コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ArsD at 1.4 A and a model for its binding of metalloid.
2 , as opposed to release and rebinding of the metalloid.
3 rolyze trinucleotide, even in the absence of metalloid.
4 reduced amphibian skin permeability to this metalloid.
5 development of strategies against this toxic metalloid.
6 nt and increased tolerance to this hazardous metalloid.
7 Arsenic (As) is a toxic metalloid.
8 ments, making it a major sink for this toxic metalloid.
9 n of the rates of binding and affinities for metalloids.
10 ing responses to toxic transition metals and metalloids.
11 bilization potential of hazardous metals and metalloids.
12 sO)(n), (SbO)(n), or a co-polymer of the two metalloids.
13 been shown to facilitate uptake of trivalent metalloids.
14 eric ArsD, with only one site releasing free metalloids.
15 are a potential source of exposure to metals/metalloids.
16 and the fate of nutrients, toxic metals and metalloids.
17 lity to sequester a wide range of metals and metalloids.
18 quality limits, mainly with heavy metals and metalloids.
19 voltaic cells crucially depend on metals and metalloids.
21 imental results demonstrated that Zn(delta+) metalloid active sites could facilitate the activation o
23 drive As methylation in the presence of the metalloid and (ii) there is an inverse relationship betw
25 of glycerol, this is the first report where metalloid and glycerol transport can be dissected by a s
26 s-172 controls the affinity of this site for metalloid and hence the efficiency of metalloactivation
29 cellular sensitivity to arsenicals and other metalloids and can modulate intracellular glutathione me
31 k because of the low concentration of metals/metalloids and the correspondingly high molecular chemic
33 ter shell electronic structure of metals and metalloids and the viscoelasticity and fragility thereof
34 Because arsenic and antimony are related metalloids, and arsenical resistant Leishmania strains a
35 nvestigation of metal-based ENMs compared to metalloid- and carbon-based ENMs but also nanoenabled pr
36 amples of microbial metabolism of metals and metalloids; and expanded the types of information it inc
38 c results in cross-resistance to the related metalloid antimony, present in the pentavalent state as
41 e) minerals determines the fate of the toxic metalloid arsenic (As) in many subsurface environments.
46 obic respiration of ferric iron or the toxic metalloid arsenic is well known to affect water quality
51 ce to trivalent and pentavalent salts of the metalloids arsenic and antimony in cells of Escherichia
52 ce to trivalent and pentavalent salts of the metalloids arsenic and antimony in cells of Escherichia
55 common heavy metal contaminant lead and the metalloids arsenic and selenium in mine tailings and con
56 on H2S production and the leaching of metals/metalloids (arsenic, copper, chromium, and boron) from t
57 Treatment of yeast with the toxic trivalent metalloid arsenite (As(III)) also activates Hog1 as part
59 73 confers resistance to the toxic trivalent metalloids arsenite [As(III)] and antimonite [Sb(III)].
60 p has been shown to facilitate uptake of the metalloids arsenite and antimonite, and the Escherichia
62 Reductive release of the potentially toxic metalloid As from Fe(III) (oxyhydr)oxides has been ident
63 avy metals including Cd(2+), Hg(2+), and the metalloid As(3+) into the vacuole to safely sequester th
65 higher levels of the heavy metal Cd and the metalloid As, it does not increase the accumulation pote
66 rferences from several transition metals and metalloids as well as inorganic acids and their anions w
67 e ArsAB pump that catalyzes extrusion of the metalloids As(III) and Sb(III), conferring metalloid res
70 Pb, Cr, Mn, Co, Cu, Zn, As, Ag, and THg) and metalloid (As) concentrations in the muscle tissue of co
72 s a metallochaperone that delivers trivalent metalloids [As(III) or Sb(III)] to the ArsA ATPase, the
74 The ArsD metallochaperone delivers trivalent metalloids, As(III) or Sb(III), to the ArsA ATPase, the
75 ave assessed the major uses of 56 metals and metalloids, assigning each use to one of three categorie
77 stal structure of ArsA shows two other bound metalloid atoms, one liganded to Cys-172 and His-453, an
80 ng a nucleotide binding domain, and a single metalloid binding or activation domain is located at the
81 422A)B in less than 1 week, showing that the metalloid binding site confers an evolutionary advantage
82 st that there is only a single high-affinity metalloid binding site in ArsA, and second that Cys-172
94 I) displacement by As(III) revealed that the metalloid-binding sites behave differentially, with the
95 nic (As) is considered the most common toxic metalloid, but its molecular mode of action is not well
96 ation of metalloid, high affinity binding of metalloid by ArsA is not obligatory for transport or res
99 ntrolling factor elucidation of toxic metals/metalloids by introducing an index, enrichment factor (E
100 olving the sequential binding and release of metalloids by the four binding sites of dimeric ArsD, wi
101 hoate >> tau-fluvalinate), then trace metals/metalloids (cadmium, arsenic), followed by the fungicide
103 taphyrin has been obtained, proving that the metalloid center acts as the topology selector stabilizi
104 the synthesis of the all-phosphine protected metalloid cluster Au(20) ((t) Bu(3) P)(8) , solely built
105 In the mine impacted environment, metals and metalloids commonly coexist in a variety of species.
107 y an effective tool for evaluating metal and metalloid concentrations but can suffer from poor replic
108 sIII oxidation and AsIII/SbIII resistance at metalloid concentrations inhibitory to the Deltaacr3-1 m
111 olecular-level speciation of heavy metal and metalloid contaminants in various environmental settings
113 suggests that in addition to Hg other metals/metalloids could also potentially be an environmental pr
114 vant to the geomicrobiology of environmental metalloid cycling as well as informing applied approache
115 13 pair was required for the majority of the metalloid-dependent quenching of Trp-97 fluorescence.
117 r species, the formal oxidation state of the metalloid diminishes from III, to II, to I, and finally
118 ponent compounds of metals and chalcogens or metalloids, doped fullerenes and organic charge-transfer
119 This is the first report of the uptake of a metalloid drug by an aquaglyceroporin in Leishmania, sug
120 s As during crystallization and retains this metalloid during the transformation from struvite, can a
121 te and metabolism of Se (and other metal and metalloids) during anuran development and the implicatio
122 s, those involving the transition metal (TM)-metalloid (E) bond, is of key importance in most convers
124 measurement site are enriched in metals and metalloids (e.g., arsenic, lead, and cadmium) and water-
125 were found to have elevated levels of metals/metalloids (e.g., mercury, arsenic, and lead) with separ
126 sorption spectroscopy conducted at metal and metalloid edges has suggested that the magnetite {111} f
128 e rapidly increased the influx of metals and metalloids entering the marine environment, which can bi
129 ance of DOM sulfurization to trace metal and metalloid (especially mercury) fate in the environment.
131 rkable tolerance of toad tadpoles to extreme metalloid exposure and implicate physiological processes
132 e-cigarette device systems to evaluate metal/metalloid exposure levels for e-cigarette users and the
134 control microbiomes are suppressed by metal/metalloid field exposure, including eradication of the h
135 D to ArsA, consistent with channeling of the metalloid from one protein to the other, as opposed to r
136 nce for and accumulation of heavy metals and metalloids from soil by expressing an Arabidopsis thalia
139 alization of C-H bonds with vinylmetalloids, metalloid halides, and sulfonates; and dehydrocoupling o
141 to reduce the intracellular concentration of metalloid, high affinity binding of metalloid by ArsA is
144 ysis of the following processes: addition of metalloid-hydrogen and metalloid-metalloid bonds to unsa
147 haracterize the criticality of 62 metals and metalloids in a 3D "criticality space" consisting of sup
148 of conceivably detrimental heavy metals and metalloids in diverse environmental constituents and the
150 R), and Web of Science for studies on metals/metalloids in e-liquid, e-cigarette aerosols, and biosam
160 z1/Ynl155w is proposed to protect cells from metalloid-induced proteotoxicity by delivering ubiquitin
161 unaffected by arsenite, suggesting that this metalloid influences aggregate structure, making them le
163 g methods to prepare alpha-stereogenic allyl metalloids involve multi-step sequences that curtail the
164 of a range of environmentally relevant metal/metalloid ions as well as natural and artificial ligands
165 of genes for resistance to heavy metals and metalloids is usually transcriptionally regulated by the
166 ikely contribute to the variability in metal/metalloid levels across studies, making comparison acros
168 ed protocols for the quantification of metal/metalloid levels from e-cigarette samples are needed.
169 n wick, and tank), 12 studies reported metal/metalloid levels in e-cigarette aerosols (from cig-a-lik
175 tank devices), and 4 studies reported metal/metalloid levels in human biosamples (urine, saliva, ser
179 r, it was resistant to many heavy metals and metalloids like cadmium, chromium, copper, mercury, arse
181 rocesses: addition of metalloid-hydrogen and metalloid-metalloid bonds to unsaturated compounds; acti
183 rform anodic electrochemical oxidation of Ni-metalloids (NiP(x), NiS(x), and NiSe(x)) to in-situ cons
184 yotes are known to grow on and respire toxic metalloids of arsenic (i.e., arsenate and arsenite).
187 trolling the transport and fate of metal and metalloid oxyanions in natural and applied systems.
188 nation, (2) a thiophilic, trigonal pyramidal metalloid (Pb(II)) that binds to these sulfurs and (3) a
189 nable detailed structure-function studies of metalloid porins, including the basis of their substrate
191 (Pb), whereas greater than 97% of metals and metalloids present were associated with the glass matrix
194 A/C422A)B genes had an intermediate level of metalloid resistance and accumulation between those expr
196 us species harvested from the environment is metalloid resistant and, when grown anaerobically in com
197 in a 3.8-kb chromosomal DNA fragment from a metalloid-resistant thermophile, Geobacillus stearotherm
199 f the steady-state fluorescence of ArsD with metalloids revealed positive cooperativity, with a Hill
200 nzyme will improve our understanding of this metalloid's metabolism and its actions as a toxin and a
206 uptake of As(III) or Sb(III) correlated with metalloid sensitivity of the wild type and drug-resistan
210 n exhibited varying levels of both basal and metalloid-stimulated activity, indicating that neither A
213 P]-triphosphate at 4 degrees C indicate that metalloid stimulation correlates with a >10-fold increas
215 formation of synthetically highly versatile metalloid-substituted alkenes, which are key building bl
216 formation of synthetically highly versatile metalloid-substituted alkenes, which are key building bl
217 e effects of extreme concentrations of toxic metalloids, such as arsenic (As) and antimony (Sb), on l
225 entially form separate binding sites for the metalloids that trigger dissociation of ArsD from the op
226 esistance is proposed to be formation of the metalloid-thiol pump substrates, so that increased synth
229 h as zinc (Zn) and copper (Cu), and possibly metalloids, to kill their bacterial prey after phagocyto
230 ally, various mechanisms for heavy metal and metalloid tolerance and virulence point to a lifestyle w
232 shown that the microbiome of animals reduces metalloid toxicity, we assayed the ability of the bee mi
233 ide further understanding of fungal roles in metalloid transformations and are relevant to the geomic
234 to alanine, aspartate and glutamine affected metalloid transport in the order, wild-type > E152Q > E1
236 (MDR)-1 is the key factor in the failure of metalloid treatment in kala-azar patients infected with
241 may help better understand the mechanisms of metalloid uptake, tolerance and detoxification in plants
249 c is a ubiquitous, naturally occurring toxic metalloid widely distributed in soil and groundwater.
250 s to As(III) and Sb(III) by coordinating the metalloids with three cysteines, located in a short sequ
251 e predominant emission source for metals and metalloids, with Cd released to such extents that PEC (1
252 igh-affinity binding site that can sequester metalloid within the cell, followed by a nucleotide-driv
253 we spatially quantify transition metals and metalloids within organic material from 3.33 billion-yea