137 research outputs found
Thermophoretic melting curves quantify the conformation and stability of RNA and DNA
Measuring parameters such as stability and conformation of biomolecules, especially of nucleic acids, is important in the field of biology, medical diagnostics and biotechnology. We present a thermophoretic method to analyse the conformation and thermal stability of nucleic acids. It relies on the directed movement of molecules in a temperature gradient that depends on surface characteristics of the molecule, such as size, charge and hydrophobicity. By measuring thermophoresis of nucleic acids over temperature, we find clear melting transitions and resolve intermediate conformational states. These intermediate states are indicated by an additional peak in the thermophoretic signal preceding most melting transitions. We analysed single nucleotide polymorphisms, DNA modifications, conformational states of DNA hairpins and microRNA duplexes. The method is validated successfully against calculated melting temperatures and UV absorbance measurements. Interestingly, the methylation of DNA is detected by the thermophoretic amplitude even if it does not affect the melting temperature. In the described setup, thermophoresis is measured all-optical in a simple setup using a reproducible capillary format with only 250 nl probe consumption. The thermophoretic analysis of nucleic acids shows the techniqueâs versatility for the investigation of nucleic acids relevant in cellular processes like RNA interference or gene silencing
Seafloor character and sedimentary processes in eastern Long Island Sound and western Block Island Sound
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2006. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geo-Marine Letters 26 (2006): 59-68, doi: 10.1007/s00367-006-0016-4.Multibeam bathymetric data and seismic-reflection profiles collected in eastern Long
Island and western Block Island Sounds reveal previously unrecognized glacial features and
modern bedforms. Glacial features include an ice-sculptured bedrock surface, a newly identified
recessional moraine, exposed glaciolacustrine sediments, and remnants of stagnant-ice-contact
deposits. Modern bedforms include fields of transverse sand waves, barchanoid waves, giant scour
depressions, and pockmarks. Bedform asymmetry and scour around obstructions indicate that net
sediment transport is westward across the northern par of the study area near Fishers Island and
eastward across the southern par near Great Gull Island.This work was supported by the Coastal and Marine Geology Program of the U.S. Geological Survey, the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection, and the Atlantic Hydrographic Branch of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Lateral variability of ichnological content in muddy contourites: Weak bottom currents affecting organismsâ behavior
Although bioturbation is commonly recognized in contourites, only a few studies have analyzed the
ichnological content of these deposits in detail. These studies have mainly focused on meso-scale
bigradational sequence (a coarsening upward followed by a fining-upward sequence resulting from
variations in current velocity). Here we present data from gravitational cores collected along the
NW Iberian Margin showing systematic variation in ichnological content across proximal to distal
depocenters within a large-scale elongated contourite drift. Data demonstrate that tracemakersâ
behavior varies depending on the distance relative to the bottom current core. Trace fossils are
already known to be a useful tool for studying of contouritic deposits and are even used as criterion
for differentiating associated facies (e.g., turbidites, debrites), though not without controversy. We
propose a mechanism by which the distance to the bottom current core exerts tangible influence on
specific macro-benthic tracemaker communities in contourite deposits. This parameter itself reflects
other bottom current features, such as hydrodynamic energy, grain size, nutrient transport, etc.
Ichnological analysis can thus resolve cryptic features of contourite drift depositional settings.The contribution and research by JD was funded through the European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and
innovation programme under the Marie SkĆodowska-Curie grant agreement No 792314 (ICON-SE). The
research of FJR-T was funded by project CGL2015-66835-P (SecretarĂa de Estado de Investigacion, Desarrollo e
Innovacion, Spain), Research Group RNM-178 (Junta de AndalucĂa), and Scientific Excellence Unit UCE-2016-
05 (Universidad de Granada). AMâs research is funded by the I2C program of the Xunta de Galicia Postdoctoral
programme (ED481B 2016/029-0). The research was conducted as part of âThe Drifters Research Groupâ (RHUL)
and âIchnology and Palaeoenvironment Research Groupâ (UGR) programs
Lower Miocene Stratigraphy along the Panama Canal and Its Bearing on the Central American Peninsula
Before the formation of the Central American Isthmus, there was a Central American Peninsula. Here we show that southern Central America existed as a peninsula as early as 19 Ma, based on new lithostratigraphic, biostratigraphic and strontium chemostratigraphic analyses of the formations exposed along the Gaillard Cut of the Panama Canal. Land mammals found in the Miocene Cucaracha Formation have similar body sizes to conspecific taxa in North America, indicating that there existed a terrestrial connection with North America that allowed gene flow between populations during this time. How long did this peninsula last? The answer hinges on the outcome of a stratigraphic dispute: To wit, is the terrestrial Cucaracha Formation older or younger than the marine La Boca Formation? Previous stratigraphic studies of the Panama Canal Basin have suggested that the Cucaracha Formation lies stratigraphically between the shallow-marine Culebra Formation and the shallow-to-upper-bathyal La Boca Formation, the latter containing the Emperador Limestone. If the La Boca Formation is younger than the Cucaracha Formation, as many think, then the peninsula was short-lived (1â2 m.y.), having been submerged in part by the transgression represented by the overlying La Boca Formation. On the other hand, our data support the view that the La Boca Formation is older than the Cucaracha Formation. Strontium dating shows that the La Boca Formation is older (23.07 to 20.62 Ma) than both the Culebra (19.83â19.12 Ma) and Cucaracha (Hemingfordian to Barstovian North American Land Mammal Ages; 19â14 Ma) formations. The Emperador Limestone is also older (21.24â20.99 Ma) than the Culebra and Cucaracha formations. What has been called the âLa Boca Formationâ (with the Emperador Limestone), is re-interpreted here as being the lower part of the Culebra Formation. Our new data sets demonstrate that the main axis of the volcanic arc in southern Central America more than likely existed as a peninsula connected to northern Central America and North America for much of the Miocene, which has profound implications for our understanding of the tectonic, climatic, oceanographic and biogeographic history related to the formation of the Isthmus of Panama
Mid-Devensian climate and landscape in England : new data from Finningley, South Yorkshire
While there is extensive evidence for the Late Devensian, less is known about Early and Middle Devensian (approx. 110â30 ka) climates and environments in the UK. The Greenland ice-core record suggests the UK should have endured multiple changes, but the terrestrial palaeo-record lacks sufficient detail for confirmation from sites in the British Isles. Data from deposits at Finningley, South Yorkshire, can help redress this. A channel with organic silts, dated 40 314â39 552 cal a BP, contained plant macrofossil and insect remains showing tundra with dwarf-shrub heath and bare ground. Soil moisture conditions varied from free draining to riparian, with ponds and wetter vegetated areas. The climate was probably low arctic with snow cover during the winter. Mutual climatic range (MCR), based on Coleoptera, shows the mean monthly winter temperatures of â22 to â2°C and summer ones of 8â14°C. Periglacial structures within the basal gravel deposits and beyond the glacial limits indicate cold-climate conditions, including permafrost. A compilation of MCR reconstructions for other Middle Devensian English sites shows that marine isotope stage 3âbetween 59 and 28 kaâexperienced substantial variation in climate consistent with the Greenland ice-core record. The exact correlation is hampered by temporal resolution, but the Finningley site stadial at approximately 40 ka may correlate with the one of the Greenland stadials 7â11
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