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Browsing by Subject "fluoresenssi"

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  • el-Khouri, Hanna (2015)
    Ilmaston muuttuessa puiden kasvuolosuhteet muuttuvat lämpötilan ja hiilidioksidipitoisuuden kasvaessa. Vaikka puiden fysiologiset vasteita on tutkittu jo pitkään, tarkempi tieto puiden vuosirytmin muutoksista ja mahdollisista vaikutuksista vuosittaiseen kasvuun on kiinnostavaa. Hiilidioksidin ja lämpötilan vaikutuksia keväiseen lehtien kehitykseen tutkittiin keväällä rauduskoivulla (Betula pendula roth). Tavoitteena oli selvittää tarkemmin silmujen puhkeamisen jälkeistä fotosynteesikapasiteetin kehittymistä ja kohotetun hiilidioksidipitoisuuden ja lämpötilan vaikutusta siihen kaasunvaihtomittausten avulla. Toisena työn tavoitteena on verrata fluoresenssimittauksilla mitattua PSII:n valoreaktioiden maksimitehokkuutta kaasunvaihtomittauksiin. Koe-asetelma toteutettiin kasvihuoneolosuhteissa neljällä eri huoneella. Nykyilmastoa vastaavissa kontrollihuoneissa ilman hiilidioksidipitoisuuden tavoitteeksi asetettiin 380 ppm, ja lämpötila +2 °C ulkolämpötilaan verrattuna. Loppi2100-olosuhteet kuvaavat tulevaisuuden skenaariota, hiilidioksidipitoisuus tasolla 700 ppm ja lämpötila kontrolliin verrattuna +2 °C. Jokaisessa huoneessa kasvatettiin viittä rauduskoivua, joista mitattiin viikoittain kaasunvaihtomittausten avulla mm. hiilen assimilaatiota ja muita fotosynteesiin liittyviä tunnuksia. Eri huoneiden erilaisen lämpötilakehityksen ja eri mittauspäivien takia erot tasattiin laskemalla huonekohtainen lämpösumma, jonka avulla tulokset saatiin vertailukelpoisiksi eri huoneiden välillä. Tulosten mukaan hiilen assimilaatio on suurempaa ja kehittyy nopeammin Loppi2100-olosuhteissa verrattuna kontrolliin. Lämpösumman avulla aineistosta muodostettiin ennustemalli, jonka residuaalien avulla voidaan todeta, että ero käsittelyjen välillä on tilastollisesti merkittävä. PSII:n maksimitehokkuus korreloi kaasunvaihtomittausten tulosten kanssa, vahvistaen käsitystä siitä, että valoreaktioiden tehokkuus antaa hyvän kuvan koko fotosynteesikoneiston kapasiteetista.
  • Rojalin, Tatu (2015)
    Raman spectroscopy is based on vibrations that occur between the atoms of a compound. The overall structural energy is derived from the electronical energy as well as vibrational, rotational and translational energy. In Raman spectroscopy the vibrational and rotational energies are essential. Usually the excitation energy used in Raman spectroscopy can be either in the region of visible light or NIR. The sample absorbs the energy and energy is also scattered back to all possible directions. Elastic scattering is called the Rayleigh scattering. In that case the back-scattered photons have an equal energy as the original excitation energy. However, some of the scattering happens inelastically and it forms the basis of Raman-phenomena. If the detected photons have smaller energy than the original, it is called the Stokes scattering. If the energy is bigger, it is anti-Stokes scattering. Raman is typically very rare and weak phenomenon. The spectral features in Raman spectra consist of the intensities and energies of the back scattered photons. Raman spectroscopy provides very accurate and detailed structural information on the molecule. It is basically a label-free technique with minimal need for sample preparation and the measurements can also be carried out e.g. through container walls. Further, Raman is quite insensitive to hydrous samples and it is suitable to solutions and biological assessments. However, there are some drawbacks that are formed by the luminescence phenomena i.e. fluorescence. Strong fluorescent backgrounds can mask the relevant Raman features in spectra because Raman and fluorescence are competetive processes. For instance many drug molecules have such structures that they cause strong fluorescence. It is also one of the reasons that pharmaceutical applications and measurements have been partly limited due to this problem. There are applications to improve and enhance a Raman signal. For example resonance phenomena and SERS are favored. To solve the fluorescence-related problems there are also means; one can change the laser wavelenght, photobleach the sample or apply different kinds of data manipulation techniques to the spectral data achieved. There are drawbacks with these methods. They can be slow, complex, damage the samples and still insufficient fluorescence suppression is a problem. In this study a novel time-gated CMOS-SPAD detection technique is applied to non-fluorescent and fluorescent drug measurements. The new detection system has a programmable on-chip delay time and it is synchronized with a picosecond pulsed laser. The scattered photons can be measured in the time scale when they are simultaneously measured in traditional energy and intensity wise. Raman scattering occurs in the timescale of sub-picoseconds while the fluorescence phenomena happen typically in the order of nanoseconds. This time difference can be exploited effectively to suppress the fluorescence. In the literature review of this study the basis of vibrational spectroscopy is introduced - especially Raman spectroscopy. The techniques related, as well as the novel time-resolved technique are covered. Further, different kinds of applications in the field of Raman spectroscopy are reviewed, mainly pharmaceutics-related and biologically relevant applications. In the experimental work the focus was to compare a continuous-wave 785 nm laser setup coupled with the CCD-detector to the pulsed picosecond 523 nm laser coupled with the CMOS-SPAD-detector. The measurements were performed on different kinds of drugs, both non-fluorescent and fluorescent. The aim was to obtain information on the effectiveness of CMOS-SPAD-technique on fluorescence suppression for solid drugs and solutions. Secondary goals were to collect knowledge on the similarities and differences between the Raman setups used for solution measurements, to optimize and discuss the key elements of setups for solids and solutions and to show preliminarily the applicability of the CMOS-SPAD-system on fluorescent drug's solutions as well as find out the requirements related to quantitative assessments using Raman spectroscopy. In drug research there is also constant need for reliable in vitro cell assays. The assessments made in this study may prove useful to the future applications e.g. measurements with living cells. An effective fluorescence suppression was achieved to strong fluorescent backgrounds using the novel time-resolved CMOS-SPAD-detection system coupled with the pulsed picosecond 532 nm laser. The setup is potentially a convenient tool to overcome many fluorescence-related limitations of Raman spectroscopy for laboratory and process analytical technology (PAT) use in the pharmaceutical setting. The results achieved encourage to consider that with careful calibration and method validation there is potential for quantitative analysis, biopharmaceutical and biological applications e.g. in vitro cell studies where most Raman techniques suffer from strong fluorescence backgrounds. Other potential fields for future applications can be also considered.
  • Mattlar, Viivi (2018)
    The literature review introduces the rapeseed chemical composition, the rapeseed protein isolate as a novel food ingredient, and protein oxidation. Rapeseed is an economically important oilseed crop since it is one of the largest sources of vegetable oil in the world. Rapeseed expeller is a protein-rich by-product of canola oil extraction. The main use of this protein-rich by-product is animal feed. However, it could be potentially utilized in the food industry, for example, as a source of protein in plant protein products, as a texture-improving ingredient in bakery products or as an alternative for animal proteins. We need more protein for human nutrition, and thus it is important to find new plants that can be used as protein sources. This way we can reduce environmental stress. Because the production process of rapeseed protein expeller already exists, it is a good new potential protein source. Protein and lipid oxidation are significant factors when food and nutrition quality are examined. The objective of this study was to optimize the protein extraction method and to examine the oxidation of rapeseed proteins and the lipid oxidation in two different rapeseed expellers. A few parameters, including extraction solvent (0.1 M and 1 M NaCl), pH (8 and 10), extraction time (4 h and overnight) and the removal of oil, were tested and the parameters that gave the biggest acquisition of soluble proteins were chosen for the experiment. The oxidation of rapeseed protein expeller was measured based on the loss of tryptophan fluorescence and the formation of carbonyls and dityrosine by using fluorescence spectrometry and based on the formation of hexanal by using the headspace gas chromatography method. Protein oxidation was measured in two different ways: in the rapeseed protein expeller during three months and in the extracted protein solution during seven days. The chosen extraction parameters were pH 8, 0.1 M NaCl solution and overnight extraction. The soluble protein amounts of the two rapeseed expeller samples were different after extraction, but this could be explained by the batches’ slightly different chemical compositions, especially their different cruciferin and napin ratios. During both the 7-day and 3-month oxidations, the tryptophan fluorescence decreased. During the 3-month oxidation, the formation of carbonyls increased and no hexanal was detected in any of the rapeseed expeller samples which were measured with headspace gas chromatography. The temperature and preservation time had a considerable effect on the protein oxidation in both the 7-day and 3-month oxidation tests, when only the loss of tryptophan was considered as an oxidation marker. The results revealed that fluorescence spectroscopy is a potential method for investigating the protein oxidation in the rapeseed protein expeller by using the loss of tryptophan and the formation of carbonyls as oxidation markers.