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71.
Thirty-six male albino rats were injected with either saline or 0.6 mg/kg scopolamine and placed on a metal grid. The grid was wired to a transistor-biased detector which determined, every second, whether the subject's resistance was above or below a preset threshold value. Over test sessions of five minutes, drug subject's resistances were above each of the three threshold values used (5, 10, 15 megohms) for significantly longer than those of control subjects. Scopolamine treated rats would therefore receive lower shock levels than control subjects in a shock experiment. 相似文献
72.
The dissociation constant and stoichiometry of copper binding to mouse liver S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase (SAHH) was determined as part of characterizing the possible roles of SAHH in copper metabolism. Copper (64Cu(II)) binding was measured by an ultrafiltration method in the presence of EDTA as a competing ligand. The KD was 3.9 +/- 0.7 x 10(-16) M, and the stoichiometry was one g atom of copper per 48-kDa subunit. Western blots indicated that the liver contains approximately 12 times more SAHH than the kidney, which in turn contains approximately 5 times more SAHH than the brain. The high concentration and copper affinity of SAHH in the liver may contribute to the liver's ability to preferentially accumulate copper, and the low levels of SAHH in the brain may contribute to the sensitivity of the brain to copper deficiency. The effects of genetic defects of copper metabolism and copper deficiency on SAHH were also determined. Normal SAHH levels were detected in brindled mouse liver, kidney, and brain. However, SAHH from brindled mouse liver eluted abnormally from phenyl Superose columns implying an effect of the brindled mouse defect on SAHH protein structure. Hepatic cytosols from the toxic milk mouse contained approximately 42% the amount of SAHH detected in controls, and hepatic levels of SAHH were also decreased by approximately 45% in copper-deficient mice. The binding properties of SAHH and the effects of abnormal states of copper metabolism on its levels are consistent with significant roles for SAHH in normal and abnormal copper metabolism. SAHH may have roles in regulating tissue copper levels and the distribution of intracellular copper. 相似文献
73.
Sean A. Stratton Adrienne S. Ettinger Cathleen L. Doherty Brian T. Buckley 《Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Water》2023,10(1):e1620
Flint, Michigan reignited the public discourse surrounding lead contamination in drinking water with Newark, New Jersey recently experiencing its own lead-in-water crisis. Following Flint's experience, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed changes to the Lead and Copper Rule (LCR), but these changes may not produce better detection of contamination. LCR testing requirements were evaluated for their ability to predict or identify problems from the recent (2015–2019) Newark lead exceedance data. LCR compliance and water quality data were obtained from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) website. Between 2002 and 2015, Newark sampled on a reduced sampling plan (50 samples once every 3 years), as required, for lead and copper. These samples were divided between Newark's two water sources with uneven sampling distribution across the city, further limiting the potential to identify a risk of lead in drinking water. Results suggest a more rigorous testing requirement may have identified the problem sooner. Limitations related to the LCR that prevented Newark water suppliers from earlier detection of lead risk will continue under the revised LCR. This article is categorized under:
- Engineering Water > Water, Health, and Sanitation
- Science of Water > Water Quality