxidation state of cerebral mitochondrial cytochrome-c-oxidase (Δ[oxCCO]) and 31P metabolite peak-area ratios during and after transient cerebral hypoxia–ischemia (HI) in the newborn piglet.
Twenty-four piglets (aged<24h) underwent transient HI (inspired oxygen fraction 9% and bilateral carotid artery occlusion for ~20min). Whole-brain 31P MRS and NIRS data were acquired every minute. Inorganic phosphate (Pi)/epp, phosphocreatine (PCr)/epp, and total nucleotide triphosphate (NTP)/epp were measured by 31P MRS and were plotted against Δ[oxCCO] during HI and recovery (epp=exchangeable phosphate pool=Pi+PCr+2γ-NTP+β-NTP).
During HI Δ[oxCCO], PCr/epp and NTP/epp declined and Pi/epp increased. Significant correlations were seen between 31P ratios and Δ[oxCCO]; during HI a threshold point was identified where the relationship between Δ[oxCCO] and both NTP/epp and Pi/epp changed significantly. Outcome at 48h related to recovery of Δ[oxCCO] and 31P ratios 1h post-HI (survived: 1-h NTP/epp 0.22±0.02, Δ[oxCCO] −0.29±0.50μM; died: 1-h NTP/epp 0.10±0.04, Δ[oxCCO] −2.41±1.48μM).
Both lowered Δ[oxCCO] and NTP/epp 1h post-HI indicated mitochondrial impairment. Animals dying before 48h had slower recovery of both Δ[oxCCO] and 31P ratios by 1h after HI.
•31P MRS correlated with broadband NIRS during and after transient hypoxia–ischemia.•A double-linear model best describes NTP/epp vs Δ[oxCCO] during HI.•Threshold point in double-linear model interpreted as cessation of ATP manufacture.•Poor outcome correlates with weaker recovery of both 31P MRS ratios and Δ[oxCCO].•Mitochondrial dysfunction may be the cause of reduction of Δ[oxCCO].
Journal Article