Publications by authors named "AA Bulgakov"

A novel lectin specific to low-branched mannans (MBL-SN) was isolated from coelomic plasma of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus nudus by combining anion-exchange liquid chromatography on DEAE Toyopearl 650 M, affinity chromatography on mannan-Sepharose and gel filtration on the Sephacryl S-200. The molecular mass of MBL-SN was estimated by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-reducing conditions to be about 34 kDa. MBL-SN was shown to be a dimer with two identical subunits of about 17 kDa.

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To elucidate the origin and evolution of mannan-binding lectins (MBL), a new C-type lectin (CTL) specific for high-mannose glycans (MBL-AJ) was isolated from the coelomic plasma of the holothurian Apostichopus japonicus. MBL-AJ has oligomeric forms with identical 17-kDa subunits on SDS-PAGE. Among natural ligands, lectin hemagglutination activity was competitively inhibited by extracellular low-branched, but not high-branched, alpha-D-mannans isolated from marine halophilic bacteria and composed of alpha-1,2 and alpha-1,6 linked D-mannose residues.

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Simplified dynamic models have been developed for predicting the concentrations of radiocesium, radiostrontium, and I in surface waters and freshwater fish following a large-scale radioactive fallout. The models are intended to give averaged estimates for radionuclides in water bodies and in fish for all times after a radioactive fallout event. The models are parameterized using empirical data collected for many lakes and rivers in Belarus, Russia, Ukraine, UK, Finland, Italy, The Netherlands, and Germany.

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Existing methods of predicting of radiocaesium transfer from soil to plants was critcally reviewed. The analysis of radiocaesium behavior in the system "soil solid phase/pore solution/plant" was carried out. Equations for calculation of radiocaesium uptake by plants as a function of soil properties were obtained and tested using the reported experimental data.

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The characteristics of a lectin from the marine bivalve Ruditapes philippinarum (Manila clam) were investigated in this study. A method was developed for the isolation of the Manila clam lectin (MCL). Affinity chromatography using mucin-Sepharose, ion-exchange chromatography with DEAE-Toyoperl, and gel filtration with Superose 6 were used for MCL isolation.

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This study tests a whole-lake experiment to reduce the bioaccumulation of radiocaesium (137Cs) in fish in lakes contaminated by the Chernobyl accident. In many lakes in the Chernobyl contaminated areas, radiocaesium activity concentrations in fish are still significantly higher (up to 100 times in some species) than acceptable limits for human consumption. Estimates of the long-term rate of decline of 137Cs in fish in these regions, in the absence of countermeasures, show that radioactivity in fish in some lakes may remain above acceptable consumption limits for a further 50-100 years from the present date.

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Collapse of interlayer spaces of soil clay minerals can by caused by ammonium cation in concentrations as low as 10(-3) mol/l. The collapse leads to substantial decrease in the soil ability to fix 137Cs. This effect is reversible and the soil fixation ability recovers after the ammonium concentration decrease.

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A model of 137Cs vertical soil transport by a tree root system is presented. As distinct from other models the radionuclide root uptake is described as a reversible process and depth distribution of roots is given as a function of time. The model was used for prediction of 137Cs release from a surface disposal site located in a territory with conditions similar to that in the Chernobyl NPP exclusion zone.

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During the years after the Chernobyl accident the radioceasium activity concentration in most contaminated aquatic ecosystems decreased markedly. Lakes with no permanent inflows and outflows (closed lakes), however, still present a radioecological problem which is expected to continue for some time. In this paper, a mechanistic model for the long-term prediction of radiocaesium behaviour in closed lakes is developed.

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A method for quantitative assessment of 137Cs availability to plants in forest ecosystems on the basis of soil properties has been developed. It is shown that the experimental dependencies of 137Cs soil-to-plant transfer factor (TFag) for fern and bilberry on the bioavailability factor calculated on the basis of soil characteristics of root layer: 137Cs exchangeability, exchangeable Ca, effective selectivity coefficient, were satisfactory described by linear function. The advantage of the proposed method is that the necessary soil characteristics can be taken from the reference literature, evaluated using empirical correlations or determined with standard agrochemical procedures.

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A method of calculation of radiocaesium concentration ratio in plants and mushrooms as a function of radionuclide and soil properties distribution within the root (myzelium) zone is presented. The method allows to predict the long-term dynamics of radiocaesium content in field and forest plants and mushrooms.

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A method of calculation of radiocaesium uptake by forest mushrooms as a function of soil properties is presented. Calculated value of 137Cs transfer factor for Xerocomus badius in the contaminated area of Bryansk Province of Russia is in a good agreement with experimental data.

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A new 44-kD, C-type mannan-binding lectin (MBL-C) consisting of two identical subunits was isolated from the coelomic fluid of the holothurian Cucumaria japonica. In the direct hemagglutination assay, the lectin was effectively inhibited by highly branched mannans similar in structure to yeast mannans and composed of alpha-(1-->2)- and alpha-(1-->6)-bound D-mannopyranose residues. Hemagglutination was not inhibited by mannosaccharides, common constituents of the hydrocarbon chains of "normal" glycoproteins.

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The results of preliminary studies suggest that the cytoskeletal fraction of the radial nerve of the starfish Asterias amurensis contained a 32 kDa protein, which is tissue specific. This protein was isolated from the radial nerve by preparative electrophoresis and used as an antigen for raising polyclonal antibodies. When testing these antibodies on sections of the starfish tissues, it was shown that they interact only with the proteins present in the radial nerve cells.

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Two alkaline DNases of tentacles of actinia Radianthus macrodactylus, referred to as alk DNase I and alk DNase II, respectively, have been purified up to apparent homogeneity with consecutive column ion exchange chromatography and gel filtration. Both enzymes have a lot of common properties, such as the ability to hydrolyze very effectively p-nitrophenyl-5'-TMP and heat-denatured DNA. They both have no preferential specificity to the sugar component of the nucleic acids and effectively digest ribopolymers.

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The regeneration of longitudinal muscle bands (LMBs) in the sea cucumber Stichopus japonicus was studied using light and electron microscopic and immunocytochemical methods. Previous investigations of holothurian organs showed the presence of some cytoskeletal proteins which were specific for LMBs only. One of them, the 98 KDa protein, was isolated by means of SDS-electrophoresis and used as an antigen to obtain polyclonal antibodies.

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The "Wash-off" scenario is designed to test models concerned with the movement of trace contaminants from terrestrial sources to bodies of water, specifically the contamination of surface water by wash-off of radionuclides initially deposited onto soils. Particular emphasis is placed on chemical speciation and on the geochemical and geophysical processes affecting transfer of contaminants from soil to water. The scenario gives descriptions of two experimental plots near the Chernobyl power plant, one using heavy rain and one using snow melt, together with characteristics of the initial aerial deposition of the radionuclides and data on topography, soil type and characteristics, and time-varying precipitation.

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Field and laboratory experiments have been used to study the behaviour of long-lived radionuclides in the zone affected by the Chernobyl accident. Speciation of 90Sr and 137Cs in soils and bottom sediments was determined. The principal distinction of the Chernobyl fallout was that it contained a relatively small proportion of exchangeable forms because a considerable fraction of the radionuclides was incorporated as part of the insoluble fuel particles.

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The influence of temperature and pH on the spatial structure of EPA-1NG has been studied by means of circular dichroism and differential UV-spectroscopy, indicating the molecule to consist mainly of beta-structures. A conformational transition in the molecule was observed within the range of 40-50 degrees C. The further temperature elevation (up to 70 degrees C) was accompanied to the complete distortion of the parent conformation, which is reversed after cooling down to 20 degrees C.

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alpha 1-Acid glycoprotein (AGP) samples, viz., normal AGP (nAGP) and embryonic AGP (eAGP), were isolated from plasma of normal donor blood and abortive human blood, respectively. The materials possess similar amino acid composition and immunochemical properties.

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General chemical and immunochemical characterization of human embryonic prealbumin-1 (EPA-1) isolated from abortive blood is presented. EPA-1 was found to exist as glycosylated and non-glycosylated forms, which are immunochemically identical. Sugar moiety of the glycosylated form contains residues of fucose (3.

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