Oxygen Production (oxygen + production)

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of Oxygen Production

  • singlet oxygen production


  • Selected Abstracts


    Electrochemical Monitoring of Singlet Oxygen Production

    ELECTROANALYSIS, Issue 21 2009
    Duncan Sharp
    Abstract The exploitation of singlet oxygen generating compounds as a means of targeted therapies drives the need to develop methods for assessing the efficacy of such compounds and their capacity for generating the reactive oxygen species. Degradation of diphenylisobenzofuran by singlet oxygen is widely used as a spectroscopic probe but its application can be problematic. An alternative detection strategy exploiting the electrochemical monitoring of the quencher concentration, by square wave voltammetry, has been shown to provide a more sensitive and flexible option that could be used to address the increasing interest in photosensitizing materials. [source]


    Photoprotection by Porcine Eumelanin Against Singlet Oxygen Production,

    PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2008
    Alice Wang
    Melanin, a major pigment found in retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells, is considered to function in dual roles, one protective and one destructive. By quenching free radical species and reactive oxygen species (ROS) melanin counteracts harmful redox stress. However, melanin is also thought to be capable of creating ROS. In this destructive role, melanin increases redox strain in the cell. This study uses readily available eumelanin extracted from porcine RPE cells as a more authentic model than synthetic melanin to determine specific mechanisms of melanin activity with regard to singlet oxygen in the presence and absence of rose bengal, a singlet-oxygen photosensitizer. Optical detection of singlet-oxygen was determined by monitoring the bleaching of p -nitrosodimethylaniline in the presence of histidine. Production of singlet oxygen in aqueous oxygen-saturated solutions of rose bengal without eumelanin was readily accomplished. In contrast, detection of singlet oxygen in oxygen-saturated solutions of eumelanin without rose bengal failed, consistent with results of others. However, a significant decrease in singlet oxygen production by rose bengal was observed in the presence of eumelanin. After correction for light absorption and chemical bleaching of eumelanin, the results show that eumelanin also provides a photoprotective mode arising from chemistry, that is, not just the physical process of light absorption followed by energy dissipation as heat. [source]


    IMAGING OF OXYGEN DYNAMICS WITHIN THE ENDOLITHIC ALGAL COMMUNITY OF THE MASSIVE CORAL PORITES LOBATA,

    JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 3 2008
    Michael Kühl
    We used transparent planar oxygen optodes and a luminescence lifetime imaging system to map (at a pixel resolution of <200 ,m) the two-dimensional distribution of O2 within the skeleton of a Porites lobata colony. The O2 distribution was closely correlated to the distribution of the predominant endolithic microalga, Ostreobium quekettii Bornet et Flahault that formed a distinct green band inside the skeleton. Oxygen production followed the outline of the Ostreobium band, and photosynthetic O2 production was detected at only 0.2 ,mol photons m,2 · s,1, while saturation occurred at ,37 ,mol photons m,2 · s,1. Oxygen levels varied from ,60% to 0% air saturation in the illuminated section of the coral skeleton in comparison to the darkened section. The O2 production within the Ostreobium band was lower in the region below the upward facing surface of the coral and elevated on the sides. Oxygen consumption in darkness was also greatest within the Ostreobium zone, as well as in the white skeleton zone immediately below the corallites. The rate of O2 depletion was not constant within zones and between zones, showing pronounced heterogeneity in endolithic respiration. When the coral was placed in darkness after a period of illumination, O2 levels declined by 50% within 20 min and approached steady-state after 40,50 min in darkness. Our study demonstrates the use of an important new tool in endolith photobiology and presents the first data of spatially resolved O2 concentration and its correlation to the physical structures and specific zones responsible for O2 production and consumption within the coral skeleton. [source]


    Contribution of Chloroflexus respiration to oxygen cycling in a hypersaline microbial mat from Lake Chiprana, Spain

    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 8 2007
    Lubos Polerecky
    Summary In dense stratified systems such as microbial mats, photosynthesis and respiration are coupled due to a tight spatial overlap between oxygen-producing and -consuming microorganisms. We combined microsensors and a membrane inlet mass spectrometer with two independent light sources emitting in the visible (VIS) and near infrared (NIR) regions to study this coupling in more detail. Using this novel approach, we separately quantified the activity of the major players in the oxygen cycle in a hypersaline microbial mat: gross photosynthesis of cyanobacteria, NIR light-dependent respiration of Chloroflexus -like bacteria (CLB) and respiration of aerobic heterotrophs. Illumination by VIS light induced oxygen production in the top ,1 mm of the mat. In this zone CLB were found responsible for all respiration, while the contribution of the aerobic heterotrophs was negligible. Additional illumination of the mat with saturating NIR light completely switched off CLB respiration, resulting in zero respiration in the photosynthetically active zone. We demonstrate that microsensor-based quantification of gross and net photosyntheses in dense stratified systems should carefully consider the NIR light-dependent behaviour of CLB and other anoxygenic phototrophic groups. [source]


    The responses of photosynthesis and oxygen consumption to short-term changes in temperature and irradiance in a cyanobacterial mat (Ebro Delta, Spain)

    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2000
    Eric Epping
    We have evaluated the effects of short-term changes in incident irradiance and temperature on oxygenic photosynthesis and oxygen consumption in a hypersaline cyanobacterial mat from the Ebro Delta, Spain, in which Microcoleus chthonoplastes was the dominant phototrophic organism. The mat was incubated in the laboratory at 15, 20, 25 and 30°C at incident irradiances ranging from 0 to 1000 µmol photons m,2 s,1. Oxygen microsensors were used to measure steady-state oxygen profiles and the rates of gross photosynthesis, which allowed the calculation of areal gross photosynthesis, areal net oxygen production, and oxygen consumption in the aphotic layer of the mat. The lowest surface irradiance that resulted in detectable rates of gross photosynthesis increased with increasing temperature from 50 µmol photons m,2 s,1 at 15°C to 500 µmol photons m,2 s,1 at 30°C. These threshold irradiances were also apparent from the areal rates of net oxygen production and point to the shift of M. chthonoplastes from anoxygenic to oxygenic photosynthesis and stimulation of sulphide production and oxidation rates at elevated temperatures. The rate of net oxygen production per unit area of mat at maximum irradiance, J0, did not change with temperature, whereas, JZphot, the flux of oxygen across the lower boundary of the euphotic zone increased linearly with temperature. The rate of oxygen consumption per volume of aphotic mat increased with temperature. This increase occurred in darkness, but was strongly enhanced at high irradiances, probably as a consequence of increased rates of photosynthate exudation, stimulating respiratory processes in the mat. The compensation irradiance (Ec) marking the change of the mat from a heterotrophic to an autotrophic community, increased exponentially in this range of temperatures. [source]


    Biogeochemical modelling of the rise in atmospheric oxygen

    GEOBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2006
    M. W. CLAIRE
    ABSTRACT Understanding the evolution of atmospheric molecular oxygen levels is a fundamental unsolved problem in Earth's history. We develop a quantitative biogeochemical model that simulates the Palaeoproterozoic transition of the Earth's atmosphere from a weakly reducing state to an O2 -rich state. The purpose is to gain an insight into factors that plausibly control the timing and rapidity of the oxic transition. The model uses a simplified atmospheric chemistry (parameterized from complex photochemical models) and evolving redox fluxes in the Earth system. We consider time-dependent fluxes that include organic carbon burial and associated oxygen production, reducing gases from metamorphic and volcanic sources, oxidative weathering, and the escape of hydrogen to space. We find that the oxic transition occurs in a geologically short time when the O2 -consuming flux of reducing gases falls below the flux of organic carbon burial that produces O2. A short timescale for the oxic transition is enhanced by a positive feedback due to decreasing destruction of O2 as stratospheric ozone forms, which is captured in our atmospheric chemistry parameterization. We show that one numerically self-consistent solution for the rise of O2 involves a decline in flux of reducing gases driven by irreversible secular oxidation of the crust caused by time-integrated hydrogen escape to space in the preoxic atmosphere, and that this is compatible with constraints from the geological record. In this model, the timing of the oxic transition is strongly affected by buffers of reduced materials, particularly iron, in the continental crust. An alternative version of the model, where greater fluxes of reduced hydrothermal cations from the Archean seafloor consume O2, produces a similar history of O2 and CH4. When climate and biosphere feedbacks are included in our model of the oxic transition, we find that multiple ,Snowball Earth' events are simulated under certain circumstances, as methane collapses and rises repeatedly before reaching a new steady-state. [source]


    Biogeochemistry of a gypsum-encrusted microbial ecosystem

    GEOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2004
    D. E. CANFIELD
    ABSTRACT Gypsum crusts containing multicolored stratified microbial populations grow in the evaporation ponds of a commercial saltern in Eilat, Israel. These crusts contain two prominent cyanobacterial layers, a bright purple layer of anoxygenic phototrophs, and a lower black layer with active sulphate reduction. We explored the diel dynamics of oxygen and sulphide within the crust using specially constructed microelectrodes, and further explored the crust biogeochemistry by measuring rates of sulphate reduction, stable sulphur isotope composition, and oxygen exchange rates across the crust,brine interface. We explored crusts from ponds with two different salinities, and found that the crust in the highest salinity was the less active. Overall, these crusts exhibited much lower rates of oxygen production than typical organic-rich microbial mats. However, this was mainly due to much lower cell densities within the crusts. Surprisingly, on a per cell-volume basis, rates of photosynthesis were similar to organic-rich microbial mats. Due to relatively low rates of oxygen production and deep photic zones extending from 1.5 to 3 cm depth, a large percentage of the oxygen produced during the day accumulated into the crusts. Indeed, only between 16% to 34% of the O2 produced in the crust escaped, and the remainder was internally recycled, used mainly in O2 respiration. We view these crusts as potential homologs to ancient salt-encrusted microbial ecosystems, and we compared them to the 3.45 billion-year-old quartz barite deposits from North Pole, Australia, which originally precipitated gypsum. [source]


    The effects of N-acetylcysteine on the expression of matrix metalloproteinase-2 and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-2 in hepatic fibrosis in bile duct ligated rats

    HEPATOLOGY RESEARCH, Issue 12 2008
    Arezou Rezaei
    Aim:, N-acetylcysteine can inhibit the formation of intracellular reactive oxygen intermediates. Cellular redox state plays a role in regulating the secretion of matrix metalloproteinase-2. We investigated the effects of N-acetylcysteine on the expression of matrix metalloproteinase-2 and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-2. Methods:, Bile duct ligated rats were used as a model of hepatic fibrosis. We compared the level of gene expression (using real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction [RT,PCR]), liver function parameters, hepatic reactive oxygen production, lipid peroxidation and glutathione state in experimental groups. Results:, N-acetylcysteine treatment significantly improved liver function parameters including the plasma levels of aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and bilirubin. In addition, significant improvement of glutathione state and reactive oxygen production were observed. Hepatic lipid peroxidation was reversed by N-acetylcysteine treatment. Although N-acetylcysteine treatment did not completely normalize the increased matrix metalloproteinase-2 expression, it significantly decreased its level by 65%. N-acetylcysteine treatment also significantly decreased matrix metalloproteinase-2 activity and normalized tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-2 expression. Conclusion:, Collectively, N-acetylcysteine showed inhibition of matrix metalloproteinase-2 expression and activity. In addition, administration of N-acetylcysteine was associated with downregulation of the expression of tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-2 and amelioration of oxidative stress in the liver of bile duct ligated rats. [source]


    Thermodynamic analysis of two-step solar water splitting with mixed iron oxides

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH, Issue 10 2009
    Martin Roeb
    Abstract A two-step thermochemical cycle for solar production of hydrogen from water has been developed and investigated. It is based on metal oxide redox pair systems, which can split water molecules by abstracting oxygen atoms and reversibly incorporating them into their lattice. After successful experimental demonstration of several cycles of alternating hydrogen and oxygen production, the present work describes a thermodynamic study aiming at the improvement of process conditions and at the evaluation of the theoretical potential of the process. In order to evaluate the maximum hydrogen production potential of a coating material, theoretical considerations based on thermodynamic laws and properties are useful and faster than actual tests. Through thermodynamic calculations it is possible to predict the theoretical maximum output of H2 from a specific redox-material under certain conditions. Calculations were focussed on the two mixed iron oxides nickel,iron-oxide and zinc,iron-oxide. In the simulation the amount of oxygen in the redox-material is calculated before and after the water-splitting step on the basis of laws of thermodynamics and available material properties for the chosen mixed iron oxides. For the simulation the commercial Software FactSage and available databases for the required material properties were used. The analysis showed that a maximum hydrogen yield is achieved if the reduction temperature is raised to the limits of the operation range, if the temperature for the water splitting is lowered below 800°C and if the partial pressure of oxygen during reduction is decreased to the lower limits of the operational range. The predicted effects of reduction temperature and partial pressure of oxygen could be confirmed in experimental studies. The increased hydrogen yield at lower splitting temperatures of about 800°C could not be confirmed in experimental results, where a higher splitting temperature led to a higher hydrogen yield. As a consequence it can be stated that kinetics must play an important role especially in the splitting step. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Photoprotection by Porcine Eumelanin Against Singlet Oxygen Production,

    PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2008
    Alice Wang
    Melanin, a major pigment found in retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells, is considered to function in dual roles, one protective and one destructive. By quenching free radical species and reactive oxygen species (ROS) melanin counteracts harmful redox stress. However, melanin is also thought to be capable of creating ROS. In this destructive role, melanin increases redox strain in the cell. This study uses readily available eumelanin extracted from porcine RPE cells as a more authentic model than synthetic melanin to determine specific mechanisms of melanin activity with regard to singlet oxygen in the presence and absence of rose bengal, a singlet-oxygen photosensitizer. Optical detection of singlet-oxygen was determined by monitoring the bleaching of p -nitrosodimethylaniline in the presence of histidine. Production of singlet oxygen in aqueous oxygen-saturated solutions of rose bengal without eumelanin was readily accomplished. In contrast, detection of singlet oxygen in oxygen-saturated solutions of eumelanin without rose bengal failed, consistent with results of others. However, a significant decrease in singlet oxygen production by rose bengal was observed in the presence of eumelanin. After correction for light absorption and chemical bleaching of eumelanin, the results show that eumelanin also provides a photoprotective mode arising from chemistry, that is, not just the physical process of light absorption followed by energy dissipation as heat. [source]


    Ultraviolet Resonance Raman Microprobe Spectroscopy of Photosystem II

    PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2008
    Jun Chen
    Photosystem II (PSII) carries out photosynthetic oxygen production and is responsible for the maintenance of aerobic, heterotrophic life. In PSII, protein amino acid residues play an important role in the light-driven electron transfer reactions. Here, we describe an approach to enhancing vibrational signals from PSII proteins through ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) and a microprobe jet flow technique. Our work shows that pump-probe UVRR can be used to monitor intermediates during photosynthetic oxygen evolution. [source]


    Mechanism of DNA Damage Photosensitized by Trisbipyrazyl Ruthenium Complex.

    PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 5 2000
    Unusual Role of Cu/Zn Superoxide Dismutase
    ABSTRACT Trisbipyrazyl ruthenium(II) (Ru[bpz]32+) was examined as DNA photosensitizer. Damage resulting from the photolysis of synthetic oligonucleotides has been monitored by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Photoadduct formation is found on both single- and double-stranded oligonucleotides. On oligonucleotide duplex, oxidative damage occurs selectively at the 5,G of the 5,GG3, site and to a lesser extent at the 5,G of a GA sequence. These findings suggest the involvement of electron transfer and show that this mechanism is the main DNA damaging process involved in Ru(bpz)32+ photosensitization. In addition, photoadducts and oxidative damage are both highly affected by an increase of salt concentration in the reaction medium, stressing the importance of direct interactions between nucleic acid bases and the excited ruthenium complex for efficient electron transfer. On single-stranded oligonucleotides, all the guanines are oxidized to the same extent. In this case, oxidative damage, which is not affected by an increase of salt in the solution, has been attributed, in part, to singlet oxygen. More importantly, Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) strongly enhances the yield of all damage, correlated to an increase of both electron transfer and singlet oxygen production. This original activity of SOD is the first example of bioactivation of a polyazaaromatic ruthenium complex. [source]


    Oxygen evolution and respiration of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp.

    PHYSIOLOGIA PLANTARUM, Issue 3 2005
    PCC 6803 under two different light regimes applying light/dark intervals in the time scale of minutes
    The photosynthetic performance of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 exposed to intermittent light was studied by measuring oxygen evolution, respiration and the fluorescence parameters for maximum efficiency of excitation energy capture by photosystem II (PSII) reaction centres (Fv/Fm), PSII quantum yield (,F/Fm1) and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). Cultures were pre-acclimated to constant light conditions. Block and sinusoidal light regimes were tested using four photon-flux densities (PFDs) applied in light/dark intervals of 1:1, 5:5 and 10:10 min. Light use was higher under the sinusoidal light regime compared with the block regime. The accumulated gross photosynthesis of the cyanobacterium was lower under intermittent light conditions compared with predictions from the photosynthesis-irradiance curve (PI curve). The respiration rates were similar for all light/dark intervals tested. However, the respiration slightly increased with increasing oxygen production for both block and sinusoidal light regime. NPQ, ,F/Fm, and Fv/Fm depended on the PFD rather than on the duration of the light/dark intervals tested, and there was no detected influence of the two applied light regimes. [source]


    Rehabilitation of Stream Ecosystem Functions through the Reintroduction of Coarse Particulate Organic Matter

    RESTORATION ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
    Kane T. Aldridge
    Abstract In streams, coarse particulate organic matter (CPOM) acts as a substrate for microbial activity, which promotes nutrient retention. However, in urban areas, increased peak flows within streams lead to decreased retention of CPOM. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the reintroduction of CPOM, in the form of leaf litter, into a degraded urban stream would increase biofilm activity and phosphorus retention, two ecosystem functions that reflect the integrity of the ecosystem. Stream metabolism and nutrient retention were assessed in treated (T) and control (C) channels of the Torrens River Catchment, South Australia, before and after CPOM addition. Gross primary production and community respiration (CR) were measured as oxygen production and consumption within benthic chambers. Phosphorus retention was measured through a series of short-term filterable reactive phosphorus (FRP) addition experiments. Before CPOM addition, there were no differences in CR, but C retained 6.8% more FRP than T. After CPOM addition, CR was greater in T than in C (572 and 276 mg O2·m,2·day,1, respectively), and T retained 7.7% more FRP than C. The increase in FRP retention in T compared to C was attributed to phosphorus limitation of the CPOM and increased demand for phosphorus of the attached microbial heterotrophic community. The reintroduction of CPOM into degraded streams will be an important step in the restoration of stream metabolism and nutrient retention. Maintenance of CPOM may be achieved through restoration of riparian vegetation, a reduction in the increased peak flows, and rehabilitation of stream morphology. [source]


    NMDA potentiation by visible light in the presence of a fluorescent neurosteroid analogue

    THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 12 2009
    Lawrence N. Eisenman
    N -Methyl- d -aspartate (NMDA) receptors are widely studied because of their importance in synaptic plasticity and excitotoxic cell death. Here we report a novel method of potentiating NMDA receptors with fluorescence excited by blue (480 nm) light. In the presence of 300 nm of a (7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl) amino (NBD)-tagged neuroactive steroid carrier C2-NBD-(3,,5,)-3-hydroxypregnan-20-one (C2-NBD 3,5,P), responses of cultured hippocampal neurons to 10 ,m NMDA were potentiated to 219.2 ± 9.2% of the baseline response (100%) by a 30 s exposure to 480 nm light. The potentiation decayed back to baseline with a time constant of 80.6 s. Responses to 1 ,m and 100 ,m NMDA were potentiated to 147.9 ± 9.6% and 174.1 ± 15.6% of baseline, respectively, suggesting that visible-light potentiation is relatively insensitive to NMDA concentration. Peak autaptic NMDA responses were potentiated to 178.9 ± 22.4% of baseline. Similar potentiation was seen with 10 ,m NBD-lysine, suggesting that visible-light potentiation is not a steroid effect. Potentiation was also seen with a steroid analogue in which the NBD was replaced with fluorescein, suggesting that NBD is not the only fluorophore capable of supporting visible-light potentiation. UV light and redox potentiation of NMDA receptors largely occluded subsequent blue light potentiation (127.7 ± 7.4% and 120.2 ± 6.2% of baseline, respectively). The NR1a(C744A,C798A) mutant that is insensitive to redox and UV potentiation was also largely unaffected by visible-light potentiation (135.0 ± 10.0% of baseline). Finally, we found that the singlet oxygen scavenger furfuryl alcohol decreased visible-light potentiation. Collectively, these data suggest that visible-light potentiation of NMDA receptors by fluorescence excitation shares mechanisms with UV and redox potentiation and may involve singlet oxygen production. [source]