3 results match your criteria: "University and Research Center Tulln[Affiliation]"

Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins.

Polymers (Basel)

January 2017

Department of Chemistry, Division of Chemistry of Renewable Resources, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, University and Research Center Tulln, Konrad-Lorenz-Strasse 24, 3430 Tulln an der Donau, Austria.

Ammoxidation of pine kraft lignin in aqueous 5 wt % ammonia affords a novel type of phenol substitute that significantly accelerates resole synthesis and curing as demonstrated for 40 wt % phenol replacement. Compared to non-ammoxidized lignin, which already shortens significantly the cooking time required to reach a resole viscosity of 1000 Pa·s (250 vs. 150 s) and reduces the typical curing B-time by about 25% at 100 °C, the use of ammoxidized lignin has an even more pronounced impact in this respect.

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Interaction of Yna1 and Yna2 Is Required for Nuclear Accumulation and Transcriptional Activation of the Nitrate Assimilation Pathway in the Yeast Hansenula polymorpha.

PLoS One

May 2016

Fungal Genetics and Genomics Unit, Division of Microbial Genetics and Pathogen Interactions, BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, University and Research Center Tulln, Konrad Lorenz Strasse 24, 3430, Tulln/Donau, Austria; Health and Environment Department, Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH (AIT), University and Research Center Tulln, Konrad Lorenz Strasse 24, 3430, Tulln/Donau, Austria.

A few yeasts, including Hansenula polymorpha are able to assimilate nitrate and use it as nitrogen source. The genes necessary for nitrate assimilation are organised in this organism as a cluster comprising those encoding nitrate reductase (YNR1), nitrite reductase (YNI1), a high affinity transporter (YNT1), as well as the two pathway specific Zn(II)2Cys2 transcriptional activators (YNA1, YNA2). Yna1p and Yna2p mediate induction of the system and here we show that their functions are interdependent.

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Reversible Oxidation of a Conserved Methionine in the Nuclear Export Sequence Determines Subcellular Distribution and Activity of the Fungal Nitrate Regulator NirA.

PLoS Genet

July 2015

Fungal Genetics and Genomics Unit, Department of Applied Genetics and Cell Biology, BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Science, Vienna, Vienna, Austria; Health and Environment Department, Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH-AIT, University and Research Center Tulln, Tulln an der Donau, Austria.

The assimilation of nitrate, a most important soil nitrogen source, is tightly regulated in microorganisms and plants. In Aspergillus nidulans, during the transcriptional activation process of nitrate assimilatory genes, the interaction between the pathway-specific transcription factor NirA and the exportin KapK/CRM1 is disrupted, and this leads to rapid nuclear accumulation and transcriptional activity of NirA. In this work by mass spectrometry, we found that in the absence of nitrate, when NirA is inactive and predominantly cytosolic, methionine 169 in the nuclear export sequence (NES) is oxidized to methionine sulfoxide (Metox169).

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