Abstract-Anew route for the formation of gammacerane from tetmhymanol is proposed; in addition to dehydration and hydrogenation, sulphurisation and early C-S cleavage are shown to be important in the pathway of formation, especially in marine sediments. Evidence is twofold. First, relatively large amounts of the gammacerane skeleton are sequestered in S-rich macromolecular aggregates formed by natural sulphurisation of functionalised lipids.
To study the putative association of dopamine agonists with sleep attacks in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and their relation to daytime sleepiness, we performed a survey of 2,952 PD patients in two German counties. In 177 patients, sudden, unexpected, and irresistible sleep episodes while engaged in some activity were identified in a structured telephone interview. Ninety-one of these patients denied the occurrence of appropriate warning signs. A total of 133 patients (75%) had an Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) score >10; 65 (37%) >15. Thirty-one patients (18%) had an ESS score < or =10 and yet experienced sleep attacks without warning signs. Thus, although a significant proportion of patients at risk for sleep attacks might be identified using the ESS, roughly 1% of the PD patient population seems to be at risk for sleep attacks without appropriate warning signs and without accompanying daytime sleepiness. Sleep attacks occurred with all dopamine agonists marketed in Germany (alpha-dihydroergocryptine, bromocriptine, cabergoline, lisuride, pergolide, pramipexole, ropinirole), and no significant difference between ergot and nonergot drugs was evident. Levodopa (L-dopa) monotherapy carried the lowest risk for sleep attacks (2.9%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.7-4.0%) followed by dopamine agonist monotherapy (5.3%; 95% CI, 1.5-9.2%) and combination of L-dopa and a dopamine agonist (7.3%; 95% CI, 6.1-8.5%). Neither selegeline nor amantadine or entacapone appeared to influence the occurrence of sleep attacks. A high ESS score, intake of dopamine agonists, and duration of PD were the main influencing factors for the occurrence of sleep attacks. The odds ratio for dopamine agonist therapy was 2.9 compared to 1.9 with L-dopa therapy and 1.05 for a 1-year-longer disease duration.
This study addresses key processes in high-energy beach systems using an interdisciplinary approach. We assess spatial variations in subsurface pore water residence times, salinity, organic matter (OM) availability, and redox conditions and their effects on nutrient cycles as well as on microbial community patterns and microphytobenthos growth. At the study site on Spiekeroog Island, southern North Sea, beach hydrology is characterized by the classical zonation with an upper saline plume (USP), a saltwater wedge, and a freshwater discharge tube in between. Sediment and pore water samples were taken along a cross-shore transect from the dunes to the low-water line reaching sediment depths down to 5 m below sediment surface. Spatial variations in pore water residence time, salinity, and organic matter availability lead to steep redox and nutrient gradients. Vertical and horizontal differences in the microbial community indicate the influence of these gradients and salinity on the community structure. shoreline. We propose that this nutrient efflux triggers growth of microphytobenthos on sediment surfaces of the discharge zone. A first comparison of nutrient discharge rates of the beach site with a nearby sandy backbarrier tidal flat margin indicates that the beach system might be of less importance in supplying recycled nutrients to nearshore waters than the backbarrier tidal flat area.
Abstract--A wide range of novel diagenetic and catagenetic products of the diaromatic carotenoid isorenieratene, a pigment of the photosynthetic green sulphur bacteria Chlorobiaceae, has been identified in a number of sedimentary rocks ranging from Ordovician to Miocene. Compound identification is based on NMR, mass spectrometry, the presence of atropisomers, and stable carbon isotopes. Atropisomers contain an axially chiral centre which, in combination with other chiral centres, results in two or more diastereomers that can be separated on a normal GC column. Chlorobiaceae use the reverse TCA cycle to fix carbon, so that their biomass is enriched in 13C. High ~3C contents of isorenieratene derivatives therefore support their inferred origins.Isorenieratene derivatives include C4o, C33, and C32, diaryl isoprenoids and short-chain aryl isoprenoids with additional aromatic and/or S-containing rings. C33 and C32 compounds are diagenetic products of C33 and C32 "carotenoids" formed from isorenieratene during early diagenesis through expulsion of toluene and m-xylene, respectively. Cyclisation of the polyene acyclic isoprenoid chain can proceed via an intramolecular Diels-Alder reaction, followed by aromatisation of the newly formed ring. Sulphurisation is also an important process during early diagenesis, competing with expulsion and cyclisation. Sulphur-bound isorenieratane is released during progressive diagenesis, due to cleavage of relatively weak S-S and C-S bonds. Cleavage of C-C bonds during aromatisation of newly formed rings and during catagenesis yields short-chain compounds. The inherent presence of a conjugated double bond system in carotenoids implies that similar diagenetic and catagenetic reactions can occur with all carotenoids.Chlorobiaceae live at or below the oxic/anoxic boundary layer and require both light and H2S. The presence of isorenieratene or its diagenetic and catagenetic products in ancient sedimentary rocks and crude oils is therefore an excellent indication for photic zone anoxia in the depositional environment. Diagenetic and catagenetic products of isorenieratene are expected to find applications in reconstruction of palaeoenvironments and in oil-oil and oil-source rock correlation studies. Their presence in several petroleum source rocks suggests that anoxia is an important environmental parameter for the preservation of organic matter.
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