9 results match your criteria: "Universitätsstrasse 16 8092[Affiliation]"

Anthropogenic contaminants can place significant stress on vegetation, especially when they are taken up into plants. Plastic pollution, including nanoplastics (NPs), could be detrimental to tree functioning, by causing, for example, oxidative stress or reducing photosynthesis. While a number of studies have explored the capacity of plants to take up NPs, few have simultaneously assessed the functional damage due to particulate matter uptake.

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Selenium (Se) is an essential micronutrient for many living organisms particularly due to its unique redox properties. We recently found that the sulfur (S) analog for dimethyl selenide (DMSe), dimethyl sulfide (DMS), reacts fast with the marine oxidant hypobromous acid (HOBr) which likely serves as a sink of marine DMS. Here we investigated the reactivity of HOBr with dimethyl selenide and dimethyl diselenide (DMDSe), which are the main volatile Se compounds biogenically produced in marine waters.

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Nanoplastics, solid polymer particles smaller than 1 μm, are suspected to be widely present in the environment, food and air, and may pose a potential threat to human health. Detecting nanoplastics in and associated with individual cells is crucial to understand their mechanisms of toxicity and potential harm. In this context, we developed a single-cell inductively coupled plasma time-of-flight mass spectrometry (sc-ICP-TOFMS) method for the sensitive and rapid quantification of metal-doped model nanoplastics in human cells.

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RNA viruses of Crithidia bombi, a parasite of bumblebees.

J Invertebr Pathol

November 2023

Life Science Research Centre, Faculty of Science, University of Ostrava, 710 00 Ostrava, Czechia. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Leishbuviridae is a group of negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses that infect trypanosomatid parasites, potentially affecting their virulence.
  • Researchers screened for viruses in Crithidia bombi, a parasite that harms bumblebees, and found a high prevalence of a virus called Crithidia bombi leishbuvirus 1 among samples from Europe and North America.
  • The study suggests that bumblebee mobility and the presence of different strains lead to significant viral exchange among C. bombi isolates.
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Because of the difficulty of measuring nanoplastics (NP), the use of NPs doped with trace metals has been proposed as a promising approach to detect NP in environmental media and biota. In the present study, the freshwater amphipod were exposed to palladium (Pd)-doped NP natural sediment at six spiking concentrations (0, 0.3, 1, 3, 10 and 30 g plastic per kg of sediment dry weight) with the aim of assessing their uptake and chronic effects using 28 days standardized single species toxicity tests.

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Long-distance gene flow and adaptation of forest trees to rapid climate change.

Ecol Lett

April 2012

INRA, UMR1202 Biodiversité Gènes et Communautés, Cestas, F-33610, FranceUniversité de Bordeaux, UMR1202 Biodiversité Gènes et Communautés, Talence, F-33410, FranceUniversité Montpellier 2 CNRS, UMR5554, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution, F-34095 Montpellier Cedex 05, FranceDepartment of Forest Ecology and Genetics, Forest Research Centre (CIFOR), INIA, 28040 Madrid, Spain ETH, Department of Environmental Sciences, Universitätstrasse 16 8092 Zürich, SwitzerlandDepartment of Civil, Environmental & Geodetic Engineering, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USAMovement Ecology Laboratory, Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, The Alexander Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Edmond J. Safra Campus, Jerusalem 91904, IsraelSchool of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 IUG, UKSchool of Biological Sciences and Department of Mathematics, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164, USAINRA, UR Biostatistiques & Processus Spatiaux 546, F-84914 Avignon, FranceDepartment of Forest Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, CanadaEcological Genetics Research Unit, Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki FI-00014, FinlandFederal Research and Training Centre for Forests, Natural Hazards and Landscape, Seckendorf-Gudent-Weg 8, 1131 Wien, Austria.

Forest trees are the dominant species in many parts of the world and predicting how they might respond to climate change is a vital global concern. Trees are capable of long-distance gene flow, which can promote adaptive evolution in novel environments by increasing genetic variation for fitness. It is unclear, however, if this can compensate for maladaptive effects of gene flow and for the long-generation times of trees.

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Light as a reagent: A highly functionalized structure that serves as a daphnane template can be formed by the photorearrangement of a 2,5-cyclohexadienone subunit within a complex tricyclic ring system. The chemistry we describe should not only find use in the total synthesis of resiniferatoxin and related daphnanes, but should also provide useful templates for access to complex analogues.

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TADDOLs, Their Derivatives, and TADDOL Analogues: Versatile Chiral Auxiliaries.

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl

January 2001

Laboratory for Organic Chemistry Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule ETH Zentrum, Universitätstrasse 16 8092 Zürich (Switzerland).

TADDOLs, which contain two adjacent diarylhydroxymethyl groups in a trans relationship on a 1,3-dioxolane ring, can be prepared from acetals or ketals of tartrate esters by reaction of the latter with aromatic Grignard reagents. They are extraordinarily versatile chiral auxiliaries. Here, a historical review of the subject is followed by discussion of the preparation of TADDOLs and analogous systems, including TADDOLs with N-, P-, O-, and S-heteroatom ligands appropriate for metals.

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