RESUMO
A new analytical method for the determination of halogenated and aromatic volatile organic compounds in groundwater, mineral water, and drinking water at concentrations ranging between 1-10000 ng/L is developed. A new type of headspace sampler that combines static headspace sampling with a trap is used, yielding very low detection limits and good repeatability without carryover effects. An unexpected transformation of 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane into trichloroethene is observed and explained.
RESUMO
Human plasma fibronectin is a high molecular weight (530,000), multi-domain, modular glycoprotein, consisting of two nearly identical subunits disulfide-bridged close to their C-terminal ends. Three sites that can be differentially labeled with fluorescent probes are present on each fibronectin subunit, the transglutaminase-sensitive Gln3 residue and the two free sulfhydryl residues, Cys1201 and Cys2196. These sites are located, respectively, in the N-terminal heparin/fibrin-binding domain, between the central DNA and cell-binding domains, and just before the C-terminal fibrin-binding domain. To map the relative spatial arrangement of these domains, steady-state and lifetime fluorescence energy transfer techniques were employed. Our results show that the minimal intramolecular distances between the labeled Gln3-Cys1201 and Gln3-Cys2196 pairs are 5.5(+/- 0.6) nm and 5.7(+/- 0.7) nm, respectively, as measured by steady-state methods. Lifetime methods gave somewhat higher distances of 8.1(+/- 0.2) nm and 7.6(+/- 0.2) nm, respectively, between these sites. The binding of heparin or subjection to high ionic strength had only a minor effect, while in the presence of 50% (w/v) glycerol, an increase of about 25% in the intramolecular distances between these sites was observed. A similar effect was induced by binding of fibronectin to the surface of Cytodex beads, an event which was previously shown instead to markedly increase the intersubunit distances between the Gln3-Gln3 and Cys1201-Cys1201 pairs. The solution structure of fibronectin was further investigated by elastic light-scattering and circular dichroism measurements. By elastic light-scattering, the radius of gyration of fibronectin was found to be 15.3(+/- 0.8) nm in the presence of 30% (w/v) glycerol, in contrast to a value of 8.6(+/- 0.3) nm under physiological conditions. Far and near ultraviolet circular dichroism spectra showed that only minor changes in the secondary structure of fibronectin take place on increasing the glycerol content of the solvent up to 34% (w/v). Our results complement previously available information on the solution structure of fibronectin and on its transition from the native compact conformation to a more expanded form on increasing ionic strength or glycerol content. In either situation, fibronectin seems to retain a basic structural core, in which the N-terminal, the central and the C-terminal regions of the two subunits strongly interact with each other. A major role of hydrophobic forces, in stabilizing the fibronectin conformations under these conditions, is therefore postulated. The transition to the extended forms seen in many electron micrographs can instead be explained by disruption of the proposed structural core upon adsorption to surfaces.