Publications by authors named "R A Hartline"

Electricity-consuming microbial communities can serve as biocathodic catalysts in microbial electrochemical technologies. Initiating their functionality, however, remains a challenge. One promising approach is the polarity inversion of bioanodes.

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Pseudomonas putida (oleovorans) (Pp(OCT)) cured of its OCT plasmid (Pp) no longer grows on D-lysine. Conjugation of PpTrp- with three different methionine auxotrophs carrying the OCT plasmid resulted in PpTrp- (OCT) organisms that grew on D-lysine. Three early D-lysine catabolic enzymes encoded by the OCT plasmid are a lysine racemase, the proposed conversion of D-lysine to delta 1-piperidine-2-carboxylate (P2C), for which we provide evidence, and P2C reductase which converts P2C to pipecolate.

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Two methods for bacterial membrane transport, filtration and flow dialysis, were used to study cellular association of Pseudomonas putida with naphthalene. It is not technically possible to determine the exact cellular or vesicular location of the naphthalene, and because it is hydrophobic, it could be at the membrane(s) rather than inside the cells. As an index of naphthalene having crossed the inner membrane we used the intracellular formation of its first catabolite.

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In vitro effects of ethanol on calcium taken up by synaptosomes were examined in two strains of mice, C57BL and DBA, that exhibit marked differences in alcohol sensitivity and preference. There were no significant strain differences in basal or depolarization-dependent synaptosomal calcium levels. Ethanol did not reduce the basal calcium level but instead reduced depolarization-dependent calcium levels with the same potency in both strains.

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