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Showing papers by "Oak Ridge National Laboratory published in 1981"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of deformation twinning in fracture of hexagonal close-packed metals is reviewed from a theoretical point of view in this paper, where strength and ductility are correlated with the intrinsic physical and metallurgical variables.
Abstract: The role of deformation twinning in fracture of hexagonal close-packed metals is reviewed from a theoretical point of view. Strength and ductility are correlated with the intrinsic physical and metallurgical variables. The importance of c + a slip and of both “tension” and “compression” twins as independent modes for a generalized polycrystalline deformation is emphasized. Effects of slip-twin and twin-twin interactions on crack initiation and high-order twinning are reviewed. The competitive role of twin nucleationvs crack initiation is discussed. Shortcomings of our current understanding of the role of twinning are indicated, and some futher studies are recommended.

1,556 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Teleosts offer examples of virtually every conceivable type of ovarian physiology and provide a wealth of experimental material for exploring the cellular and hormonal mechanisms which regulate oocyte recruitment and growth throughout ovarian recrudescence.
Abstract: SYNOPSIS. Four principal stages of oocyte growth are recognized among teleosts. During gonadotropin-independent primary growth, multiple nucleoli form as well as a Balbiani body which eventually disperses throughout the ooplasm. The first gonadotropin-dependent stage involves the formation of yolk vesicles, the precursors to the cortical alveoli. True vitellogenesis follows during which vitellogenin is sequestered from the maternal blood and packaged into yolk granules or spheres. The latter generally fuse centripetally at some time during oocyte growth to give a continuous fluid phase surrounded by a peripheral layer of cytoplasm containing the cortical alveoli. Maturation represents the final stage and is accompanied in many teleosts by water uptake; among marine teleosts with pelagic eggs, most of the final egg volume may be achieved by this process. Ovaries may be synchronous, asynchronous, or group-synchronous. Among the latter, a clutch of oocytes may be recruited from an asynchronous population of earlier stages into any of the subsequent stages. In teleosts which spawn repeatedly, recruitment of new clutches can usually be associated with the transition of a previously recruited clutch from one stage to the next. Teleosts thus offer examples of virtually every conceivable type of ovarian physiology and provide a wealth of experimental material for exploring the cellular and hormonal mechanisms which regulate oocyte recruitment and growth throughout ovarian recrudescence.

1,270 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a closed set of moment equations is presented for the time evolution of thermodynamic and magnetic field quantities which results from collisional transport of the plasma and two-dimensional motion of the magnetic flux surface geometry.
Abstract: Tokamak plasmas are inherently comprised of multiple ion species. This is due to wall-bred impurities and, in future reactors, will result from fusion-born alpha particles. Relatively small densities nI, of highly charged non-hydrogenic impurities can strongly influence plasma transport properties whenever . The determination of the complete neoclassical Onsager matrix for a toroidally confined multispecies plasma, which provides the linear relation between the surface averaged radial fluxes and the thermodynamic forces (i.e. gradients of density and temperature, and the parallel electric field), is reviewed. A closed set of one-dimensional moment equations is presented for the time evolution of thermodynamic and magnetic field quantities which results from collisional transport of the plasma and two-dimensional motion of the magnetic flux surface geometry. The effects of neutral-beam injection on the equilibrium and transport properties of a toroidal plasma are consistently included.

1,081 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the International Association for the Properties of Steam (IAPS) issued a new international formulation for the ion product of water substance (May 1980), which is represented by an equation, based on density and two quadratic functions of reciprocal absolute temperature, for use from 0 to 1000°C and 1 to 10,000 bars pressure.
Abstract: This paper is the background for a new international formulation for the ion product of water substance (May 1980) issued by the International Association for the Properties of Steam. The ion product of water (Kw) is represented by an equation, based on density and two quadratic functions of reciprocal absolute temperature, for use from 0 to 1000 °C and 1 to 10,000 bars pressure. The equation is believed to describe within ±0.01 units of log Kw* (where Kw* equals Kw/(mol kg−1)2) many of the measurements at saturated vapor pressure up to 200 °C, and to within ±0.02 units up to the critical temperature (374 °C). It also describes within the experimental uncertainty the several sets of measurements at high pressures and should provide values within ±0.05 and 0.30 units at low and high temperatures, respectively.

968 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data support the concept that SCEs provide a useful indication of exposure, although the mechanism and biological significance of SCE formation still remain to be elucidated.
Abstract: This paper reviews the ability of a number of chemicals to induce sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs). The SCE data for animal cells in vivo and in vitro, and human cells in vitro are presented in 6 tables according to their relative effectiveness. A seventh table summarizes what is known about the effects of specific chemicals on SCEs for humans exposed in vivo. The data support the concept that SCEs provide a useful indication of exposure, although the mechanism and biological significance of SCE formation still remain to be elucidated.

576 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
28 Aug 1981-Science
TL;DR: A single topical application of benzoyl peroxide produced a marked epidermal hyperplasia and induced a large number of dark basal keratinocytes, effects similar to those produced by the potent tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate.
Abstract: Benzoyl peroxide, a widely used free radical-generating compound, promoted both papillomas and carcinomas when it was topically applied to mice after 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene initiation. Benzoyl peroxide was inactive on the skin as a complete carcinogen or as a tumor initiator. A single topical application of benzoyl peroxide produced a marked epidermal hyperplasia and induced a large number of dark basal keratinocytes, effects similar to those produced by the potent tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate. Benzoyl peroxide, like other known tumor promoters, also inhibited metabolic cooperation (intercellular communication) in Chinese hamster cells. In view of these results caution should be recommended in the use of this and other free radical-generating compounds.

484 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Uranium accumulated extracellularly on the surfaces of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells and Pseudomonas aeruginosa occurred intracellularly and was extremely rapid (<10 s), and no response to environmental parameters could be detected.
Abstract: Uranium accumulated extracellularly on the surfaces of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. The rate and extent of accumulation were subject to environmental parameters, such as pH, temperature, and interference by certain anions and cations. Uranium accumulation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa occurred intracellularly and was extremely rapid (<10 s), and no response to environmental parameters could be detected. Metabolism was not required for metal uptake by either organism. Cell-bound uranium reached a concentration of 10 to 15% of the dry cell weight, but only 32% of the S. cerevisiae cells and 44% of the P. aeruginosa cells within a given population possessed visible uranium deposits when examined by electron microscopy. Rates of uranium uptake by S. cerevisiae were increased by chemical pretreatment of the cells. Uranium could be removed chemically from S. cerevisiae cells, and the cells could then be reused as a biosorbent.

444 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the need for standard soil porosity terms is explained and suggested characteristics of three porosity classes are presented in table form: 1) microporosity with an equivalent pore diameter range of 1000 to 1000 mm.
Abstract: The need for standard soil porosity terms is explained in the letter. Suggested characteristics of three soil porosity classes are presented in table form: 1) microporosity with an equivalent pore diameter range of 1000 ..mu... Classification schemes of other authors are discussed. (JMT)

412 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used macroscopic diffusion equations for heat and mass transport, cast in a finite-difference form to allow for the temperature and spatial dependences of the thermal conductivity, absorption coefficient, reflectivity, and other quantities.
Abstract: Pulses of radiation from ruby and Nd:YAG $Q$-switched lasers have been used recently to anneal the lattice damage caused by ion implantation of semiconductors. Other similar applications include the laser-induced diffusion of thin dopant films deposited on the surface of samples, recrystallization of doped amorphous films deposited on single-crystal substrates, and the removal of precipitates present after conventional high-temperature dopant diffusion. All of these processes can be understood in terms of models and calculations based on macroscopic diffusion equations for heat and mass transport, cast in a finite-difference form to allow for the temperature and spatial dependences of the thermal conductivity, absorption coefficient, reflectivity, and other quantities. Results of calculations on silicon with the models show that the near-surface region of a sample can melt and stay molten for times of the order of 100 nsec during which dopant diffusion in the liquid state and nonequilibrium segregation during ultrarapid recrystallization are sufficient to explain the major features of the experimental results. In this paper, a description of the model used in our heat-transport calculations is given. Results of the modeling are illustrated by a variety of calculations which should be of particular interest to experimentalists working with pulsed-laser annealing. These results include, e.g., the effects of pulse duration, shape, and energy density, the effects of assumptions made about the latent heat of amorphous silicon, the effects of substrate heating, the role played by the absorption coefficient in determining melt-front penetration, and the duration of surface melting.

396 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mathematical analysis of the changes in plant relative growth rates necessary to increase aboveground production following grazing found that high grazing intensities are least likely to increase production and high grazing frequencies require greater responses than infrequent grazing events.
Abstract: A mathematical analysis of the changes in plant relative growth rates necessary to increase aboveground production following grazing was conducted. The equation derived gives an isoline where production of a grazed and ungrazed plant will be the same. The equation has four variables (mean shoot relative growth rate, change in relative growth rate after grazing, grazing intensity, and recovery time) and may be analyzed graphically in a number of ways.

375 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the stopping power of an electron gas for slow ions using the density functional formalism has been calculated using the self-consistent potential around the ion and from scattering theory determine the energy loss directly.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The report reviews and evaluates the current literature on chemically induced specific locus mutations in the V79 Chinese hamster lung cell line, and discusses the protocols for quantitative mutation studies including measurements of cytotoxicity, mutant expression times, mutant selection agents, cell densities during selection, and the stability and verification of mutant phenotypes.
Abstract: The report reviews and evaluates the current literature (about 125 primary publications) on chemically induced specific locus mutations in the V79 Chinese hamster lung cell line. The V79 cell is convenient to use for mutagenesis studies since it has a rapid growth rate, high plating efficiency, and a stable karyotype. Mutation can be easily measured at either the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase or the Na+/K+ ATPase locus, both of which have been well characterized. Other less-studied markers are also described. We discuss the protocols for quantitative mutation studies including measurements of cytotoxicity, mutant expression times, mutant selection agents, cell densities during selection, and the stability and verification of mutant phenotypes. Mutations in the V79 cells by chemicals that require activation can be tested after their metabolism by cell homogenates or by intact cells, and the results with each type of activation are compared. For purposes of analysis, we classified a compound as mutagenic if it induced a mutation frequency that is at least 3 times higher than the spontaneous mutant frequency reported for that specific experiment. By this criterion two-thirds of the chemicals analyzed were mutagenic--; 11% with and 55% without metabolic activation. Of the 191 chemicals examined; 119 were polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; 25 were nitro or nitroso compounds, 9 were alkyl halides; 7 were purine or pyrimidine derivatives and the remaining 31 were from other chemical classes. We also defined mutagenic potency as the concentration of a compound that increases the mutant frequency by 10 times the spontaneous frequency. Mutagenic potencies of the compounds examined varied over a range of 5 X 10(6). We have also found large interlaboratory variations in the mutagenic potencies. Such variation in potency could be reduced by normalizing the results to a standard mutagen such as N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. The role of the V79 assay in mutagenicity and carcinogenicity testing is discussed and recommendations are suggested for future investigation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There was good agreement between clastogenicity and carcinogenicity, and there were advantages to using leukocytes because they are a synchronous population, at least through their cell division, and because of the ready availability of human cells.
Abstract: This report presents an assessment made by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Gene-Tox Program's Work Group on mammalian cytogenetics of the clastogenic effects of chemicals in in vivo and in vitro mammalian cell assays. This assessment is based on information provided by the Environmental Mutagen Information Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, with the proviso that the experimental protocol used in these papers was adjudged to be acceptable by standards outlined by the Work Group. Some data were accepted as "qualitative only" because the protocol used was fairly close to that proposed as suitable. Using these criteria, 177 papers were selected for review. 6 assays were reviewed: bone marrow (32 papers, 31 chemicals), spermatogonial (10 papers, 10 chemicals), spermatocyte (25 papers, 25 chemicals), oocyte or early embryo (18 papers, 19 chemicals), in vitro cell culture (30 papers, 66 chemicals), and leukocyte (66 papers, 53 chemicals). Each assay was considered separately, and comparisons were then made between them for their similarities or differences in producing a positive or negative clastogenic effect of a particular chemical or chemical class. A large proportion of the available cytogenetic data was not suitable for inclusion in the final data base because of poor experimental design or unsatisfactory reporting of the information. It was not possible to recommend any one assay for determining potential clastogenicity because each had its own particular advantages and limitations and provided unique information. For demonstrating in vivo effects, the bone-marrow assay is probably the simplest and most economical. If only in vitro exposures were considered, leukocytes or cultured mammalian cell lines would be suitable. However, there are advantages to using leukocytes because they are a synchronous population, at least through their cell division, and because of the ready availability of human cells. In general, there was good agreement between clastogenicity and carcinogenicity.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of grain boundaries in corrosion product scales as short-circuit transport paths for the outward diffusion of metal and the inward ingress of oxygen, sulfur and carbon needs to be clarified.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the (p, n) reactions on several targets from 40Ca to 208Pb have been studied at 200 MeV using the Indiana University Cyclotron time-of-flight facilities.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These integrated results clearly demonstrate a measurable effect of insect consumers on ecosystem processes, and provide support for the regulatory importance of insects on a landscape scale.
Abstract: Chronic defoliation by the fall cankerworm, Alsophila pometaria (Harris), accompanied substantial increases in the stream export of nitrate nitrogen (NO3-N) from three mixed hardwood forests in the southern Appalachians. These integrated results clearly demonstrate a measurable effect of insect consumers on ecosystem processes, and provide support for the regulatory importance of insects on a landscape scale.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Raman spectra of anhydrous crystalline samples of all of the lanthanide orthophosphates (with the exception of PmP04) have been obtained.
Abstract: Raman spectra of anhydrous crystalline samples of all of the lanthanide orthophosphates (with the exception of PmP04) have been obtained. These data were interpreted in a systematic manner based on the known structures of these compounds. Assignments and correlations have been made for many of the observed bands. Accordingly, a series of investigations of the chemical and physical properties of the lanthanide (and related) orthophosphates is currently in progress. Single crystals of all of the lanthanide orthophosphates (except PmP0,) doped with small amounts of Gd3+ were prepared for the initial purpose of performing a series of electron paramagnetic resonance experiments. The availability of these samples made it possible to carry out a study of the Raman spectra for essentially the entire series of rare-earth orthophosphates. This study was directed toward the following objectives. First, baseline spectra were to be established that could be used as a basis of comparison with subsequent lanthanide orthophosphate crystals that would be doped with @-active actinides and, consequently, would be subjected to heavy-particle radiation damage. Second, a classification and correlation of the Raman spectra of the entire group of rare earth orthophosphates was desired. Yttrium orthophosphate was included in the present investigation because its properties are known to correlate well with those of the orthophosphates of the second half of the rare-earth series (i.e. TbP04 through LuP04) and also because YP04 is the analog of the natural mineral xenotime. In addition, a consider- able literature exists on the properties of YP04 that can be used for the purposes of verification and comparison with the lanthanide compounds. The lanthanide orthophosphates can be conveniently divided into two groups on the basis of the prevalent crystal structural form. The first group has the mono- clinic 'monazite' structure and consists of LaP04 through GdP04. The second group has the zircon struc- ture and consists of TbP04 through LuP04. Both YP04 and ScP04 also crystallize with the zircon structure and can be grouped with the orthophosphates formed by EXPERIMENTAL ~~~~ ~ ~

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the phase equilibria of alkali metal oxides and their combinations with other oxides relevant to nuclear fuels, fission products, and structural materials are considered.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors obtained semiempirical fusion barriers by analysis of 87 excitation functions for complete fusion and used them as a test for several theoretical potentials, and ascribe this to dynamic effects such as neck formation which may be expected as precursors of fusion.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The average Lagrangian time scale for the vertical component of turbulence at heights above ∼100 m is given by the formula TL = 0.17zi/σμ where zi is mixing depth as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Lagrangian (neutral balloon) and Eulerian (tower and aircraft) turbulence observations were made in the daytime mixed layer near Boulder, Colorado. Average sampling time was ∼25 min. Average Lagrangian time scale is ∼70 s and average ratio of Lagrangian to Eulerian time scales (β = TL/TE) is about 1.7. The ratio β is inversely proportional to turbulence intensity i. These data support the formula β = 0.7/i. Lagrangian time scale for the vertical component of turbulence at heights above ∼100 m is given by the formula TL = 0.17zi/σμ where zi is mixing depth. This formula is valid for the horizontal components of turbulence at all heights in the mixed layer. Lagrangian spectra in the inertial subrange are best represented by the formula Fr(n) = 0.2ϵn−2.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a form of Langevin's equation is derived that is applicable to the atmospheric diffusion problem and the resulting equation for the particle displacement variance σ 2y has limits at small and large diffusion times equal to asymptotic predictions of statistical diffusion theories but provides, in addition, estimates over the broad, middle range of diffusion.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a special solution procedure is developed for the one-dimensional case which replaces the heat conduction equation with an approximating hyperbolic equation, and an initial value problem for the damped wave equation is obtained.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an expansion in the adiabatic molecular basis is chosen to calculate the energy and matrix elements of the electron-positron field in the presence of strong extemal electromagnetic fields.
Abstract: Collisions of very heavy ions at energies close to the Coulomb barrier are discussed as a unique tool to study the behavior of the electron-positron field in the presence of strong extemal electromagnetic fields. To calculate the excitation processes induced by the collision dynamics, a semiclassical model is employed and adapted to describe the field-theoretical many-particle system. An expansion in the adiabatic molecular basis is chosen. Energies and matrix elements are calculated using the monopole approximation. In a supercritical (2, + Z, 2 173) quasiatomic system the 1s level joins the antiparticle continuum and becomes a resonance, rendering the neutral vacuum state unstable. Several methods of treating the corresponding time-dependent problem are discussed. A projectionOperator technique is introduced for a fully dynamical treatment of the resonance. Positron excitation rates in s„, andp,,] states are obtained by numencal solution of the coupled-channel equations and are compared with results from first- plus second-order perturbation theory. Calculations are performed for subcritical and supercritical collisions of Pb-Pb, Pb-U, U-U, and U-Cf. Strong relativistic deformations of the wave functions and the growing contributions from inner-shell bound states lead to a very steep Z dependence of positron production. The results are compared with available data from experiments done at GSI. Correlations between electrons and positrons are briefly discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it is suggested that the simple correlation coefficient derived from analysis of Monte Carlo simulations is a more reasonable way to rank model parameters according to their contribution to prediction uncertainty.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: If the results with the pigeon can be applied to humans, the incidence of aortic atherosclerosis and hypertension should be significantly higher in areas where the drinking water contains magnesium, lead, and cadmium with a relatively low calcium concentration.
Abstract: In epidemiological studies, both positive and negative correlations have been found between cardiovascular disease and mortality and the presence of several inorganic ions in the drinking water. In an attempt to resolve this apparent disagreement, we exposed White Carneau pigeons to drinking water containing calcium (100 ppm), magnesium (30 ppm), lead (0.8 ppm), or cadmium (0.6 ppm) and used a 2(4)-factorial design to measure the effects of these elements in atherosclerosis and hypertension. The results indicate that (i) lead and cadmium induced aortic atherosclerosis and hypertension, and (ii) calcium protects against the cardiovascular effects of cadmium. Furthermore, the effects of lead and cadmium were promoted by magnesium, and there were indications that magnesium antagonized the atherosclerotic protective effect of calcium. We suggest that, if these results with the pigeon can be applied to humans, the incidence of aortic atherosclerosis and hypertension should be significantly higher in areas where the drinking water contains magnesium, lead, and cadmium with a relatively low calcium concentration. Furthermore, if hard and soft water produce similar levels of lead and cadmium uptakes, the level of magnesium may be an additional factor in aortic atherosclerosis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mouse specific-locus test with visible markers (SLT) has been the only extensively used method for detecting and quantifying the induction of heritable point mutations (intragenic changes and small deficiencies) in mammals.
Abstract: The mouse specific-locus test with visible markers (SLT) has been the only extensively used method for detecting and quantifying the induction of heritable point mutations (intragenic changes and small deficiencies) in mammals. Mutations are detected in first-generation offspring; and scoring is simple, objective, and rapid. Different germ-cell stages can be sampled, including those of greatest pertinence for genetic risk assessment. The differential probability of involving the various loci of the marked set makes the method capable of detecting qualitative (as well as quantitative) differences between the actions of mutagens. Control SLT frequencies for males reported by 4 sets of investigators are in excellent agreement and were summed as a "historical control" (801406 observations) for use in our calculations. Experimental results were classified as positive, negative, or inconclusive based upon a multiple-decision procedure produced by the testing of the following 2 hypotheses: (1) the mutation frequency (induced + spontaneous) of treated mice is not higher than the spontaneous mutation frequency, and (2) the induced mutation frequency of treated mice is no less than 4 times the historical-control mutation frequency. Each hypothesis was tested at the 5% significance level. Because of the low mutation frequency in a very large control, the SLT is capable of yielding positive results in relatively small samples. We reviewed 58 publications, SLT results have been reported for 25 chemical agents, of which 17 (representing 21 chemical classes) gave results that were positive or negative by our criteria. The frequency of positive agents was 6 of 14, 5 of 5, and 0 of 1 conclusively tested, respectively, in spermatogonia, post-spermatogonial stages, and unspecified male germ cells. Depending on the chemical used, post-spermatogonial stages can be of greater, less, or equal sensitivity relative to spermatogonia. The SLT was strongly positive for some chemicals that are not mutagenic (or only weakly so) in lower systems, and there are several examples of the reverse situation. Factors which presumably operated to cause these differences (e.g., metabolism, transport, repair in germ cells) are likely also to operate for transmitted point mutations in man.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 1981-Ecology
TL;DR: In this paper, differences in canopy arthropod community structure, major cation content, and calculated nutrient consumption between clearcut and undisturbed hardwood forest watersheds at Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, North Carolina, USA, during the first two growing seasons following cutting were described.
Abstract: This paper describes differences in canopy arthropod community structure, major cation content, and calculated nutrient consumption between clearcut and undisturbed hardwood forest watersheds at Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, North Carolina, USA, during the first two growing seasons following cutting. Although canopy arthropod biomass was about 0.08% of foliage biomass on both watersheds, aphid mass increased 23-fold and ant mass increased 6-fold per unit foliage mass following cutting. These groups in general had lower nutrient concentrations than did chewing herbivores and predators. Arthropod K concentrations were 33% lower on the clearcut; Na, K, and Mg concentrations were 20 to 50% higher in 1978 than in 1977. Arthropod Mg and Ca concentrations, but not Na and K, were reduced significantly more by the greater effect of drought on the clearcut watershed. Consumption estimates based in part on consumption rates reported by others indicated increased nutrient translocation from foilage via arthropods following cutting. These data indicated that canopy arthropod responses to changes in nutrient availability following disturbance could have increased nutrient cycling rates and contributed to nutrient retention by the recovering ecosystem.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The GENE-TOX Group on Specific Gene Mutations in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) Cells has evaluated the use of mutational systems in these cells for identification of mutagenic chemicals, finding the CHO/HGPRT assay has a sound genetic and biochemical basis for quantifying specific locus mutation reproducibly.
Abstract: The GENE-TOX Group on Specific Gene Mutations in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) Cells has evaluated the use of mutational systems in these cells for identification of mutagenic chemicals from 261 references in the file of the Environmental Mutagen Information Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory by February, 1979; 68 references were found to be relevant to the stated task. After establishing that the end-point of mutational measurement occurs at a specific locus and the determinations are quantifiable and reproducible, data from 21 references were found to fulfill such requirements. Among them, 14 were concerned with chemically-induced mutations to resistance to a purine analogue, 6-thioguanine, which selects for variants deficient in the enzyme hypoxanthine—guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRT). This mutational system is referred to as the CHO/HGPRT assay. Studies with other genetic markers offer promise for the development of quantitative specific genemutational assays, but these studies have not advanced thoroughly enough to assess their value. Several lines of genetic, physiological and biochemical evidence support the premise that the CHO/HGPRT system fulfills the criteria for measurement of specific gene mutations using CHO-K1-BH4 subclone and other appropriate CHO subclones. Based largely on published information, this Work Group has suggested a protocol for testing of chemical agents with consideration of the following: cells, media, culture conditions and their quality control, treatment with test compounds with and without an exogenous metabolic activation system, estimation of cytoxicity (cloning efficiency), optimum expression and selection of the mutant phenotype, calculation of mutation frequency, positive and negative controls, vehicles or solvents, spontaneous mutation frequency, dosage selection and number of doses, and collection of raw data. For interpretation of the mutagenesis data, this Work Group recommends various ways of presenting data, numerous criteria for acceptability of data, the need to use appropriate statistical procedures for data evaluation, and a potential applicability of results to hazard evaluation. Evaluation of test performances with 18 chemicals revealed that the correlation between mutagenicity in CHO/HGPRT assay and animal mutagenicity and carcinogenicity is high. Since the number of chemicals tested was small and 17 of the 18 compounds were direct-acting agents, the utility of the system for identification of various classes of potential mutagens and carcinogens cannot be adequately assessed until more chemical classes, especially promutagens, are tested. However, the assay has a sound genetic and biochemical basis for quantifying specific locus mutation reproducibly. The fact that CHO cells are also useful for determination of chemically-induced chromosome aberration and sister-chromatid exchange adds an additional strength to the assay. Future research should address the possible improvement of procedures for phenotypic expression and application for testing gaseous and volatile liquids, as well as such problems as appropriate metabolic activation system(s) and effective statistical procedures common to perhaps all short-term cellular assays. Recent rapid development of mutagen test systems like the CHO/HGPRT assay calls for a need to update and evaluate the data base generated.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The crystal structure of CePO4 has been determined by modern X-ray crystallographic techniques as discussed by the authors, and the structure is made up of irregular 9-coordinated cerium atoms linked together by distorted tetrahedral phosphate groups.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Electron microscopy of surface-spread spermatocytes from mice heterozygous for a tandem duplication shows the heteromorphic synaptonemal complex (SC) to comprise two lateral elements of unequal length, the longer of which is buckled out in a characteristic loop, representing the unsynapsed portion of the duplication.
Abstract: Surface spread spermatocytes of mice heterozygous for a tandem duplication show nuclei in late zygotene-early pachytene in which the heteromorphic synaptonemal complex (SC) contains a lateral element that is buckled out into an unpaired loop as a consequence of the added length of the duplication (estimated in another study to be 21.7%, with breakpoints at 0.50 and 0.72 of the length of the chromosome). The ends of the buckle, marking the interstitial termini of synapsis proceeding from opposite directions, vary over a wide range of positions, but within limits: the proximal end of the loop does not exceed the distal end of the duplication segment, while the distal end of the loop does not lie closer to the kinetochore than the proximal end of the segment. Thus, synapsis (SC formation) at zygotene is restricted to homologous regions (exclusive homosynapsis). — In the last half of pachytene, no buckles are found, only simple SCs with lateral elements of equal length, as a consequence of synaptic adjustment. Intermediate stages of adjustment are found throughout the first half of pachytene. Shortly after homosynapsis is complete, synaptic adjustment begins: the ends of the duplication loop separate (desynapsis of homosynapsed regions); the long axis shortens with respect to the short axis in both the unpaired loop and in the SC portions; asymmetrical twists take up inequalities; the loop is reduced to from 1 to 3 asymmetrical twists; the axes (lateral elements) equalize as the long axis shortens; and a simple SC is formed, indistinguishable from others in the complement, in which the region of the duplication and those adjacent to it have heterosynapsed, while the distal regions of the SC are presumably still homosynapsed. Synaptic adjustment evidently involves two sequential events: localized instability of the homosynapsed condition, leading to desynapsis, then restoration of the SC by heterosynapsis. Adjustment therefore represents the loss of strict homosynapsis. It is concluded that the asymmetry produced by the duplication loop constitutes an instability that triggers synaptic adjustment.