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Stoneberg, Michael R
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Botany and Plant Pathology
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- Creator:
- Sun, Jin-Hua, Hyman, Michael R., and Arp, Daniel J.
- Abstract:
- Acetylene is a slow-binding inhibitor of the Ni- and Fe-containing dimeric hydrogenase isolated from Azotobacter vinelandii. Acetylene was released from hydrogenase during the recovery from inhibition. This indicates that no transformation of acetylene to another compound occurred as a result of the interaction with hydrogenase. However, the release of C2H2...
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- Article
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- ? Jin-Hua Sun, Michael R. Hyman, and Daniel J. Arp* Laboratory for Nitrogen Fixation Research, Oregon
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- Creator:
- Hyman, Michael R., Ensign, Scott A., Arp, Daniel J., and Ludden, Paul W.
- Abstract:
- Carbonyl sulfide (COS) has been investigated as a rapid-equilibrium inhibitor of CO oxidation by the CO dehydrogenase purified from Rhodospirillum rubrum. The kinetic evidence suggests that the inhibition by COS is largely competitive versus CO (Ki = 2.3 pM) and uncompetitive versus methylviologen as electron acceptor (Ki = 15.8 pM)....
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- Article
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- from RhodospiriZZum rubrum+ Michael R. Hyman,t Scott A. Ensign,s Daniel J. Arp,t and Paul W. Ludden*,s
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- Creator:
- Hyman, Michael R., Seefeldt, Lance C., Morgan, Vance, Arp, Daniel J., and Mortenson, Leonard E.
- Abstract:
- The effects of nitric oxide (NO) on the individual components of Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase have been examined by kinetic and spectroscopic methods. Incubation of the Fe protein (Av2) for 1 h with stoichiometries of 4- and 8-fold molar excesses of NO to Av2 dimer resulted in a complete loss of...
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- Article
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- vinelandii Nitrogenasef Michael R. Hyman,* Lance C. Seefeldt,$ T. Vance Morgan,$ Daniel J. Arp,* and
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- Creator:
- Behrenfeld, Michael J., Hu, Yongxiang, Hostetler, Chris A., Dall’Olmo, Giorgio, Rodier, Sharon D., Hair, John W., and Trepte, Charles R.
- Abstract:
- Global ocean phytoplankton biomass (C-phyto) and total particulate organic carbon (POC) stocks have largely been characterized from space using passive ocean color measurements. A space-based light detection and ranging (lidar) system can provide valuable complementary observations for C-phyto and POC assessments, with benefits including day-night sampling, observations through absorbing aerosols...
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- Article
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- ocean carbon stocks Michael J. Behrenfeld,1 Yongxiang Hu,2 Chris A. Hostetler,2 Giorgio Dall’Olmo,3
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- Creator:
- Siegel, D. A., Behrenfeld, Michael J., Maritorena, S., McClain, C. R., Antoine, D., Bailey, S. W., Bontempi, P. S., Boss, E. S., Dierssen, H. M., Doney, S. C., Eplee, R. E. Jr., Evans, R. H., Feldman, G. C., Fields, E., Franz, B. A., Kuring, N. A., Mengelt, C., Nelson, N. B., Patt, F. S., Robinson, W. D., Sarmiento, J. L., Swan, C. M., Werdell, P. J., Westberry, T. K., Wilding, J. G., and Yoder, J. A.
- Abstract:
- Photosynthetic production of organic matter by microscopic oceanic phytoplankton fuels ocean ecosystems and contributes roughly half of the Earth's net primary production. For 13 years, the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) mission provided the first consistent, synoptic observations of global ocean ecosystems. Changes in the surface chlorophyll concentration, the primary...
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- Article
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- ScienceDirect Remote Sensing of Environment j ourna l homepage: www.e lsev ie r .com/ locate / rse Regional to
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- Creator:
- Deans, Andrew R., Lewis, Suzanna E., Huala, Eva, Anzaldo, Salvatore S., Ashburner, Michael, Balhoff, James P., Blackburn, David C., Blake, Judith A., Burleigh, J. Gordon, Chanet, Bruno, Cooper, Lauren D., Courtot, Mélanie, Csösz, Sándor, Cul, Hong, Dahdul, Wasila, Das, Sandip, Dececchi, T. Alexander, Dettal, Agnes, Diogo, Rui, Druzinsky, Robert E., Dumontier, Michel, Franz, Nico M., Friedrich, Frank, Gkoutos, George V., Haendel, Melissa, Harmon, Luke J., Hayamizu, Terry F., He, Yongqun, Hines, Heather M., Ibrahim, Nizar, Jackson, Laura M., Jaiswal, Pankaj, James-Zorn, Christina, Köhler, Sebastian, Lecointre, Guillaume, Lapp, Hilmar, Lawrence, Carolyn J., Le Novère, Nicolas, Lundberg, John G., Macklin, James, Mast, Austin R., Midford, Peter E., Mikó, István, Mungall, Christopher J., Oellrich, Anika, Osumi-Sutherland, David, Parkinson, Helen, Ramírez, Martín J., Richter, Stefan, Robinson, Peter N., Ruttenberg, Alan, Schulz, Katja S., Segerdell, Erik, Seltmann, Katja C., Sharkey, Michael J., Smith, Aaron D., Smith, Barry, Specht, Chelsea D., Squires, R. Burke, Thacker, Robert W., Thessen, Anne, Fernandez-Triana, Jose, Vihinen, Mauno, Vize, Peter D., Vogt, Lars, Wall, Christine E., Walls, Ramona L., Westerfeld, Monte, Wharton, Robert A., Wirkner, Christian S., Woolley, James B., Yoder, Matthew J., Zorn, Aaron M., and Mabee, Paula
- Abstract:
- Despite a large and multifaceted effort to understand the vast landscape of phenotypic data, their current form inhibits productive data analysis. The lack of a community-wide, consensus-based, human- and machine-interpretable language for describing phenotypes and their genomic and environmental contexts is perhaps the most pressing scientific bottleneck to integration across...
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- through Phenotypes Deans, A. R., Lewis, S. E., Huala, E., Anzaldo, S. S., Ashburner, M., et al. (2015
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- Creator:
- Gene Ontology Consortium, Berardini, Tanya Z., Li, Donghui, Huala, Eva, Bridges, Susan, Burgess, Shane, McCarthy, Fiona, Carbon, Seth, Lewis, Suzanna E., Mungall, Christopher J., Abdulla, Amina, Wood, Valerie, Feltrin, Erika, Valle, Giorgio, Chisholm, Rex L., Fey, Petra, Gaudet, Pascale, Kibbe, Warren, Basu, Siddhartha, Bushmanova, Yulia, Eilbeck, Karen, Siegele, Deborah A., McIntosh, Brenley, Renfro, Daniel, Zweifel, Adrienne, Hu, James C., Harris, Midori A., Deegan, Jennifer I., Ireland, Amelia, Lomax, Jane, Jaiswal, Pankaj, Chibucos, Marcus, Gwinn-Giglio, Michelle, Wortman, Jennifer, Hannick, Linda, Madupu, Ramana, Botstein, David, Dolinski, Kara, Livstone, Michael S., Oughtred, Rose, Blake, Judith A., Bult, Carol, Diehl, Alexander D., Dolan, Mary, Drabkin, Harold, Eppig, Janan T., Hill, David P., Ni, Li, Ringwald, Martin, Sitnikov, Dmitry, Collmer, Candace, Torto-Alalibo, Trudy, Laulederkind, Stan, Shimoyama, Mary, Twigger, Simon, D'Eustachio, Peter, Matthews, Lisa, Balakrishnan, Rama, Binkley, Gail, Cherry, J. Michael, Christie, Karen R., Costanzo, Maria C., Engel, Stacia R., Fisk, Dianna G., Hirschman, Jodi E., Hitz, Benjamin C., Hong, Eurie L., Krieger, Cynthia J., Miyasato, Stuart R., Nash, Robert S., Park, Julie, Skrzypek, Marek S., Weng, Shuai, Wong, Edith D., Aslett, Martin, Chan, Juancarlos, Kishore, Ranjana, Sternberg, Paul, Van Auken, Kimberly, Khodiyar, Varsha K., Lovering, Ruth C., and Talmud, Philippa J.
- Abstract:
- The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (http://www.geneontology.org) (GOC) continues to develop, maintain and use a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. The GO ontologies are expanding both in content and in structure. Several new relationship types have been introduced and used, along with...
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- ); Rama Balakrishnan, Gail Binkley, J. Michael Cherry, Karen R. Christie, Maria C. Costanzo, Stacia R