A cyanobacterium containing phycobiliproteins with far-red acclimation was isolated from Pozas Rojas, Cuatro Ciénegas, México. It was named Leptolyngbya CCM 4 after phylogenetic analysis and a description of its morphological characteristics. Leptolyngbya was grown in far-red light. Sucrose-gradient analysis of the pigments revealed two different colored bands of phycobiliproteins. A band at 60% sucrose was a phycocyanin containing phycobilisome; at 35% sucrose, a new type of phycobiliprotein absorbed at 710 nm. SDS-PAGE revealed the presence of two types of core-membrane linkers. Analysis of the hydrophobic pigments extracted from the thylakoid membranes revealed Chl a, d, and f. The ratio of Chl f/a was reversibly changed from 1:12-16 under far-red light to an undetectable concentration of Chl f under white light. Cuatro Ciénegas, a place surrounded by the desert, is a new ecosystem where a cyanobacterium, which grows in farred light, was discovered., C. Gómez-Lojero, L. E. Leyva-Castillo, P. Herrera-Salgado,
J. Barrera-Rojas, E. Ríos-Castro, E. B. Gutiérrez-Cirlos., and Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy
This paper focuses on Utraquist priest Jan Gaudencius (+ c. 1455), from whose quite extensive library only a parchment Bible copied in 1418 has been preserved. From 1431, when he began to work in Litoměřice, he started using in to note down chronicle records, not only on important events, but also on the weather. Gaudencius and other users of the Bible continued this in the Western Bohemian town of Žlutice.