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Wittenberger, J. F. (1981). Animal Social Behavior. Boston: Duxbury Press.
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Waage Jk,. (1981). How the zebra got its stripes – biting flies as selective agents in the evolution of zebra coloration. J ent Soc S Afr, 44, 351–358.
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TURNER JR JW et al,. (1981). Elimination marking behavior in feral horses. Can J Zool, 59, 1561–1566.
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SchäFer M,. (1981). Beobachtungen zum interspezifischen Aggressionsverhalten eines Halbeselhybrid. Säugetierk Mitt, 29, 49–58.
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Saigo, S. (1981). A transient spin-state change during alkaline isomerization of ferricytochrome c. J Biochem (Tokyo), 89(6), 1977–1980.
Abstract: Kinetic difference spectra during the alkaline isomerization of ferricytochrome c were obtained by the pH-jump method in the range of 540 to 655 nm. The spectrum of the transient intermediate, which appears during the course of the isomerization, was reproduced from the spectra. The intermediate showed an intense absorption band at 600 nm, indicating that it is a high spin or mixed spin species. This is in contrast to the stable neutral and alkaline forms which are low spin species. The transient spin-state change during the isomerization was also observed upon rapid oxidation of ferrocytochrome c at alkaline pH.
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Saigo, S. (1981). Kinetic and equilibrium studies of alkaline isomerization of vertebrate cytochromes c. Biochim Biophys Acta, 669(1), 13–20.
Abstract: Equilibria and kinetics of alkaline isomerization of seven ferricytochromes c from vertebrates were studied by pH-titration and pH-jump methods in the pH region of 7-12. In the equilibrium behavior, no significant difference was detected among the cytochromes c, whereas marked differences in the kinetic behavior were observed. According to the kinetic behavior of the isomerization, the cytochromes c examined fall into three classes: Group I (horse, sheep, dog and pigeon cytochromes c), Group II (tuna and bonito cytochromes c) and Group III (rhesus monkey cytochrome c). The kinetic results are interpreted in terms of the sequential scheme: Neutral form in equilibrium with fast Transient form in equilibrium with slow Alkaline form where the neutral and alkaline forms are the species stable at neutral and alkaline pH, respectively, and the transient form is a kinetic intermediate. From comparison of the primary sequences of the seven cytochromes c and the classification of these cytochromes c, it is concluded that the amino acid substitution Phe/Tyr at the 46-th position has a major influence on the kinetic behavior. In Group II and III cytochromes c, the ionization of Tyr-46 is suggested to bring about loosening of the heme crevice and thus facilitate the ligand replacement involved in the isomerization.
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Rubenstein Di,. (1981). Behavioural ecology of island feral horeses. Equine. Vet. J., 13, 27–34.
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Roberts, J., Hunter, M. L., & Kacelnik, A. (1981). The ground effect and acoustic communication. Anim. Behav., 29(2), 633–634.
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Ridge, J. A., Baldwin, R. L., & Labhardt, A. M. (1981). Nature of the fast and slow refolding reactions of iron(III) cytochrome c. Biochemistry, 20(6), 1622–1630.
Abstract: The fast and slow refolding reactions of iron(III) cytochrome c (Fe(III) cyt c), previously studied by Ikai et al. (Ikai, A., Fish, W. W., & Tanford, C. (1973) J. Mol. Biol. 73, 165--184), have been reinvestigated. The fast reaction has the major amplitude (78%) and is 100-fold faster than the slow reaction in these conditions (pH 7.2, 25 degrees C, 1.75 M guanidine hydrochloride). We show here that native cyt c is the product formed in the fast reaction as well as in the slow reaction. Two probes have been used to test for formation of native cyt c. absorbance in the 695-nm band and rate of reduction of by L-ascorbate. Different unfolded species (UF, US) give rise to the fast and slow refolding reactions, as shown both by refolding assays at different times after unfolding (“double-jump” experiments) and by the formation of native cyt c in each of the fast and slow refolding reactions. Thus the fast refolding reaction is UF leads to N and the slow refolding reaction is Us leads to N, where N is native cyt c, and there is a US in equilibrium UF equilibrium in unfolded cyt c. The results are consistent with the UF in equilibrium US reaction being proline isomerization, but this has not yet been tested in detail. Folding intermediates have been detected in both reactions. In the UF leads to N reaction, the Soret absorbance change precedes the recovery of the native 695-nm band spectrum, showing that Soret absorbance monitors the formation of a folding intermediate. In the US leads to N reaction an ascorbate-reducible intermediate has been found at an early stage in folding and the Soret absorbance change occurs together with the change at 695 nm as N is formed in the final stage of folding.
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Rau Re,. (1981). Zur Geschichte und Präparation der Mainzer Quaggas. Mainzer Naturw Archiv, 19, 221–236.
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