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This paper describes an investigation on the effect of microbial removal using IMF for high quality drinking water production. The comparison of IMF and IMF-PAC configuration was carried out in the study to highlight the importance of PAC in the system. The specific objective of this study was to study the effect of PAC adsorption in the IMF-PAC system particularly in removing microbial substances from contaminated raw water. A bench scale IMF-PAC configuration using a flat sheet microfiltration membrane was set up for experimental purposes. Experimentally, the result has shown high removal of microbial substances with the IMF-PAC system compared to IMF. The result of E. coli removal achieved was below the detectable level due to the microbial size, which is bigger than membrane pore size. The addition of PAC has shown a direct effect on total microbial removal. The adsorption of microbial onto PAC surfaces reduced the amount of smaller microbial present in permeate samples. As a conclusion, the configuration of IMF is a promising separation process in removing microbial substances, especially when the system is combined with PAC.
Water Sci Technol 2002
PMID:Comparative study on microbial removal in immersed membrane filtration (IMF) with and without powdered activated carbon (PAC). 1244 59

Three beef dressing lines of different capacity (160, 440 and 800 head d(-1)) were investigated with respect to contamination associated with carcass/hide and carcass/faeces contacts, the distribution of microbial contamination on carcasses and the antimicrobial efficacy of cold water carcass washes. Swab samples were taken from up to 17 sites for determination of Aerobic Plate Counts at 37 degrees C (APC 37 degrees C) and Escherichia coli enumeration using the Petrifilm procedure. The three beef dressing systems produced virtually identical patterns of microbial contamination. High contamination was found at those sites associated with opening cuts and/or subject to hide contact during hide removal. Where contamination is intermittent, the use of mean microbial data tended to obscure evidence of faecal or hide contact. Consequently, worst-case results, as represented by the 95th percentile value, were used to identify probable instances and sources of contact contamination. Sites not subject to faecal contamination or hide contact typically had swab sample APC (37 degrees C) values of less than log 2.00 cfu cm(-2) accompanied by the occasional detection of E. coli at levels below log 1.00 cfu cm(-2). Sites contacted by 'clean' hide typically had APC (37 degrees C) counts of log 3.00 cfu cm(-2) or greater accompanied by occasional E. coli counts not exceeding log 2.00 cfu cm(-2). Sites contaminated by direct faecal contact or contact with faecally contaminated hides typically had APC (37 degrees C) counts equal to, or greater than, log 4.00 cfu cm(-2) accompanied by E. coli counts exceeding log 2.00 cfu cm(-2). Cold water carcass washing was ineffective in removing microbial contamination and tended to bring about a posterior to anterior redistribution, resulting in increased counts at forequarter sites.
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PMID:Distribution and sources of microbial contamination on beef carcasses. 1245 92

A new method for solid-liquid separation for wastewater incorporating simple operation and shortened treatment time is necessary for improvement of sewage systems. In this study, removal of suspended solids from municipal wastewater by coagulation and foam separation using coagulant and milk casein was examined. By adding casein before the foam separation process, the removal of suspended substances was dramatically improved. The optimum condition for treating sewage was 20 mg-Fe/L of FeCl3, 3 mg/L of casein, and pH 5.5, which resulted in a removal rates of over 98% for turbidity and SS. A removal of 96-98% was also possible for phosphate and anionic surfactant. When PAC was used, the floc was also efficiently recovered in foam by the addition of casein. It became clear that coagulation and foam separation using casein as the collector is an effective method for removing suspended solids in municipal wastewater in a short time (within 10 min).
Water Sci Technol 2002
PMID:Removal of suspended substances by coagulation and foam separation from municipal wastewater. 1252 52

We have previously prepared beta-lactoglobulin (beta-LG)-carboxymethyl dextran (CMD) conjugates with water-soluble carbodiimide and achieved reduced immunogenicity of beta-LG. In the present study, to elucidate the mechanism for the reduced immunogenicity of beta-LG, we investigated changes in the T cell response to beta-LG after conjugation with CMDs differing in molecular weight (about 40 and 162 kDa). Lymph node cells from BALB/c, C3H/He, and C57BL/6 mice that had been immunized with beta-LG or the conjugates were stimulated with beta-LG, and the in vivo T cell response was then evaluated by BrdU (5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine) ELISA as the ex vivo proliferative response. T cells from the conjugate-immunized mice showed a lower proliferative response than those from the beta-LG-immunized mice. T cell epitope scanning, using synthesized peptides, showed that the T cell epitope profiles of the conjugates were similar to those of beta-LG, whereas the proliferative response to each epitope was reduced. These results indicate that the lower in vivo T cell response with the conjugates was not due to induction of conjugate-specific T cells, but due to a decrease in the number of beta-LG-specific T cells. After the lymph node cells from beta-LG-immunized mice had been stimulated with beta-LG or the conjugates, the efficiency of the antigen presentation of the conjugate to beta-LG-specific T cells was evaluated by BrdU ELISA as the in vitro proliferative response. The antigen presentation of beta-LG to the T cells was reduced by conjugation with CMD. In addition, conjugation with CMD enhanced the resistance of beta-LG to cathepsin B and cathepsin D, which suggest that conjugation with CMD inhibited the degradation of beta-LG by proteases in APC and led to suppression of the generation of antigenic peptides including T cell epitopes from beta-LG. It is therefore considered that the suppressive effect on the generation of T cell epitopes reduced the antigen presentation of the conjugates and that this reduction led to a decrease in the number of beta-LG-specific T cells in vivo. As a result, the decreased help to B cells by T cells would have reduced the antibody response to beta-LG. We conclude that suppression of the generation of T cell epitopes by conjugation with CMD is important to the mechanism for the reduced immunogenicity of beta-LG.
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PMID:Modulation of the T cell response to beta-lactoglobulin by conjugation with carboxymethyl dextran. 1252 6

Epidemiological and animal studies suggest that tea may be protective towards cancers of the GI tract. White tea, the least processed form of tea, contains high levels of polyphenols and, like green tea, is chemopreventive towards heterocyclic amine-initiated colonic aberrant crypt formation in male F344 rats. We examined for the first time the relative effectiveness of white and green tea in suppressing intestinal tumorigenesis in C57BL/6J-Apc(Min/+) (Apc(min)) mice. Each tea was also compared with sulindac, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug known to be highly effective in Apc(min) mice. Male C57BL/6J (+/+) (wild-type) and Apc(min) mice were treated in the drinking water with white tea or green tea (1.5% w/v, 2 min brew-time), 80 p.p.m. sulindac, a combination of 80 p.p.m. sulindac in 1.5% white tea, or pH buffered water. After 12 weeks of treatment, Apc(min) mice given white tea, green tea, or sulindac had significantly fewer tumors than controls (P < 0.05). The protection provided by 1.5% green or white tea was comparable to that provided by 80 p.p.m. sulindac. Mice treated with a combination of white tea plus sulindac had significantly fewer tumors than either treatment alone (P < 0.05). beta-catenin and beta-catenin/Tcf-4 regulated proteins Cyclin D(1) and c-Jun were readily detected in polyps, but markedly reduced in normal-looking intestines of mice treated with both tea and sulindac. This research provides evidence that teas, particularly when administered in combination with sulindac, are highly effective at inhibiting intestinal neoplasia in male Apc(min) mice via direct or indirect effects on the beta-catenin/APC pathway.
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PMID:Suppression of tumorigenesis in the Apc(min) mouse: down-regulation of beta-catenin signaling by a combination of tea plus sulindac. 1258 76

The use of vortex concentrators is becoming increasingly popular for suspended solids reduction in combined sewer overflows and stormwater. This study is a laboratory investigation of the use of vortex concentrators to reduce the solids concentration of synthesized stormwater. The synthesized stormwater was made with water and addition of particles; sand, granular activated carbon, and sewer sediments. The vortex concentrator was made of acryl resin 300 mm in diameter. To determine the efficiency for various influent suspended solids (SS) concentrations, tests were performed with different SS concentrations. The samples were taken simultaneously at the influent storage tank and effluent tank, and measured SS concentrations. The range of surface loading rates were 120 to 850 m3/m2/day, and influent SS concentrations were varied from 300 to 5,000 mg/L. To determine the optimum coagulant dosage, jar tests were conducted with coagulants such as PAM and PAC. It was found that optimum coagulant and its dosage were PAM and 2 mg/L. The overall SS removal efficiency of the vortex concentrator for typical stormwater was estimated at about 65%. With an increase of SS concentration, the removal efficiency was increased. Since the SS concentration of stormwater was higher than 1,000 mg/L, the removal efficiency of the vortex concentrator for stormwater could be estimated to be 65-70%. The SS removal efficiency was increased with an increase of retention time, and the optimum retention time was 0.15-1.0 minutes. With an increase of the foul to overflow Q(F)/Q(o), a key parameter for vortex concentrator operation, the removal efficiency was increased. An alternative solution to improve treatment efficiency might be to set a follow-up retention basin. Based on a series of settling tests on the treated overflow water from the vortex concentrator, 5 to 10 minutes hydraulic retention time in a follow-up retention basin would substantially improve the results.
Water Sci Technol 2003
PMID:The vortex concentrator for suspended solids treatment. 1279 98

Combined flocculants with higher environmental safety and lower ecological risk are urgently required in the process of water and wastewater treatment. HECES, a kind of flocculants with high effect and high ecological safety was synthesized by natural and biodegradable polysaccharide starch of corn and inorganic aluminium salt. Flocculent performance includes sediment character and turbidity removal rate. The jar test results showed that the flocculent performance of HECES with the dose of 3.0 mg.L-1 was prior to the combined adding 4.5 mg.L-1 PAC and 1.0 mg.L-1 PAM in treating kaolin suspensions. The optimal concentration of HECES was 8.0 mg.L-1 and 4.0 mg.L-1 in treating domestic wastewater and municipal effluent respectively, with the comparison to 50% an 40% of PAC, the removal rate of turbidity reached 95% and 99%, respectively. It was also identified that the optimal concentration required to effect flocculation depended on kaolin concentration, and on the character of the wastewater within the range examined. It could be more effective to treat wastewater with higher concentration of HECES. The flocculating performance would be better at pH 4.0-9.5. The superior ecological safety of HECES was due to its lower dosage and its lower concentration of residual activated aluminium.
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PMID:[Performance of a novel combined flocculant HECES]. 1292 42

Bjerkandera adusta produces many chlorometabolites including chlorinated anisyl metabolites (CAMs) and 1-arylpropane-1,2-diols (1, 2, 3, 4) as idiophasic metabolic products of L-phenylalanine. These diols are stereoselectively biosynthesized from a C7-unit (benzylic, from L-phenylalanine) and a C2-unit, of unknown origin, as predominantly erythro (1R,2S) enantiomers. Of the labeled amino acids tested as possible C2-units, at the 4-10 mM level, none were found to efficiently label the 2,3-propane carbons of the diols. However, glycine (2-13C), L-serine (2,3,3-d3) and L-methionine (methyl-d3) entered the biomethylation pathway. Neither pyruvate (2,3-13C2), acetate (1,2-13C2), acetaldehyde (d4) nor ethanol (ethyl-d5) labeled the 2,3-propane carbons of the diols at the 4-10 mM level. Pyruvate (2,3-13C2) and L-serine (2,3,3-d3) (which also entered the biomethylation pathway) did, however, effectively label the 2,3-propane carbons of the alpha-ketols and diols at the 40 mM level as evidenced by mass spectrometry. Glycerol (1,1,2,3,3-d5) also appeared to label one of the 2,3-propane carbons (ca. 5% as 2H2 in the C3 side chain) as suggested by mass spectrometric data and also entered the biomethylation pathway, likely via amino acid synthesis. Glycerol (through pyruvate), therefore, likely supplies C2 and C3 of the propane side chain with arylpropane diol biosynthesis. Incubation of B. adusta with synthetic [2-2H1, 2-18O]-glycerol showed that neither 2H nor 18O were incorporated in the alpha-ketols or diols. The oxygen atom on the C2 of the ketols/diols, therefore, does not appear to come from the oxygen atom on the C2 of glycerol. Glycerol, however, can readily form L-serine (which can then form pyruvate via PLP/serine dehydratase and involve transamination washing out the 18O label and providing the oxygen from water), and can then go on to label the C2-unit. Labeled alpha-ketol, phenyl acetyl carbinol (5) (PAC; ring-d(5), 2,3-13C2 propane) cultured with B. adusta leads to stereospecific reduction to the (1R,2S)-diol (6) (ring-d5 and 2,3-13C2); in all other metabolites produced, the 2,3-13C2) label is washed out. Incubation of the fungus with 4-fluorobenzaldehyde (13) produces a pooling of predominantly erythro (1R,2S) 1-(4'-fluorophenyl)-1,2-propane diol (18 as diacetate) (through the corresponding alpha-ketols 16, 17). Blocking the para-position with fluorine thus appears to prevent ring oxygenation and also chlorination, forcing the conclusion that para-ring oxygenation precedes meta-chlorination.
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PMID:Stereoselective biosynthesis of chloroarylpropane diols by the basidiomycete Bjerkandera adusta: exploring the roles of amino acids, pyruvate, glycerol and phenyl acetyl carbinol. 1461 30

The artificial recharge of sand aquifers with raw source waters is a means both explored and utilised by many water utilities to meet the future potable water demands for increasing urban populations. The microbial ecology within these systems is however, poorly understood, as is the role that microbial biofilms play in the quality of finished water. Knowledge of the ability of biofilm bacteria to metabolise natural organic matter (NOM) is limited, particularly in respect to the degradation of normally recalcitrant hydrophilic and hydrophobic humic acid fractions by sessile and planktonic microbial consortia within sand aquifer systems. To simulate the artificial recharge of sand aquifers that were proposed for the Greater Stockholm Area, four separate 4 m deep sand columns were fed raw lake water and examined over a 45-week study period. The simulated aquifer system (hydraulic retention time 9-16 h) demonstrated the removal of total organic carbon (TOC) (10+/-5%), direct total counts (DTC) of bacteria (74+/-11%), heterotrophic plate count (HPC) bacteria (87+/-5%) and assimilable organic carbon (AOC) (87+/-5%), thereby fulfilling an important barrier function, except for the removal of TOC. Hydrophilic humic acid fractions were more readily metabolised by microbiota (HPC and EUB338-positive cells) harvested from the raw source water (SSM-W), whilst hydrophobic humic acid fractions promoted higher activity by microbiota harvested from the sand matrix (SSM-S). The apparent low activity demonstrated by biofilm microbiota (approximately 40% and 25% of DTC were positive to EUB338 probing for sand matrix and slide biofilms, respectively) could be attributed to the highly recalcitrant nature of the organic loads, whilst at the same time explain the poor removal of TOC. Following nutrient activation (by the PAC assay) nonetheless, a 3-fold increase in the percentage of EUB-positive bacteria was observed on glass slides. Furthermore, the incubation of SSM-S with R2A increased probe-active cells from 57+/-8% to 75+/-7% of DTC and at the same time increased SSM-W from 38+/-8% to 50+/-10%. Whilst these results may imply a good potential for the biological treatment of water by shallow sand aquifers, further work should address the poor removal of TOC observed in this study.
Water Res 2004 Feb
PMID:Artificial groundwater treatment: biofilm activity and organic carbon removal performance. 1472 44

Irinotecan (CPT-11) is a semisynthetic derivative of camptothecin, an alkaloid extracted from the Chinese plant Camptotheca acuminata. It bears a bis-piperidine moiety and was selected for its water solubility and promising preclinical antitumor activity in in vitro and in vivo models. The target of drugs of the camptothecin family is DNA topoisomerase I, a nuclear enzyme involved in the relaxation of the DNA double helix required for replication and transcription activities. They stabilize the enzyme-DNA complex and prevent the religation of the single-strand breaks created by the enzyme, which are converted to double-strand breaks upon the collision with a replication fork during the S-phase. Resistance to irinotecan appears not to be mediated by P-glycoprotein, but by qualitative and/or quantitative alterations of its target, topoisomerase I, or by alterations occurring downstream of this interaction. As with all camptothecin derivatives, irinotecan contains a lactone ring that can be spontaneously and reversibly hydrolyzed to a carboxylate open ring form, which predominates at neutral and alkaline pH and is inactive on topoisomerase I-DNA complexes. Irinotecan is, in fact, much less active than its metabolite SN-38 and is generally considered as a prodrug of this compound. The carboxylesterase which carries out this conversion is preferentially active on the lactone form of irinotecan and directly generates the lactone form of SN-38, which may explain the superiority of irinotecan over SN-38 in vivo. Further metabolism of SN-38 to a beta-glucuronide conjugate is a major pathway of detoxification and plays an important role in determining irinotecan toxicity in the clinical setting. Other metabolic pathways of irinotecan involve oxidations occurring on the bis-piperidine rings, which are carried out by cytochrome P450. Irinotecan has shown an important activity in advanced and metastatic colorectal carcinoma and is now used for this indication in several countries, with two different recommended schedules: weekly administration of 125 mg/m(2) with a 2-week drug-free interval every 4 administrations or 3-weekly administration of 350 mg/m(2), a dose that can be increased to 500 mg/m(2) with the support of antidiarrhetics. Other possible indications of irinotecan include lung and cervix cancer, which are presently under investigation. The dose-limiting toxicity of irinotecan is mainly diarrhea, which occurs 7-10 days after treatment and can be life-threatening when associated with neutropenia, another frequent side effect. High-dose loperamide has shown good efficacy for treating this diarrhea and has allowed an increase in irinotecan doses tolerated by patients. The pharmacokinetics of irinotecan are characterized by a 2- or 3-compartment decay, with a terminal half-life of about 10 h, a total volume of distribution of 150 l/m(2) and a total plasma clearance of 15 l/h/m(2). SN-38 AUC is only a small fraction of that of irinotecan (2-4%) and SN-38 is eliminated from plasma with a half-life of about 12 h. SN-38 glucuronide is present in plasma at higher concentrations than SN-38 and is eliminated at the same rate. APC, produced by the action of cytochrome P450, isoenzyme 3A4, is present in plasma at concentrations close to those of irinotecan itself. Only a small fraction of irinotecan and its metabolites is eliminated in urine and a higher proportion in the bile, with an enterohepatic cycle of SN-38 glucuronide and SN-38. Significant relationships have been established between the AUCs of both irinotecan and SN-38 and hematological and intestinal toxicities, suggesting a potential use for monitoring of this drug.
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PMID:Pharmacology of irinotecan. 1498 54


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