Experiments on glassy rhyolite and phenocrystic andesite-seawater interactions were carried out at 300°C and 1,000b using Dickson-type gold bag equipments. Chemical reactions in rhyolite-seawater inter action proceeded very rapidly and a steady state was attained within about 48h. Andesite-seawater inter action, however, proceeded very slowly and a steady state was not attained within the run period of 7,090h. Rhyolite and glass, augite and hypersthene in andesite were altered into smectite. Seawater lost most Mg2+ and S042 and become acid Na-K-Ca-Cl-type solution through the reactions.
Shwachman-Diamond syndrome (SDS) is a rare hereditary disorder characterized by pancreatic exocrine insufficiency, bone marrow dysfunction and skeletal changes. Recently, the cause of SDS was identified as mutations of Shwachman-BodianDiamond syndrome gene (SBDS) and most mutations are caused by gene conversion between SBDS and its highly homologous pseudogene. Clinical variations especially in skeletal and bone marrow abnormalities are well known in this syndrome. To study the relationship between SBDS mutation and its clinical features, we analyzed 9 Japanese patients including one sibling and detected the three different SBDS mutations in 7 patients: a mutation that disrupts the donor splice site of intron 2, deletes 8bp of the exon 2 and produces premature termination (258+2 T > C), a dinucleotide change that replaces a lysine at 62nd amino acid to a termination codon (183-184 TA > CT), and a 4-bp deletion that causes premature termination by frameshift (292-295 delAAAG). The 5 patients represent compound heterozygotes of the 258+2 T > C and 183-184 TA > CT mutations. One patient is a compound heterozygote of the 258+2 T > C and 292-295 delAAAG mutations, and in the remaining one case only a 258+2 T > C mutation could be detected. Thus, the 258+2 T > C and 183-184 TA > CT mutations are prevalent among Japanese patients. No mutations were found in two cases, despite the clinical features. Of the 7 patients with SBDS mutations, persistent hematologic abnormalities and skeletal changes were not observed in 3 and 2 patients, respectively. Notably, clinical variations are present even among the patients with the identical genotype: compound heterozygotes of the 258+2 T >
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