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Shinkichi Yamada

Bio: Shinkichi Yamada is an academic researcher from Nagoya University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ligand & Vanadium. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 27 publications receiving 317 citations.

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TL;DR: In this paper, the solution equilibria of vanadium(V) complexes formed by N-methyliminodiacetic acid (MIDA), nitrilotriacetic acid, and ethylenediamine-N,N′-diacetic acid were investigated spectrophotometrically.

38 citations

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TL;DR: Mesure des vitesses de formation des complexes 1:1 et 1:2 oxalato, glycinato, and ethylenediamine avec la phenanthroline-1,10 as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Mesure des vitesses de formation des complexes 1:1 et 1:2 oxalato, glycinato et ethylenediamine avec la phenanthroline-1,10. Reactivite accrue de NiA comparee a celle de Ni 2+ , attribuable a l'effet labilisant du coordinat A sur la vitesse de perte de molecules d'eau coordinees

16 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: Electrodes showed a Nernstian response to [Ca2+] down to 1 micro M free concentration in 0.1 M KCl, and usually a useful response to below 100 nM Ca2+.

446 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These chemical characteristics match cellular requirements for Zn(II) and suggest how the molecular structures and redox chemistries of metallothionein and thionein determine Zn (II) availability for biological processes.
Abstract: Each of the seven Zn(II) ions in the Zn(3)S(9) and Zn(4)S(11) clusters of human metallothionein is in a tetrathiolate coordination environment. Yet analysis of Zn(II) association with thionein, the apoprotein, and analysis of Zn(II) dissociation from metallothionein using the fluorescent chelating agents FluoZin-3 and RhodZin-3 reveal at least three classes of sites with affinities that differ by 4 orders of magnitude. Four Zn(II) ions are bound with an apparent average log K of 11.8, and with the methods employed, their binding is indistinguishable. This binding property makes thionein a strong chelating agent. One Zn(II) ion is relatively weakly bound, with a log K of 7.7, making metallothionein a zinc donor in the absence of thionein. The binding data demonstrate that Zn(II) binds with at least four species: Zn(4)T, Zn(5)T, Zn(6)T, and Zn(7)T. Zn(5)T and Zn(6)T bind Zn(II) with a log K of approximately 10 and are the predominant species at micromolar concentrations of metallothionein in cells. Central to the function of the protein is the reactivity of its cysteine side chains in the absence and presence of Zn(II). Chelating agents, such as physiological ligands with moderate affinities for Zn(II), cause dissociation of Zn(II) ions from metallothionein at pH 7.4 (Zn(7)T Zn(7-n)T + nZn(2+)), thereby affecting the reactivity of its thiols. Thus, the rate of thiol oxidation increases in the presence of Zn(II) acceptors but decreases if more free Zn(II) becomes available. Thionein is such an acceptor. It regulates the reactivity and availability of free Zn(II) from metallothionein. At thionein/metallothionein ratios > 0.75, free Zn(II) ions are below a pZn (-log[Zn(2+)](free)) of 11.8, and at ratios < 0.75, relatively large fluctuations of free Zn(II) ions are possible (pZn between 7 and 11). These chemical characteristics match cellular requirements for Zn(II) and suggest how the molecular structures and redox chemistries of metallothionein and thionein determine Zn(II) availability for biological processes.

256 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The metallochromic indicator 4-(2-pyridylazo)resorcinol (PAR) has been used at pH 7.0 to monitor the mercurial-promoted Zn2+ release from Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase and uptake by regulatory dimers as mentioned in this paper.

225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review surveys possible approaches to estimation of these dissociation constants and pinpoints the various problems associated with each approach.

186 citations