One Route (one + route)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Tracing recent invasions of the Ponto-Caspian mysid shrimp Hemimysis anomala across Europe and to North America with mitochondrial DNA

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, Issue 2 2008
Asta Audzijonyte
ABSTRACT The mysid crustacean Hemimysis anomala (,bloody-red shrimp') is one of the most recent participants in the invasion of European inland waters by Ponto-Caspian species. Recently the species also became established in England and the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America. Using information from mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) gene sequences, we traced the invasion pathways of H. anomala; the inferences were enabled by the observed phylogeographical subdivision among the source area populations in the estuaries of the Ponto-Caspian basin. The data distinguish two routes to northern and western Europe used by distinct lineages. One route has been to and through the Baltic Sea and further to the Rhine delta, probably from a population intentionally introduced to a Lithuanian water reservoir from the lower Dnieper River (NW Black Sea area) in 1960. The other lineage is derived from the Danube delta and has spread across the continent up the Danube River and further through the Main,Danube canal down to the Rhine River delta. Only the Danube lineage was found in England and in North America. The two lineages appear to have met secondarily and are now found intermixed at several sites in NW Europe, including the Rhine and waters linked with the man-made Mittellandkanal that interconnects the Rhine and Baltic drainage systems. [source]


Assessing online issue threats: issue contagions and their effect on issue prioritisation

JOURNAL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, Issue 4 2002
W. Timothy Coombs
Abstract To be effective, issue managers must develop a sophisticated understanding of the Internet's effect on issues management. Our current understanding is in an early phase of description. We know that the Internet makes it easier for publics to form so they can press an issue but precious little is known of how the dynamic operates. The issue contagion perspective is offered as an explanatory and prescriptive device. The idea of an issue contagion posits that the Internet provides a means for altering issue priorities, often with blinding speed. One route for change is altering the likelihood; a common evaluative tool for prioritising issues that assesses the probability of an issue gaining strength and requiring action. Through various Internet communication channels, attempts can be made to change the likelihood of an issue requiring attention and action , an issue manager will witness shifts in issue prioritisation. This paper details why likelihood is important, how it can be altered via the Internet, and the implications for issue managers. Copyright © 2002 Henry Stewart Publications. [source]


Bis (ortho -) chelated Monoanionic Bisphosphinoaryl Ruthenium (II) Complexes: Synthesis, Characterization and Reactivity,

CHINESE JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, Issue 3 2002
Gerard P. M. Klink
Abstract Bisphosphinoaryl ruthenium (II) compounds are synthesized using two distinct synthetic routes. One route, direct cycloruthenation, consists of the reaction of the parent arene compound R-PCHP with [RuCl2 (PPh3)3] in chlorinated solvents. However, this route suffers from major drawbacks because HCl is formed as well as free triphenylphoshine. The other route, the transcyclometalation reaction, involves the interconversion of one cyclometalated ligand metal complex, [RuCl (NCN) (PPh3)], into another complex, [RuCl (R-PCP) (PPh3)], with concomitant consumption and formation of the corresponding arenes R-PCHP and NCHN, respectively. [source]


Some highlights of research on aging with invertebrates, 2009

AGING CELL, Issue 5 2009
Linda Partridge
Summary This annual review focuses on invertebrate model organisms, which shed light on new mechanisms in aging and provide excellent systems for both genome-wide and in-depth analysis. This year, protein interaction networks have been used in a new bioinformatic approach to identify novel genes that extend replicative lifespan in yeast. In an extended approach, using a new, human protein interaction network, information from the invertebrates was used to identify new, candidate genes for lifespan extension and their orthologues were validated in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Chemosensation of diffusible substances from bacteria has been shown to limit lifespan in C. elegans, while a systematic study of the different methods used to implement dietary restriction in the worm has shown that they involve mechanisms that are partially distinct and partially overlapping, providing important clarification for addressing whether or not they are conserved in other organisms. A new theoretical model for the evolution of rejuvenating cell division has shown that asymmetrical division for either cell size or for damaged cell constituents results in increased fitness for most realistic levels of cellular protein damage. Work on aging-related disease has both refined our understanding of the mechanisms underlying one route to the development of Parkinson's disease and has revealed that in worms, as in mice, dietary restriction is protective against cellular proteotoxicity. Two systematic studies genetically manipulating the superoxide dismutases of C. elegans support the idea that damage from superoxide plays little or no role in aging in this organism, and have prompted discussion of other kinds of damage and other kinds of mechanisms for producing aging-related decline in function. [source]


In Situ Synthesis of Trisubstituted Methanol Ligands and Their Potential as One-Pot Generators of Cubane-like Metal Complexes

CHEMISTRY - A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, Issue 27 2006
Brendan F. Abrahams Dr.
Abstract Two different one pot routes to a variety of metal cubane compounds are reported; one route is based on an in situ benzilic acid type rearrangement and the other involves in situ nucleophilic attack at a ketone. Diketosuccinic acid in basic solution in the presence of certain divalent metal ions undergoes a benzilic acid type rearrangement to generate the carbon oxyanion, C(CO2,)3O,, which serves as a cubane-forming bridging ligand in a series of octanuclear complexes of composition [M8{C(CO2)3O}4](H2O)12 (M=Mg, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Zn). At the heart of each of these highly symmetrical aggregates is an M4O4 cubane core, each oxygen component of which is provided by the alkoxo centre of a C(CO2,)3O, ligand. Reaction of 2,2,-pyridil, (2-C5H4N)COCO(2-C5H4N), and calcium nitrate in basic alcoholic solution, which proceeds by a similar benzilic acid type rearrangement, gives the cubane compounds, [Ca4L4(NO3)4] in which L=(2-C5H4N)2C(COOR)O, (R=Me or Et). Nucleophilic attack by bisulfite ion at the carbonyl carbon atom of 2,2,-dipyridyl ketone in the presence of certain divalent metals generates the electrically neutral complexes, [{(C5H4N)2SO3C(OH)}2M] (M=Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Zn and Cd). Cubane-like complexes [M4{(C5H4N)2SO3C(O)}4] (M=Zn, Mn) can be obtained directly from 2,2,-dipyridyl ketone in one-pot reaction systems (sealed tube, 120,°C) if a base as weak as acetate ion is present to deprotonate the OH group of the initial [(C5H4N)2SO3C(OH)], bisulfite addition compound; the [(C5H4N)2SO3C(O)]2, ligand in this case plays the same cubane-forming role as the ligands C(COO,)3O, and (2-C5H4N)2C(COOR)O, above. When excess sodium sulfite is used in similar one-pot reaction mixtures, the monoanionic complexes, [M3Na{(C5H4N)2SO3C(O)}4], (M=Zn, Mn, Co) with an M3NaO4 cubane core, are formed directly from 2,2,-dipyridyl ketone. [source]