Different cyanines absorbing in the NIR between 750 and 930 nm were applied to study the efficiency of both radical and cationic polymerization in combination with diaryliodonium salt. Variation of the connecting methine chain and structure of the terminal indolium moiety provided a deeper insight in the structure of the cyanine NIR-sensitizer and the efficiency to generate initiating radicals and conjugate acid. Photophysical studies were pursued by fluorescence spectroscopy providing a deeper understanding regarding the lifetime of the excited state and contribution of nonradiative deactivation resulting in generation of additional heat in the polymerization process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyanines comprising either a benzo[e]- or benzo[c,d]indolium core facilitate initiation of radical photopolymerization combined with high power NIR-LED prototypes emitting at 805 nm, 860 nm, or 870 nm, while different oxime esters function as radical coinitiators. Radical photopolymerization followed an initiation mechanism based on the participation of excited states, requiring additional thermal energy to overcome an existing intrinsic activation barrier. Heat released by nonradiative deactivation of the sensitizer favored the system, even under conditions where a thermally activated photoinduced electron transfer controls the reaction protocol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree guanylin-like peptides, guanylin, uroguanylin and renoguanylin and two guanylate cyclase type C (GC-C) receptor isoforms were cloned and sequenced from the European eel (Anguilla anguilla). All peptides and both receptors (GC-C1 and GC-C2) were predominantly expressed within the intestine and kidney of both sexually immature yellow, and sexually maturing, migratory silver eels. The derived amino acid sequences for the pre-prohormones and guanylate cyclase isoforms had structural features in common with sequences previously reported for guanylin-like peptides and guanylate cyclases from teleost fish and other species in general.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn euryhaline teleosts, osmoregulation is a fundamental and dynamic process that is essential for the maintenance of ion and water balance, especially when fish migrate between fresh water (FW) and sea water (SW) environments. The European eel has proved to be an excellent model species to study the molecular and physiological adaptations associated with this osmoregulatory plasticity. The life cycle of the European eel includes two migratory periods, the second being the migration of FW eels back to the Sargasso Sea for reproduction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe life cycle of the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) includes two long migratory periods, when the newly hatched leptocephali larvae drift on ocean currents from the Sargasso Sea to the shores of Western Europe and then again up to 30 years later when adult eels swim back to their place of birth for reproductive purposes. Prior to the migration from fresh water (FW) to sea water (SW) adult yellow eels undergo various anatomical and physiological adaptations (silvering) which promote sexual development and aid the transition to increased environmental salinities. The aim of this study was to identify and characterise changes in gene expression within the major osmoregulatory tissues of the eel which enable these fish to make the physiological adaptations required for transfer to SW environments.
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