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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (Brown)
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Brown pigment(s) formed in Cryptococcus neoformans when grown on media containing extracts of the seeds of Guizotia abyssinica cannot be extracted by common organic solvents or by 6 n HCl or 2 n NaOH. A similar pigmentation was observed in C. neoformans when grown on a medium containing caffeic acid isolated from the hydrolyzed methanol extract of G. abyssinica seeds. Its methyl ester and the diacetate thereof, as well as the following structurally related compounds, 3-hydroxytyramine, 3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethanolamine, and 4-hydroxy-3,5-dimethoxycinnamic acid, brought about similar pigmentation. However, 2,4-, 2,5-, 2,6-, and 3,5-dihydroxybenzoic acids, tyrosine, phenylalanine, cinnamic acid, 4-hydroxycinnamic acid, and 4-hydroxy-3-methoxycinnamic acid did not cause coloration in C. neoformans.
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PMID:Pigment production of Cryptococcus neoformans grown with extracts of Guizotia abyssinica. 511 9

Brown, Richard W. (National Animal Disease Laboratory, Ames, Iowa). Color of cultures of Staphylococcus epidermidis determined by spectral reflectance colorimetry. J. Bacteriol. 91:911-918. 1966.-A colorimeter with a reflectance attachment was used to study pigment production by Staphylococcus epidermidis strains grown on a medium containing Trypticase Soy Agar (BBL) and cream. The color of each culture was first characterized by reflectance colorimetry for dominant wavelength, purity, and luminous reflectance (Y) and was then classified visually into 1 of 10 color grades. There was not complete agreement in grading colors by the two methods, inasmuch as cultures that were considered more pigmented in relation to other cultures by the reflectance method were sometimes graded visually as less pigmented, and vice versa. Nevertheless, when the cultures were visually graded as being more pigmented, there was a concomitant increase in the average values of dominant wavelength and purity with a decrease in Y for the cultures in each higher grade. Thus, the nonpigmented cultures had the lowest dominant wavelength and purity values but the highest Y (brightness) values, whereas the most pigmented cultures had the highest dominant wavelength and purity values, but the lowest Y values. These results indicated that the cultures did not produce pigments of different hues (greenish-yellow, yellow, yellowish-orange) each with high, medium, and low degrees of purity and brightness. The value (1 - z), where the chromaticity coordinate z = Z/(X + Y + Z), was found to be proportional to the purity value. An inverse relationship between the tristimulus Z and purity values was also demonstrated. All cultures tested by the reflectance method were also classified according to the type of spectral absorption curve obtained with pigments extracted from the cultures with methanol. A comparison of these methods indicated that determining the type of spectral absorption curve would be better for differentiating strains of S. epidermidis, whereas the use of the reflectance method would be better for determining differences of pigment production within strains.
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PMID:Color of cultures of Staphylococcus epidermidis determined by spectral reflectance colorimetry. 593 6

We have investigated the interaction of bovine carbonic anhydrase with neutral aniline, phenol, and methanol molecules. The measurements are of optical spectra and solvent water and methanol proton magnetic relaxation rates of solutions of Co2+-substituted enzyme. We recently proposed a model [Koenig, S. H., Brown, R. D., & Jacob, G. S. (1980) Proceedings of the Symposium on Biophysics and Physiology of Carbon Dioxide, Springer-Verlag, West Berlin and Heidelberg], based on the interaction of enzyme with monovalent anions, that accounts for the pH dependences observed for a wide variety of phenomena, including the apparent pKa for enzymatic activity. We now extend the model to include the observed effects of neutral molecules. Aniline and phenol, though isoelectronic, shift the observed pKa values in opposite directions, and both appear to bind at the aromatic binding site to which sulfonamide inhibitors and aromatic esters are known to bind. The resulting binary complexes behave as altered enzymes, with different values of the pKa for activity, but otherwise are similar to the native enzyme. In terms of our model, aniline and phenol alter the relative affinities of water and anions for the same coordination position of the metal ion at the active site. The effect is opposite in sign for the two nolecules becuase of the differing proton affinities of the NH2 and OH moieties of the phenol ring in each case. By extension, our results indicate that data from experiments using aromatic buffers such as imidazole and lutidine should be analyzed with some care; effects previously attributed to buffer molecules to the aromatic binding site in the active region of the enzyme. The interaction of methanol with carbonic anhydrase is quite different, and very weak. Methanol does displace water at the metal, but to first order there is little, if any, preferential binding of methanol compared to water. Observations by others that alcohols inhibit esterase activity with inhibition constants on the order of 1 M are not attributable to binding of alcohol to enzyme but rather, in our view, result from the increased solubility of aromatic ester substrates in the alcohol-modified solvent.
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PMID:Interaction of bovine carbonic anhydrase with (neutral) aniline, phenol, and methanol. 677 52

Brown adipose tissue and collagenase-isolated brown adipocytes were investigated in rats by means of 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. After chloroform-methanol extraction of brown adipose tissue, proton and natural abundance 13C spectra of the chloroform fraction showed resonances attributable to triglycerides, and were qualitatively similar to those of the corresponding fraction of white adipose tissue. By means of quantitative analysis of 1H spectra, fatty acid unsaturation and polyunsaturation in triglycerides were found to be lower in brown than white adipose tissue; moreover, unsaturation parameters decreased in triglyceride fatty acids of brown adipose tissue upon norepinephrine administration or cold acclimatization of rats, and were affected by the age of donors. The molar percentage of mono- and polyunsaturated C18 fatty acids in triglycerides was determined from 13C spectra and found to change in the early post-natal period. Isolated, agarose-embedded brown adipocytes from 4-day-old rats showed a number of peaks in the carbohydrate region of 1H spectra that were not present in spectra of white adipocytes and almost disappeared in brown fat cells of older animals. These peaks could be restored by insulin exposure. Natural abundance 13C spectra of isolated brown adipocytes were resolved enough to allow unambiguous assignment of resonances to carbons of fatty acids, glycerol, glucose, ethanolamine, and choline. Calculation of the mono- to polyunsaturated fatty acids ratio in the cells was also performed. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a useful tool for the investigation of brown adipose tissue and adipocytes therefrom.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance spectroscopy investigations of brown adipose tissue and isolated brown adipocytes. 789 17

Aging is associated with increases in body mass and fat mass (FM), whereas fat-free mass (FFM) either decreases or remains unchanged. The purpose of this study was to determine whether dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) accurately detects age-associated changes in male Fischer 344 x Brown-Norway rats ages 8, 18, and 28 months. Eviscerated animal carcasses were first examined via the Lunar DPX-IQ DXA (small animal software version 1.0; HiRes (0.6 x 1.2 mm) medium mode). Eviscerated carcasses were then weighed, autoclaved, homogenized, and fat isolated from aliquots of homogenate via methanol/chloroform extraction. In both chemical (CHEM) and DXA analysis, carcass mass (CM), FM, and % fat were significantly higher (P < 0.0001) in the 18 and 28 versus 8-month-old rats. CHEM showed greater FFM in the 18 versus 8 months-old rats but not the 28 months-old animals. DXA was unable to detect the age-associated changes in FFM. Regression analysis showed a strong correlation between CHEM and DXA methods for CM (r = 0.98, P < 0.0001) and FM (r = 0.97, P < 0.0001), but less strong for FFM (r = 0.59, P = 0.0002). In conclusion, compared to CHEM, DXA consistently overestimated CM and FM across the age groups by 9% and 77%, respectively, and underestimated FFM by 5%.
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PMID:Chemical versus dual energy x-ray absorptiometry for detecting age-associated body compositional changes in male rats. 1083 61

Stocks, Peter K. (Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge), and C. S. McCleskey. Morphology and physiology of Methanomonas methanooxidans. J. Bacteriol. 88:1071-1077. 1964.-Pure cultures of methane-oxidizing bacteria isolated from soil, from the rumen of a fistulated cow, and from coalmine water were found to be identical in morphological, cultural, and physiological characteristics with Methanomonas methanooxidans of Brown and Strawinski. Two of the isolates were serologically related to the organism of Brown and Strawinski. All the strains required methane for good growth, but a delayed moderate growth occurred on methanol. No other substances were utilized as carbon and energy source. Nitrogen requirements were satisfied by nitrates, ammonium salts, peptone, or certain amino acids. The taxonomic position of the species is discussed.
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PMID:MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF METHANOMONAS METHANOOXIDANS. 1421 21

Sandvik, Olav (National Animal Disease Laboratory, Ames, Iowa), and Richard W. Brown. Spectrophotometric characterization of pigments produced by Staphylococcus epidermidis strains isolated from bovine udders. J. Bacteriol. 89:1201-1208. 1965.-Spectrophotometric analysis of methanol-extracted pigments of 70 isolates, representing 48 strains of Staphylococcus epidermidis, exhibited absorption curves that were classified into seven types, designated I, II, III, IV, V, VI, and a S. aureus type. Two subtypes were included in types I and III. All nonpigmented cell extracts were classified as type I. One of the six numbered type absorption curves was obtained with the majority of isolates. Three isolates gave an absorption curve that was similar to the curve produced by extracts of five of seven S. aureus strains, thus the designation S. aureus type. The differences in pigment complexes indicated by the various absorption curves of methanol extracts were substantiated by column-chromatography studies. Generally, pigments of types II to VI, as produced by representative strains, were of a xanthophyllic nature, whereas, the S. aureus type pigment studied was carotenelike. Analyses of representative strains showed that the type of spectral absorption curves did not change whether the organisms were carried in vitro and tested through 3 months, or isolated repeatedly from infected udders for periods up to 8 months. The method of determining the spectral absorption curves of whole-cell methanol extracts provides an additional tool for differentiating strains of S. epidermidis that can be used in enzootiological studies of udder infections.
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PMID:SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC CHARACTERIZATION OF PIGMENTS PRODUCED BY STAPHYLOCOCCUS EPIDERMIDIS STRAINS ISOLATED FROM BOVINE UDDERS. 1429 86

Brown coal fly ashes were tested as potentially low-cost sorbents for the removal of synthetic dyes from waters. It was shown that both basic (cationic) as well as acid (anionic) dyes can be sorbed onto the fly ash. The adsorption can be described by the multi-site Langmuir isotherm. The sorption capacities were in the range of 10(-1)-10(-3)mmol/g and did not differ significantly for basic and acid dyes. The dye sorption decreased in the presence of organic solvents (methanol, acetone). The presence of oppositely charged surfactants exhibited a pronounced effect on the dye sorption-low concentrations of the surfactant enhanced sorption, whereas high concentrations solubilized the dyes and kept them in solution. Inorganic salts exhibited only a minor effect on the dye sorption. The sorption of basic dyes increased at high pH values, whereas the opposite was true for acid dyes.
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PMID:Sorption of dyes from aqueous solutions onto fly ash. 1460 40

A capillary electrophoretic (CE) method for analyzing five basic dyes (Basic Red 76, Basic Brown 16, Basic Yellow 57, Basic Brown 17 and Basic Blue 99) sold under the trade name Arianor, which are commonly used in hair care products, has been established. A buffer of 100 mM acetic acid-ammonium acetate (50:50) containing 90% (v/v) methanol was employed in a fused-silica capillary of 40.0 cm x 50 microm I.D. with a bubble cell arrangement. Washing the capillary end immediately after injection was effective in preventing peak tailing of the basic dyes, which was due to their adsorption onto the outer wall of the capillary during the injection. Under these optimized conditions, acceptable results for reproducibility, limit of detection and quantitation, and linearity were obtained for the five authentic dyes tested. The recoveries of five authentic basic dyes spiked to three commercial hair care products also provided with acceptable results. This optimized CE method is useful for the analysis of mixed basic dyes in hair care products.
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PMID:Separation and determination of basic dyes formulated in hair care products by capillary electrophoresis. 1644 18

Transition state search algorithms, such as the nudged elastic band can fail, if a good initial guess of the transition state structure cannot be provided. The growing string method (GSM) [J. Chem. Phys. 120, 7877 (2004)] eliminates the need for an initial guess of the transition state. While this method only requires knowledge of the reactant and product geometries, it is computationally intensive. To alleviate the bottlenecks in the GSM, several modifications were implemented: Cartesian coordinates were replaced by internal coordinates, the steepest descent method for minimization of orthogonal forces to locate the reaction path was replaced by the conjugate gradient method, and an interpolation scheme was used to estimate the energy and gradient, thereby reducing the calls to the quantum mechanical (QM) code. These modifications were tested to measure the reduction in computational time for four cases of increasing complexity: the Muller-Brown potential energy surface, alanine dipeptide isomerization, H abstraction in methanol oxidation, and C-H bond activation in oxidative carbonylation of toluene to p-toluic acid. These examples show that the modified GSM can achieve two- to threefold speedups (measured in terms of the reduction in actual QM gradients computed) over the original version of the method without compromising accuracy of the geometry and energy of the final transition state. Additional savings in computational effort can be achieved by carrying out the initial search for the minimum energy pathway (MEP) using a lower level of theory (e.g., HF/STO-3G) and then refining the MEP using density functional theory at the B3LYP level with larger basis sets (e.g., 6-31G( *), LANL2DZ). Thus, a general strategy for determining transition state structures is to initiate the modified GSM using a low level of theory with minimal basis sets and then refining the calculation at a higher level of theory with larger basis sets.
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PMID:Development and application of a hybrid method involving interpolation and ab initio calculations for the determination of transition states. 1904 35


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