Nashsahl8607
This study explored the phytoremediation potential of sunflower on cadmium (Cd) contaminated soils. We also studied the mechanisms through which a plant growth regulator, 5-aminolevolinic acid (ALA) protected sunflower plants from Cd-induced cellular injury. Six-leaf old sunflower plants were exposed to 0.3 g kg-1 Cd for one week and then treated with chelating agents i.e. trisodium (S,S)-ethylenediamine-N,N'-disuccinic acid (EDDS, 5 mmol kg-1) and citric acid (CA,10 mmol kg-1), and 10 mg L-1 ALA. One week after chelators and ALA application, plants were harvested for further analyses. Results suggested that chelators EDDS/CA significantly increased Cd accumulation but inhibited plant growth of sunflower. In contrast, ALA promoted both Cd absorption and biomass accumulation, especially when applied in combination with EDDS. Bioaccumulation quantity and remove efficiency of Cd + EDDS + ALA treated plants was increased by 21.00% and 20.93% as compared with Cd + EDDS treatment. The qRT-PCR results revealed that increased Cd uptake by chelators EDDS/CA and ALA was associated with an increased expression of Cd transport genes e.g. Elexacaftor OPT6, HMA3 and Nramp1 in sunflower leaves and roots. Our study suggested that ALA protects sunflower plants from Cd-induced cellular injury by immobilizing Cd ions, modulating activities of antioxidative enzymes and capturing reactive oxygen species.Nitrogen-doped porous biochar (NPB) with a large specific surface area, wide pore size distribution, graphitized structure, nitrogen doping, and hydrophobicity was fabricated by high-temperature modification of algal biochar with potassium carbonate. This NPB was then uniformly coated on stainless steel wire as a novel solid-phase microextraction (SPME) fiber. The extraction efficiency of NPB-coated fiber for seven chlorobenzenes (CBs) was excellent; it was 1.0-112.2 times higher than that of commercial SPME fibers. A trace determination method was developed for seven CBs in water with the optimized extraction conditions by NPB-coated fiber and gas chromatography-electron capture detector, which showed wide linear ranges (1-1000 ng L-1), low detection limits (0.007-0.079 ng L-1), great repeatability (2.5-6.5% for intra-day, and 3.1-6.8% for inter-day), and excellent reproducibility (3.5-6.3%, n = 5). The practicality of the developed method was evaluated using real water samples and showed great recoveries (89.55-105.19%). This study showed that low-cost biomass wastes could be converted to advanced biochar materials by a facile method, and displayed excellent performance in SPME applications.Recycling activity for waste electrical and electronic equipment is always accompanied with leaching solution containing copper. Its selective extraction is of environmental and economic significance, and is beneficial for subsequent resource purification procedure. Compared with techniques such as chemical precipitation and solvent extraction, potentiostatic electrodeposition is outstanding with the advantage of high selectivity, electron as clean reagent, and minimal chemical usage. However, key factors affecting copper electrodeposition behavior as well as its kinetic process remain unclear, which blocks its further application. In this study, selective copper electrochemical extraction from multi-metal leaching solution of waste liquid crystal display panels is explored. Copper electrodeposition is analyzed from electrochemical and mass transport point of view, and the main results are summarized (i) copper can be first electrodeposited due to its higher reduction potential compared with indium; (ii) applied potential and agitation are the most influential factors towards space-time yield and current efficiency; (iii) a semi-empirical kinetic model could quantitatively describe the influence of agitation and the time-current-concentration relationship. The model-predicted extraction rate agreed well with experimental data throughout electrodeposition; (iv) electrodeposition experiments show over 95% of copper can be selectively extracted as ultrafine copper powder (~150 nm) at 0.05 V (vs. SHE).Humic acid (HA) as a natural coordinating agent was employed to modify the Fenton-like process by promoting the redox cycle of Fe(III)/Fe(II) and enhancing the pH tolerance. However, the roles of coordinating stages of HA-Fe(III) and the dynamic changes of iron species remain unclear. In this study, HA was introduced into the H2O2-Fe(III) process to investigate the accelerating roles of coordinating stages and systematically reveal the mechanism via the reactive oxygen species (ROS) identification, HA-Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox cycles tracking, electrochemical and kinetic analysis. Results suggested that two reaction stages were separated concerning the enhancement for HA in H2O2-Fe(III) process, including coordinating stage (slow rate) and promoting the redox stage (fast rate). HA-Fe(III) was identified as the major contributor, along with hydroxyl radical (·OH) and superoxide radical (·O2-) as the dominant ROS with formation rates calculated as 7.0 × 10-9 and 2.1 × 10-3 M s-1 via the steady-state model. Based on the density-functional theory (DFT) calculations and HPLC-MS/MS analysis, three degradation pathways of 2,4-Dichlorophenol were proposed with ten intermediate products identified, and the ecotoxicity was evaluated through Ecological Structure Activity Relationships (ECOSAR) program. This study unveiled the mechanism of HA on enhancing water decontamination via H2O2-Fe(III) process in stages.Human FOXH1 (Forkhead Box H1) gene encodes a human homolog of Xenopus forkhead activing signal transducer-1 and has been shown to play an important role in mesendoderm formation in X. tropicalis and mice. However, little is known about the function of FOXH1 in human development. Here we generated a FOXH1 homozygous knockout human embryonic stem cell (hESC), WAe009-A-42 by CRISPR/Cas9 mediated gene targeting. The WAe009-A-42 retained a typical undifferentiated morphology and normal karyotype, pluripotenty, and trilineage differentiation potential in vivo and vitro.This study sought to examine if mental health issues, namely depression and anxiety symptoms, and loneliness were experienced differently according to various demographic groups during the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e., a societal stressor). An online survey, comprising demographic questions and questionnaires on depression, anxiety and loneliness symptoms, was distributed in Canada during the height of social distancing restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Respondents (N=661) from lower income households experienced greater anxiety, depression and loneliness. Specifically, loneliness was greater in those with an annual income 65yr). Moreover, loneliness scores increased with increasing depression and anxiety symptom severity category. The relationship between loneliness and depression symptoms was moderated by gender, such that females experienced higher depressive symptoms when encountering greater loneliness. These data identify younger females, individuals with lower income, and those living alone as experiencing greater loneliness and mental health challenges during the height of the pandemic in Canada.