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1.
Geophys Res Lett ; 46(24): 14826-14835, 2019 Dec 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33012881

RESUMO

During winter in the mid-latitudes, photochemical oxidation is significantly slower than in summer and the main radical oxidants driving formation of secondary pollutants, such as fine particulate matter and ozone, remain uncertain, owing to a lack of observations in this season. Using airborne observations, we quantify the contribution of various oxidants on a regional basis during winter, enabling improved chemical descriptions of wintertime air pollution transformations. We show that 25-60% of NOx is converted to N2O5 via multiphase reactions between gas-phase nitrogen oxide reservoirs and aerosol particles, with ~93% reacting in the marine boundary layer to form >2.5 ppbv ClNO2. This results in >70% of the oxidizing capacity of polluted air during winter being controlled, not by typical photochemical reactions, but from these multiphase reactions and emissions of volatile organic compounds, such as HCHO, highlighting the control local anthropogenic emissions have on the oxidizing capacity of the polluted wintertime atmosphere.

2.
Earth Space Sci ; 8(7): e2020EA001634, 2021 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34435081

RESUMO

The ACT-America project is a NASA Earth Venture Suborbital-2 mission designed to study the transport and fluxes of greenhouse gases. The open and freely available ACT-America data sets provide airborne in situ measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide, methane, trace gases, aerosols, clouds, and meteorological properties, airborne remote sensing measurements of aerosol backscatter, atmospheric boundary layer height and columnar content of atmospheric carbon dioxide, tower-based measurements, and modeled atmospheric mole fractions and regional carbon fluxes of greenhouse gases over the Central and Eastern United States. We conducted 121 research flights during five campaigns in four seasons during 2016-2019 over three regions of the US (Mid-Atlantic, Midwest and South) using two NASA research aircraft (B-200 and C-130). We performed three flight patterns (fair weather, frontal crossings, and OCO-2 underflights) and collected more than 1,140 h of airborne measurements via level-leg flights in the atmospheric boundary layer, lower, and upper free troposphere and vertical profiles spanning these altitudes. We also merged various airborne in situ measurements onto a common standard sampling interval, which brings coherence to the data, creates geolocated data products, and makes it much easier for the users to perform holistic analysis of the ACT-America data products. Here, we report on detailed information of data sets collected, the workflow for data sets including storage and processing of the quality controlled and quality assured harmonized observations, and their archival and formatting for users. Finally, we provide some important information on the dissemination of data products including metadata and highlights of applications of ACT-America data sets.

3.
J Geophys Res Atmos ; 126(24): e2021JD035692, 2021 Dec 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35865864

RESUMO

Accurate fire emissions inventories are crucial to predict the impacts of wildland fires on air quality and atmospheric composition. Two traditional approaches are widely used to calculate fire emissions: a satellite-based top-down approach and a fuels-based bottom-up approach. However, these methods often considerably disagree on the amount of particulate mass emitted from fires. Previously available observational datasets tended to be sparse, and lacked the statistics needed to resolve these methodological discrepancies. Here, we leverage the extensive and comprehensive airborne in situ and remote sensing measurements of smoke plumes from the recent Fire Influence on Regional to Global Environments and Air Quality (FIREX-AQ) campaign to statistically assess the skill of the two traditional approaches. We use detailed campaign observations to calculate and compare emission rates at an exceptionally high-resolution using three separate approaches: top-down, bottom-up, and a novel approach based entirely on integrated airborne in situ measurements. We then compute the daily average of these high-resolution estimates and compare with estimates from lower resolution, global top-down and bottom-up inventories. We uncover strong, linear relationships between all of the high-resolution emission rate estimates in aggregate, however no single approach is capable of capturing the emission characteristics of every fire. Global inventory emission rate estimates exhibited weaker correlations with the high-resolution approaches and displayed evidence of systematic bias. The disparity between the low-resolution global inventories and the high-resolution approaches is likely caused by high levels of uncertainty in essential variables used in bottom-up inventories and imperfect assumptions in top-down inventories.

4.
Mol Cell Biol ; 5(6): 1301-6, 1985 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3162095

RESUMO

To define the structural gene for ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) in Neurospora crassa, we sought mutants with kinetically altered enzyme. Four mutants, PE4, PE7, PE69, and PE85, were isolated. They were able to grow slowly at 25 degrees C on minimal medium but required putrescine or spermidine supplementation for growth at 35 degrees C. The mutants did not complement with one another or with ODC-less spe-1 mutants isolated in earlier studies. In all of the mutants isolated to date, the mutations map at the spe-1 locus on linkage group V. Strains carrying mutations PE4, PE7, and PE85 displayed a small amount of residual ODC activity in extracts. None of them had a temperature-sensitive enzyme. The enzyme of the PE85 mutant had a 25-fold higher Km for ornithine (5mM) than did the enzyme of wild-type or the PE4 mutant (ca. 0.2 mM). The enzyme of this mutant was more stable to heat than was the wild-type enzyme. These characteristics were normal in the mutant carrying allele PE4. The mutant carrying PE85 was able to grow well at 25 degrees C and weakly at 35 degrees C with ornithine supplementation. This mutant and three ODC-less mutants isolated previously displayed a polypeptide corresponding to ODC in Western immunoblots with antibody raised to purified wild-type ODC. We conclude that spe-1 is the structural gene for the ODC.


Assuntos
Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Genes Fúngicos , Neurospora crassa/genética , Neurospora/genética , Ornitina Descarboxilase/genética , Alelos , Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Genes , Cinética , Ornitina/metabolismo , Ornitina Descarboxilase/metabolismo
5.
Andrology ; 4(4): 565-72, 2016 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27003928

RESUMO

A previous report documented that endocrine disrupting chemicals contribute substantially to certain forms of disease and disability. In the present analysis, our main objective was to update a range of health and economic costs that can be reasonably attributed to endocrine disrupting chemical exposures in the European Union, leveraging new burden and disease cost estimates of female reproductive conditions from accompanying report. Expert panels evaluated the epidemiologic evidence, using adapted criteria from the WHO Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation Working Group, and evaluated laboratory and animal evidence of endocrine disruption using definitions recently promulgated by the Danish Environmental Protection Agency. The Delphi method was used to make decisions on the strength of the data. Expert panels consensus was achieved for probable (>20%) endocrine disrupting chemical causation for IQ loss and associated intellectual disability; autism; attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; endometriosis; fibroids; childhood obesity; adult obesity; adult diabetes; cryptorchidism; male infertility, and mortality associated with reduced testosterone. Accounting for probability of causation, and using the midpoint of each range for probability of causation, Monte Carlo simulations produced a median annual cost of €163 billion (1.28% of EU Gross Domestic Product) across 1000 simulations. We conclude that endocrine disrupting chemical exposures in the EU are likely to contribute substantially to disease and dysfunction across the life course with costs in the hundreds of billions of Euros per year. These estimates represent only those endocrine disrupting chemicals with the highest probability of causation; a broader analysis would have produced greater estimates of burden of disease and costs.


Assuntos
Efeitos Psicossociais da Doença , Disruptores Endócrinos/economia , Exposição Ambiental/economia , Disruptores Endócrinos/toxicidade , Exposição Ambiental/efeitos adversos , União Europeia , Humanos , Modelos Teóricos , Método de Monte Carlo
6.
J Biol Chem ; 262(16): 7889-93, 1987 Jun 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2953728

RESUMO

Ornithine decarboxylase, a highly regulated enzyme of the polyamine pathway, was purified 670-fold from mycelia of Neurospora crassa that were highly augmented for enzyme activity. The enzyme is significantly different from those reported from three other lower eucaryotic organisms: Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Physarum polycephalum, and Tetrahymena pyriformis. Instead, the enzyme closely resembles the enzymes from mammals. The Mr = 110,000 enzyme is a dimer of 53,000 Da subunits, with a specific activity of 2,610 mumol per h per mg of protein. Antisera were raised to the purified enzyme and were rendered highly specific by cross-absorption with extracts of a mutant strain lacking ornithine decarboxylase protein. With the antisera, we show that the inactivation of the enzyme in response to polyamines is proportional to the loss of ornithine decarboxylase protein over almost 2 orders of magnitude. This is similar to the inactivation process in certain mammalian tissues, and different from the process in S. cerevisiae and P. polycephalum, in which enzyme modification, without proportional loss of antigen, accompanies enzyme inactivation. The N. crassa enzyme is therefore suitable as a microbial model for studies of the molecular regulation of the mammalian enzyme.


Assuntos
Neurospora crassa/enzimologia , Neurospora/enzimologia , Ornitina Descarboxilase/isolamento & purificação , Eflornitina/metabolismo , Eflornitina/farmacologia , Cinética , Peso Molecular , Ornitina Descarboxilase/metabolismo , Inibidores da Ornitina Descarboxilase , Ligação Proteica
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 82(12): 4105-9, 1985 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3159019

RESUMO

We wished to identify metabolic signals governing changes in ornithine decarboxylase (L-ornithine carboxy-lyase, EC 4.1.1.17) activity in Neurospora crassa. By manipulations of the ornithine supply and by the use of inhibitors of the polyamine pathway, we found that spermidine negatively governs formation of active ornithine decarboxylase and that putrescine promotes inactivation of the enzyme. Direct addition of putrescine or spermidine to cycloheximide-treated cells confirmed the role of putrescine in enzyme inactivation and showed that spermidine had no effect on this process. Increases in ornithine decarboxylase activity caused by blocking spermidine synthesis occurred prior to a significant decrease in the spermidine pool. This is consistent with our previous finding that only 10-20% of the spermidine pool is freely diffusible within N. crassa cells. We presume that only this small fraction of the pool is active in regulation.


Assuntos
Neurospora crassa/genética , Neurospora/genética , Ornitina Descarboxilase/genética , Putrescina/farmacologia , Espermidina/farmacologia , Cicloexilaminas/farmacologia , Regulação da Expressão Gênica/efeitos dos fármacos , Mitoguazona/farmacologia , Ornitina Descarboxilase/metabolismo
8.
Anal Biochem ; 160(2): 290-3, 1987 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3578755

RESUMO

A rapid and sensitive spectrophotometric assay for ornithine decarboxylase is described. It is based on the observation that the product of ornithine decarboxylase, putrescine, reacts with 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid to give a colored product soluble in 1-pentanol whereas ornithine does not. The amount of putrescine produced by the enzyme was determined by measuring the absorbance of the 1-pentanol extract of the reaction mixture at 420 nm, and by comparing the results to those obtained by the trapping of 14CO2 and by HPLC assays. The three assays were found to be equivalent in sensitivity, with the spectrophotometric assay having the advantages of being relatively rapid, requiring only common laboratory equipment, and not requiring the use of radioactive isotopes.


Assuntos
Ornitina Descarboxilase/análise , Espectrofotometria/métodos , Putrescina/análise , Ácido Trinitrobenzenossulfônico
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