SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT FEDOROV, V.YE. - FEDOROVA, M.N.
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CIA-RDP86-00513R002200810004-4
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RIF
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S
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100
Document Creation Date:
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 17, 2001
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4
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Publication Date:
December 31, 1967
Content Type:
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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NC L SStFIED!
~PRUCESSING I)ATE--13NOV70
016
Ul A
"`tITLE--'SYNTriESIS AND X RAY D IFFRACTION' 'STUDY Ll FT
TELLUR IDES -U- UNGSTEN AND RHENJU,,4
:-UTHOR (05)-OPALOVSKlYt A.A., FEDOROV, V.YE., LOBKGV, t-U-9 ERENBUR G,
V.G.
..SENCHENKO,, L.No
OF 1,NFO--USSR
r MATER; F~970r ';613) 561-3
SOURCE--zZV. AKAD. NAUK SSSR -NEORG.
_..DATE. PU8L ISHED-------- 70
..SUBJECT AREAS-~-
CHER I S T
RYy MATERIALS
TOPIC TAGS--X RAY DIFFRACTION, TUNGSTEN.CDMPOUNU, TELLORIDEr RHENI(j,"i
COMPOUND,' CHALCOGENIDEIGLASS
~.~.~,:CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTR ICT WINS
'.-DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIE0
''..PROXY.REEL/FRAME--1996/0898 STEP NU--UR/0363/70/006/003/0561/0563
CERC-ACCESSION NO--AP0116067
'L";CLASS I f I UO
mil Will"
-13NOV70
2/2 016 UNCLASSIFIED--- PqOCESSING UATE-
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0118067
'ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT* W-TE AND RE-TE MIXTS. AT AMETAL
CdALCOGEN RATIO OF 1:2 WERE HEATED IN EVACUATED,~AND SEALED QUARri
AMPULES AT A RATE OF 8-10DEGREES PER MIN. AND CALCINED AL SUBZ 0SUB3
SERVED AS THE DTA REF. THE.HEATING'CURVES ARE:CHARACTERIZED 13Y 2
HEATING EFFECTS, OF WHICH THE ENDOTHERMAL EFFECT-IS CAUSED BY T14E
MELTINGIOF TE AND THE EXOTHERMAL EFFECT.:CORRESP,ONDS TO OXIDN# OF THE
METAL WITH TE. THIS MEANS TH4TJHE~REACTION BETWEEN-D) AND RE~PRIJCEEDS
ONLY WITH FUSED CHALCOGEN. THE~RATE OF-THE HET~ROr'ENEUUS REACTIONS IS
STRONGLY DEPENDENT ON THE'tNTERACTION SURFACE WHICH VARIFS
SIGNIFICANTLY,IF GAS Is USED IN THE REACTION. WTE SU,12 WAS SYNTHESIZE0
AT 750UEGREFS FOR 25-30 HR, AND RETE SU62 AT 800DEGREES FOR 60-5 HR.
THE SAMPLES WERE STUDIED BY X RAY PHASE ANDAA ANALYSES. THE UNIT CELL
:PARAMETERS WERE CALCD. BY USING COMPUTERS. THE AGREEMENT 6ETWEEN THE
MEASURED AND THE !CALCD. 0 SUBHKL VALUES WAS~NOT
YERY.GOOD, ESP. IN THE
LAKGE.-ANGLES REGION. FAC I LI TY. i~! INS7'r. NEORG. ~KHIM-, NOVOSIBIRSKy
USSR.
112 031 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--18SEP70
TITLE--CORROSION OF COPPER AND STEELS IN WASTE WATERS -t)-
-.AUTHOR-"FEDOROV, YE.A.
COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE-,-GIDROLIZ. LESOKHIM. PROM. 1970# 23(2)? 28
DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
:SUBJECT AREAS--MATERIALS
TOPIC TAGS--CORROSION RATE, STAINLESS STEEL, PHENOL, WOOD CHEMICAL
PRODUCT, COPPER, STEEL, METAL COATING, CnRROSION.~RESISTAr4CE/(U)KIII~9rllOT
STAINLESS STEEL, (U)ST3 STEEL
.CONTROL V.ARKfNG--N0 RFsrRIC'rlfjt4S-
OUCUIiENT CLASS--U."ICLASSIFIED
~-PROXY REEL/FRAME--19a9/0773 STEP NO--UR/0328/70/02'.~/Ot)2/0026/0028
CIRC ACCESS101"ll '-,10--AP0107315
DATE-18SEP70
2/2 031 UNCLASSIFIED PROC E S S 1 N'
CIRC ACCESSION ND--AP0107315
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-CU) G9-0- ABSTRACT. IDETNS. (GRAVIMETRICI WERE IMADE OF
THE RATE OF CORkOSION (IF CU, STAINLESS STEEL K1118NIOTt AND CARBON STEEL
Sf. 3 IN THE EFFLUENT FROM THE SYASYA WOOD CHEA. ~PLAJNT. THE EFFLUENT
HAD A PH 3.5-4, AN OXIDILABILITY OF 1900 MG-L., ANO CO%TAINED UNSATO.
HYDROCARBONS 1380, VOLATILE PHENOLS 44, AND VOLATILE ACIDS 296? M(;-L.
UNDER THE CONDITIONS OF THE TESTS (2-3 MONTHS AT 40-50DEGREES), CT. 3
STEEL.AND CU UNDERWENT CONSIOERABLE CORROSIONg ANU SHOULD BE REGAROEO AS
STAINLESS STEEL SHOWED
1INSUITABLE FOR CONTAINERS, PIPING, AND CLOSUPES.w
CONSIDERABLE RESISTANCE TO CORROSION CAN BE RECOAMENCYED FOR USE IN WOOD
CI
HEM.'PLANT EQUIPMENT. SUCH EQUIPMENT CAN ALSO BE MAOE OF STEEL CT. 3
'COATED WITH STAINLESS STEEL. q
UNCi-ASSIFIED
USSR UDC 539.214.-539.374
FEDOROV. Ye. 1.
"On the Probability of Calculating a Column Under L.ongitudinal-Transverse
Bending"
V sb. Probl. tiadezlinosti v stroit. provektir. (Reliability Problems fn
Structural Design -- Collection of WorVs), Sverdlovsk, 1972, pp 255-261
(from RZh-Mekhanika, No 3, Mar 73, Abstract No 3V464)
Translation: A formal solution is obtained for the problen of the rellabi-
lity of a column made from an ideally elastic-plastic materl.al under longi-
tudinal-Lransverse bending. It is assumed that the longitudinal and tr~ansverse
forces consist of random independent Markov processes. The-solutioll is
reduced to the integration of a Fokker-Planck-Kolmogr )ro,,r equation with boundary
and initial conditions. 5 ref. -1. Sh. Rakhmatulin.
USSR UDC 621.582.~.026.439
KISURIN, A.A., FEDCROVI_Dt;~.L, SHCHEVELEV, M.I.
"Some Problems Of The Initial Statistical Proceasing Of The Results Of Maseure-
ments Of The Electrical Parameters Of Power High-Frequenicy Transistors"
Sb. Tr. po poluprovod.niPovym materialem, priboram i ikh. primanoniyu (Collection
Of Works On Semiconductor 1.4aterials, Devices, And Their ' Applications), Vorone.zh,
1971, pp 169-178 (from RZh:Elektronika i yeye primenen-~ie, 110.11, Nov 1972, -
Abstract No 11B252)
Translation: The application of methods of correlation--regressive analysis to
the results of menourements of the olectrical-parumetero of' power HF tronnistore
is deacribed. For correct application of these mothode,the requirements which
are imposed on the conditions for collection of atatistical material are con-
sidered: 1) Elimination of sharply separated results of measurements; 2) Deter-
mination of the necessary and sufficient quantity of transistors in the nample;
Verification of homogeneity of several samples. The analysis was conducted on
ten lots. It is shown that 100 transistors in a lot is a euffkcient quantity for
the specific case considered of the difference of a temporal nature during the
collection of otatietical material for a correlation--regressive analysis of
parameters. ref. A.M.
USSR mc: 6?4 o7:2..--'.1!. 04
DRIVING1 A. YA.1
"Concernin- the Calculation of Rols of a .711cadinearly Vb~-ctic Witli
large Deflections"
J"Oscow, Stroitellnaya MaMariiha I Racchet Sooruzlic-niv, Ito 1,1 1.) p
Abstract: The authors obtain a visible analytic solution, of the pioblcr. in
a strict (;eometrically nonlin-,.ar formLlation for a rol made of a zionliuearl--
elastic material and compare the obtained results Wth Vne recsix)-IU3 of v. calu--
tion of the =mp. problem in a L-T-onatrically linear fx1rula-t-ion. Thia article-
deals with an eccentrically co.-irpresced rod of a nonlinvarly OrIntic
with tin ideal double-11 cronn voction. A oloced voliitiom of' I'lio -FIT-olAcm IV,
obtained in a Btriet goomatrically nonlinear formilatiop. F0111, 11~"uroa' 81.7
mm. Hill, ifflillffli-MMUMI THOW, 111M
USSR UDO 538-576.23
KRASNUSHKIN, P.YE.,
iall
"Multiplicity Of The Wave Numbers Of Normal Waves In Laminated Med
Radiotekhnika i elektronika, Vol XVII, No 61 June l9r-, pp 1129-1140
Abatract: Transformatione of normal waves at neighboring Pointe of a multi-
plicity of wave numbers are studied on the basic of the thOD17 of not self-
conjugate differential operators and the theory of many cc=plex variables.
Among the examples considered are waves of Type TH in the,isotropic wave
guide "earth--lower ionoophere." The model diucuseL relates to a au=,,-,er day
in the middle latitudes and makes it possible to calciilate -the field of suver-
long waves on sea routca. 4 fig. 24 ref. Peceived by editoic, 12 April 1971,
AM11 N
119 ni'll 011011,121, mv NY M,
; =Hlr
i,212,1111 tin Nf E11,111,J11TH 'ifirIVINNN1111R 1V
USSR UDC:
SMOKOVA,
VIKULINAO L. F., GONYAYEV., G. S., LYUZE L. L., F~~R?
"Investigation of the 'Second Threshold' Effect in Gallium JU-senide Cavity
Oscillators"
Moscow,,Radiotekhnika i ElektrEnika, Vol 16, No 1, Jan 71, PP 131-133
Abstract: An attempt is made to explain the "second threshold" effect reported
by Gunn in 1966. The essence of this phenomenon is that an abrupt change in
the frequency of oscillations takes place with an acco,mpar*rIng reduction in
~the average current through some gallium arsenide specimens when the bias
voltage exceeds a certain value. The following rechezism in proposed as an
explanation of the effect. At bias voltages between the threshold value and
the "second" threshold, the specimen is operating in 6 "resonance-drift" niode.
The overall voltage during the negative part of the cycle or the variable
component falls below the threshold value, which delays the~time for genera-
tion of a nev domain. Above a certain biao voltage, which liffers for differ-
ent specimens, the amplitude of the variable component may be too small, so
that the overall voltage does not faU below the threshold value. Thus there
1/2
USSR
V=rNAJP L. F., et al, Radiotekhnika i-Blektronika., Vol 16P NO 1, Jan 71, PP
131-133
is a jump to the drift mode of operation. The lower amplitude of the oscilla-
tions in this mode is due to the reduction in current pulse duration. Pre-
quency jumps do not take place when the specimens are:connected in higher-Q
oscillator sections, or when the elements of,the section are adjusted with a
change in voltage.
2/2
110 WIR
USSR
BAYCRENKO, 1. P. , Candidate of Biological Sciences, STEPX,1311, Ye. 1. 1 and
ORO Candidate of Biological Sciences, Leningrad Scientific
a 0
esoea"RMInstitute of Ph-sical Culture
*
Improvement of Vestibular Function in Young Skiers"
Moscow, Teoriya i Praktika Fizicheskoy Kul'tury, No' 1, 1972, pp 60-63
Abstract: Ninety-eight 11- to 12-year old boys and girls wore given 16 skiing
lessons over a period of 9 weeks on different kinds of, terrain (rugged, Flac,
combination of rugged and flat) to determine the effect of tarrain on the
acquisition of motor skills and the affect of pract-ice on differcnt kinds of
terrain on vestibular function. The children who skied on Tugged terrain did
best. Beneficial changes were observed in the vestibular analysor in the
form of decreased excibility on the periphery and increased resistance to
extreme stimuli. By the end of the program, all the groups showed improvement
in technique, speed, and balance, but the laLter was most d,--~,/eloped in those
who skied-on rugged terrain.
USSR UDO: 529.781:621-397.6:629-195.1
FALIY, G. 11. and nDOROV Yuo A.
"A-Method of Tying Time Scales Using SatellSt~e (',jjMUnjCU4-jO'
a and
Ground TV Rets"
Moscow, Izrneritellnaya telldmika, No 3, 1
972, pp -26
Abstract: The pre8ent methods for*tying time -scairs use television
signals to provide simultaneous vertical sync,pull,-.e record1lig
at two different points or to transmit special pv]_,,~es or time
-markers within the television signal. The syutem ,)reposed in thi--
article takes advantage of the experimental Lqyste~:. that has been
created in the Soviet Union for tranamitting:tiz!l-, ;,:tmd frequency
information from the highly ato,bla quartz from -the
televicion station in Moscow. Ito advantage i's it resolves
the ambiguity of counting at second intervals id", the reception
of vertical pulses without first tying in the of.compared
clocks' The use of satellites involved in TV broadcaating guar-
antees the constancy of the moment for releaseiof second pulseEll
from the satellite tranamitting antenna, and peamAits combining
this moment with that of second puls'es from the I..,oscow t'ransmit-
ter.
USSR, 529-781c621.7197.6
PALIY, G.N., IM'YANCHEM10, YA.I., F~MPCROV--YUJ~f, MKO YZI
"Experimental High-Precision System Of Transmission Of The Dimensions Of.Ti=e
And Frequency Units On Television Broadcasting Channels"
IZMeritel-Inays tel-hnika, Moscow, No 1, Jan 1972, pp 1A-37
Abstract: An established expericental system is described wiiich aesures joining
the time scale of television channels in various cities bf tho ---uropean Part of
the USSR with an error of less than I microsecond. A block diai~r6m of the SySteM
is shown. The authors express their thanks to S.N. '..!ordavin, V.F. Zhele-zov, V.S.
Kraoulin, V.G. Illin,,L. A. Abraniov, G*A. Zadykin, M.D. $opellnikov and ot~ar
specialists who took tin active purt In creallon of tho aptem, flocalved by od-
itors 20 SePt 71. " fig. 1 tab- 7 ref.
............. ............
USSR UDC 539.67
DARINSKIY, B. M.) and FEDOROV, Yu.~A.
"On the Theory of Amplitude-Dependent Internal Friction"
Sb. "Vnutrenneye treniye v metallicheskikh materialakh" (Internal Friction
: 11/oscow Izd-vo "Nauka 1970
in Metallic Materials), pp 82-85
Abstract: Internal friction governed by a breakaway of dislocations from
locking points is considered.
ExDressions are derived for the number of breakwmy dislocations from.
locking points and internal friction as a function of~the applied stress
amplitude. The amplitude dependence of internal frictions at the beGinning
growth stage is compared with a corresponding depender :ice o'.1-itetined by Granato-
Lucke. I figure, 3 references.
1/1
112 021 UNCLASSIFIEU PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
.,TITLE--HYGIENE OF THE ORAL CAVITY -U-
AUTIIOR--FEDORGVt YUsA.
COU:NTRY OF INFt2--USSR
--STOMATOLOGIYA, 1970, VOL ft9t NR 39 PP 6-12
SOURCE
DATE PUBLISHED------70
SUBJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
~i-TOPIC TAGS--ORAL DISEASE, PROPHYLAXIS, ORAL HYGIENE
CCNTROL MARAMIG-NO RESTRICTIONS,
.DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAME--1998/0099 STEP NiD--UR/0511/.70/i)-149/003/000(i/0012
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0120799
U-
:'M Flay" _11 Zi 11.1 mi
2/2 021 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0120799
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- A6STRACT. THE PAPER OISCUS$ES THE P'Esut.rs w
SOVIET STUOIES CON'ERNINL'? ORAL HYGIENE DURING THEE LAST YEAP.S, 11 R E S EN T S
DATA ON THE ABRASIVE, ANTISEPTIC AND CURATIVE PROPHYLACTIC PK;.JPl-drIES '3c-
SOME S44PLES OF SOVIET AN'[) FORFIGN oE-.,4r4L PASTES,A%L) POKOE,-S, GIVES
INFOkMATION ON THE FREQUENCY OF ORAL CARE AND ITS l'4P(jRTA!\lcE, Ns wE-LL As
SETS FORTH THE ROLE OF THE tiYGIENIC FACTORS IN (;C-NERAL !MEASURE$ PGR THE
PkEVENTION OF THE PRINCPAL STOMATOLOGICAL DIS-cASE. tiAYS !.JF OEVLLUP~IIENT
OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH IN THE REFERRED TO FIELD All-E GUFLINED.
FACILITY: ODESSKIY N-1 [NISTITUT STOMATOLOGII.
w
11rIkk.,ir, A Ul 11 'FLUCtUALill;
Sh,~h~kkunov. K. n. 4~,aly~B tif th~ C-Ocal.
cha"nAl WiLtt% Ti~t Vivilioll
MUlt1~111ALtM Of thi VU1. Trutm,F . ................
Utvtnova, T. P., frtqwncy-Space Corrie..6tlo~ ~~jnztiwt,u.' t4-
ApILLudea of ~-av-~ Pre-,.;3tet n A Lc,,~aCy
laotropic Turbulent At=,ORPhee ................
Lobkova, L. W., Effect of Amplitude =a 11hafe-Fittid
~4t a Laver Otitput on the, SpAti'al Coherencit at
M. .4, the Laser Emission _ ..................... #.... 11.
Lcbkov4, L. M., YaAt and SI(w Fluctuations of the An,114% ut
Chiotylkav, A. a. Arrival of Laser F-odeftlon .............. I ... I ...
Lohkuv, 11. H.
Mallc9in, N. V.. StatititizAl be,%cript1cm of liamitiAn and
Poddut~nyj' V. V. Laguttre Photon Mix es .......................
Kiblitsin, N. V., anicAl D"Cri7ti= at %ome pracad-
Quantum hech.
Podduhnyl, V. V., ures of,Nanpacamecric Statl4ti . ........
PuUmLn. V. P.
PodI.Abnyy, V. V.. Potential. Accuracy of Measuring tho Anituldr
Trivoyhonko. H. Ye. Ponition of Photon Sourr* ...............
F. C., Application of Semiconductor La3or,% for
Ismatlov. I., Multichannel Optical Carzturt-Icstlows ...........
Fedocov Yu F
Strizhavxkiy, V. L.. Relation of Vie Distributlac Functions tit n
r..rp"nko, S. C..: Ouamtmonochrc~atlc Signal- and It* Amplit-0-it
tgayev. A. V.
bery,igin, 1. A., f3ptimiastion of Opti.cal-SaInd, ~ualkt%im Cu%itstitsit
Kurar-ov, V, It. SYS tems ................................ I ......
40, rianova, t. L.,
Ad Laser EmLaalon Modulation ....... ..........
Brodovich, 14. A., Vo l-.
zhonukiy. V. II., Dan
I
C
tlov.
D. S., fiestarays. Z. V..
'?Ltro'ja, A. V., Popov,
Yu, V., Roz4nov, H. N.
485
YlICAMICAL 71*6-~AN Sl,),Td!ON
a J
tlj~17 I STC III
iin.E! 17ROIILM~i OF LA:;rs% ArAM ZATA lpwiHISS-Q~'4
PROCEZ014GS OF THE FIRST ALL-UNION
SEPTEMBER 1966
'ri rL),: PROOLLIff PEREDACIft LNFUAAATSII LAZEX4" t-,LVCI(tNjy L.,f
At ITI 10 R; I A. DEPAUGIN. ET AL.
KIEV MER OF LENtH STATE U41VERS"TY
IMENt T.C. S.ClirVCJIE?r, 250 kev) rose by more than
minor storms the intensit-
a factor of 2. In a subsequent series of such disturbances, addl-ticnal injecticn
occurred and the front of the injected electrons moved closer to the earth. An
112.
............
USSR
VEMMOV, S. U., et al, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Fizicheskaya,
No 11, Nov 70, pp 2270-2274
injection of electrons of higher energies in the region L 3 was not,as effective
as for L = 3, and the spectrun here was softer. It is obser%red that these pheno-
oF Pelar d-sturbances and in
mena are closely associated with increased intensity,
a.U probability are*of great interest.in understanding the dynamics of the magneto-
sphere as a whole.
2/2
... ............. ........ . ...... - ---------
USSR uDc 621.22.o1
FEDOROVA, G. I. (SURO
"Laminar Flcm in a Gap Between Coaxial Rotating Cones in the Presence of a
Pressure Gradient on the Ends"
Hoscow, Mashinovedeniye, No 6) November-December 19TO, PP 90-93
Abstract: The article deals vitb a problem of the laminar flow of a viscous
liquid in a narrow gap of variable width between coaxial cones, of which the
internal one rotates at a constant angular velocity, The
precourc grwlicnt
at the ends of the gap is given., The laminar flow in stabilized, the enti-j
sector is-not considered. Analytical expressions are obtained for the
velocities and pressures, the flow rate of liquid throullh the gap, and the
hydrodynamic force. A comparison is rode with the data available in the
literature for radial and cylindrical gaps which are special cases of the
conical gap considered in the article. 1 figurey 6 'bibliographic entries.
LNCLASSIFIEC PRCCESSING OATE
--17JUL7C
,TITLE--PRODUCTICK CF VARIOUS FORMS OF L CRCWTh' BY'SPHERUPLASTS -U-
ALTHCR--FEDCRC%jA, G.I.
CUNTRY CF INFC-LSSR
S-CURCE--ANTIBICTIKII 19701 VCL 159 NR 3p PP 24C-243.
CATE PU13L ISI-.*EC------7C
SUBJECT AREAS---elCLCGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
TOFIC TAGS-PENICILLIN, GLYCf-hEt SALMCNELLAt SLCRC`Sfi MAGNESIUV SULFATE*
AGARI CULTUPE MECIUM
CCNTRCL PARKING-NC RESTRICTIhNS
DOCUMENT CLASS--LNCLASSIFIED
PROXY RLFL/FRAME--I1;82/043q STEP NC--UR/0297/'tQ/0151003/OZ40/0243
CIRC ACCESSICN NC--AP0051952
..... ...... ........ ........ ............. .........
Acc. N::: to,;: . Co "-'e
40-197
PR D L'0% Y S 01" C E Anl--ibiotiki, '970~ Vol 15, N r..
PRODUCTION OF VARIOUS FORAIS 01: L-GRDYVTil I1Y SPHEROPLASTS
6- 1, Eedorova
Virusologv-sif the I ISS ~Arntj.-!rl~
Moscow
I.vsozvmc, penicillin arid glycine spheroplasta of S. typhi 5606 and S. 'NrPjjjnjUriu.n
3046. as well as intact bacteria! cells were plated out iu- semi-liquid (0.3 1wr cent agar)
and semisolid (1.3 per cent agar) nutrient media with stahilizers 0-jorse sLrum, li~pertonic:
concentrations of sucrot!e and magnesium sulfate) -amf and I.-transforiningr agent
(penicillin or glycine). At optimal concentrations of - the skabilizeri and L-transforming
agents the spheroplasts. produced classtcal L-variants irl the form -.-)f L-colonie,~'. As a rule,
spheroplasts produced grea'er numbers of L-colonies thun intact celhs lated out in the
When tile oses of the L-transfortning agrenis were ~iigher thar, the
same amounts,
optimal ones, the growth of granular L-forins was olw,,s!.fved.
19820439
il
50
MlIgIl"o ! I OWN'
NIT .1
AlMill r .
USSR UDC 547.241'341
FEDOROVA,G. K., ANAWYEVA, L. G., KONONENKO, I. M.,!KAKSYUTINA, L. I., and
"Derivatives of B-Chloroalkyl- and Aiken-1-ylphosphoAic and Thiophosphonic
Acids"
Leningradi Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 43 (105), No 3, Mar 73, pp 533-543
Abstract: Heating B-chloroalkylphosphonic acids with sodium in octane yields
monosodium salts of these acids which upon solution in water split along the
C-P bond. Alkoxylation of a-chloroalkylthiophosphanic acid dichlorides with
alcohols in presence of acrylonitrile yields diestem of 6-chloroalkylthio-
phosphonic acids, while alkoxylation with sodium alkoxides -- the diesters
of alken-1-yltliiophosplionic acids. Amidation of a-chloroalkylphosplionic
acid dichlorides with aliphatic amines produces diamides of alken-l-
ylphosphonic aclds, and the use of aromatic amines leads to the formation
of the diamides of B-chloroalkylphosphonic acids, The reaction of trie-
thylamine with 6-chloroalkylthiophosphanic acid dichlorides yields the
dichlorides of alken-1-ylphosplionic and al~-eii-1-yl-tliioplios-~ptioni.c aci.ds.
FITT-_"
-1. h....... iih-i-MMIN -T, I
fifl, i it, I IrMll ;;I .111M Mil !NPHNIIM; N1,11,1110" -";;I IWMINI, 1 HH;1i I 111MIN I I ~ Ik if' IM I IMPH H if 11115111111 If
USSR LTDC 547.341
CMIUSHCHAK, N. I., VENGRZHANIOVSKIY, V. A., and _PEnQRQJLA _.G_,J' Institute
-of Organic Chemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Uk-rS$R
"4-Aryl-1,3-butadienylphosphonic Acids and Their Derivatives"
Mnfngrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii,.Vol 42(103), No 21 Feb.72, pp 291-M
Abstract: Hexachlorophosphorates (ArCH=CRCHCPC112 FC13 PC16 are treated
with sulfur dioxide at 20*C to produce 4-aryl-1,3-butadienylphosphonic
acid dichlorides, which are then hydrolyzed to,give the free acids. Re-
action of the dichlorides with ethanol and piperidineiin the. presence of
pyridine produces diethers and dipiperidides of the corresponding aryl-
butadienylphosphonic acids. The IR-spectra of 4-phenyl-1,3-butadienyl-
phosphonic acid and its derivatives show no band typical of terminal
methylene or vinyl radicals. Absorption bands are observed which indi-
cate a double bond conjugated with the benzene ring, and a trans C=C band.
USSR LTD C547.241
MOSKALEVSKAYA, L. S., and FEDOROVA. G. K.
'IDerivatives of a-Ketophosphinic Acids"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey nimii, Val 43 (105), No 10, Oct 73, pp 2183-2187
Abstract: Thionyl chloride reacted with dipheaylacyl-, phenylphenacyl-
and styrylphenacylphosphonium salts leads to the formation of corresponding
acid dichlorides which can be easily alkoxylated with alcohols in presence
of pyridine or reacted with amines to form respective esters and amides of
a-ketophosphinic acids. The esters and araides of 64etophosphinic acids
react with phenyl- and 2,4-dinitroplieny1hydrazines y1e.1-ding corresponding
hydrazones; with hydroxylamine corresponding oximes 4ire obtained.
35 -
USSR UDc 547-572 547-241
SHATURSKIY, YA. P.t MOSKALEVSKAYA-t L. S., and
3 WAI 4A&. ZV. ,Institute of Organic Chemistry, Mcademy of Sciences
Ukrainian SSR
"Synthesis of 6-Ketophosphinic Acids"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol LLO, No 5, May 70, PP 1167-
1168
Abstract: Phosphorylation of c(-methoxystyrene with phosphorus penta-
chloride, phenyl- and styryltetrachloroDhosphorus, with subsequent
treatment of the primary reaction products with water, Zives phenacyl-
ind phenacylphenyl- and phenacI713tyi-jinhos I 'c a-c4ds.
phosphonic acid Phini,
.n
The product of the reaction of CL-mothoxystyre o with Phosphorus
Dentachloride when treated with sulfur dioxide, is converted in!.,o
;6-raethoxystyrylphosphonic acid dichloride, which also givcz* phen-
acylphosphonic acid on hydrolysis with water.
55
T-q
hA A.2k.-M h1461.1 H. I I'll
j~;' "'I j'J~7 il IFIRIMI IWA
fli! H1 N1 14; 1-aMiN -41HM4 4~ 114, 49W,
USSR UDC~620.193.52
BYALOBZHESkIY, A. V., PLAVNIK, G. M., ANUROVA, G. 14., and
FEDOROVA, G. M., Academy of Sciences,USSR,:In.StitUte of Physical
"Compo!ii_t-i_ofi' of Films Foiri-mi-e-d'on Metali idbilit-illed Waier at 2SO*11
Moscow, Zashchita Metallov, Vol 7#' No 2. Mar-Apr., 1971', pp 177-178,
Abstract; The authors performed x-ray phase analysi5 of the films formed on
copper, cadmium, tungsten, molybdenum, niobium, ziTcoilium, titanium, nickel,and
iron in distilled water at 250 The films formed an each of these t)-pes-of
metals are described,
USSR UDC: 669.018.8
TOMASPIM, N. D., RUSKOL, Yu. S.0 FILIPPOVI A F.P
PLAWNIK, G. M.# and FEDOROV& nl;titu~e of i'"ilTsical Cahai_imistry,
Academy of Scieice;'L;_;~,
"Corrosion Behavior of Titaniuri-,-!,olybdenu7.-Chromiu-. Alloys".
Moscow, Zashchita Metallov,,Vol 6, No 5, Sep-Oct 70, pp 499-504
Abstract: This paper deals with the affect of chromitim on tho corrosion
resistance of titanium alloys containing 5 and 102 molybdenein. The
electroche-mic;i! and corrosion behavior of tile alloys w4is studied by
potentiometry, both the etirrotiL anti weight lossol; being tho:indicators
of the corrouion rate, It han been shom that Lite it-pha:;c ofjf.Lanium
alloyr, collLaining a Gtabla (under tile twating conditlow;) componeuit such
as nolybdenum,_I)0sSeS-.;es clevaLed corrosion resint.-ince. In the active
dissolution of tvo-phase a+3--alloys of titanlw,.i with
predominantly the a-phase goes into solution, while the 6-phasc rei;iains
at the surface in the forpt of a finely disperse layer. In the active*
1/2
USSR
TOMASHOV, N. D. et al, Zashchita Merallov, Vol 6, No 5, Sep.-Oct 70,
pp 499-504
diss%~;-,tion in nonoxidizinc, mediall the corrosion-ratc~of Ti-,-fo-Cr alloys
narkedly decreases only on addition of chromitm in an 'ariount sufficient
for producing single-phase G-alloys (Ti-5Mo-l0Cr ind Ti-101'-'P-1OCr);
however, if the alloys haveM a+S-structurre, than thelcorrosion rate
remains about the same (aa compared to Ti-.'-o alloys). Chrot'llivm addition
reduces the tendency of alloys to over-passivation, w)lich is caused by
the presence of '11'.0, and the Ti-51-',o-lOCr alloy exhibits. the sane low
corrosion rate within 0.15 to 1.2 v as trranium or Ti-IOCr alloy. At
potential.- which are more positive than 1.2 vi, the corrosion rate of
Ti-Mo-Cr alloys begins to increase owing to the tendency of chromium
to over-passivation.
2/2
4~3' 1. 1 EM -1M111111 ill-Iff - ~zt t 1-1~ ~M-11 lAh Rag,
1/2 017 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--IASEP70
TITLE--USE OF ETHYLENEDIAMINE AURINTRICARBOXYLATE FOR THE PHOTOMETRIC
-DETERMINATION OF THE RARE EARTH ELEMENTS -U-
AuTHOR-(02)-SERDYUK, L.S., FEDGROVA, G.Po
~CGUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
.~SOURCE-ZH. ANAL. KHIM. 19701 25(Lit 172-5
~OATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
SUBJECT,AREAS--CHEMISTRY
,TOPIC TAGS--ETHYLENEDIAMINE, RAPE EARTH METAL, PHOTIOMETRIC ANALYSIS,
CARBOXYLIC ACIDt CHEMICAL ANALYSIS
CP-NTPfX MARKING--N-4' PESTRICTIONS
,DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
~PROXY REEL/FRAMV-19,31/1092 STEP Nl,]--UR/0075/70/025/001/0172/0115
CIRC ACCESSIntl r4n--AP0104490
U NCL A S S-f F I ED
zfz 017 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-18SEPTO
,CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0104490
'ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U).GP-0- ABSTRA ICT, AURINTkICARBOXYLIC ACID REACTS
WITH ETHYLENEDIAMINE IN A 1:2 MOLAR RATIO JO FORM LIGHT YELLOW I WHICH
CANF HE USEn AS A REAGENT FOR THE PHOTOMETRIC DETN$i OF RAPE EARTHS.
DISSOLVE-0.05 G SAMPLE IN 2-3 ML L:l HCL WITH MODERATE HEATING ANO OIL.
TO 100 ML WITH H SUBZ 0o THEN OIL. 17.8 OF THIS SOLN,~TO 50'ML IN A
VOLUMETRIC FLASH. PLACE INTO A Z5-ML VOLUMETRIC FLASH SEVERAL Mt. oF A
PH 6.7 AMMONLACAL-ACETATE BUFFER, 0.5-0,9.CF THE OIL. SAMPLE, I ML
.0.2PERCENT REAGENT AND DIL. TO VOL. WITA,H suaz o.' f P11i OF THE SOLN.
SHOULD BE 7.4). DET. THE ABSORBANCE COLORIMETRICALLY BY USING A GREEN
FILTER AND FIND THE CONCN. OF TOTAL RARE EARTHS BY THE METHOD OF
COMPARISON,* A LACL SUB3 SOLN. IS,SUED AS STD. 504-N. JHE ERROR IN TliE
OETN9 OF' 2.4-3 5 TIMES 10 PRIME' NEGATIVE5 M RARE-IrARTHS, IS" PLUS: OR MINUS
3*4PERCENT.
!NrVASS I FIED
MR UDC 615,31.547-75
AKSMNOVA, L. A., SILAR KOVA, L. M. ,KUCHEROVA, N. F. RTE~M'MO$ C. N. , and
FLDjP,Ov,%--;" , SC*Intific Research Institute of ;4~macology of t~e
NE-ademy of 1-f-adical Sciences of USSR, 'Moscmi
"Indole Darivatives. XXXVI. Synthesis and Pharmacologic:al Investigation of
Some BenzoxerAnoindole Derivatives"
Ylosco;,!, Zhurnal, Vol 5, No 11, 1971, pp 3-5
Abstract: In scarcli.in,,, for psychotropic agents several. N-substitutcd dihydro-
and tetra'lydr;-lbciizo..-.c~-oinoindoles with sedative and antidepres-sant properties
were syathesi,--c,].
R,,~-, 0 N.
r
R R
1-11
1/3
TSAINOVA, L. A. et al., Kilimiko-Farmatsevticheskiy Zhurnal, Vol 5, No 11,
11171, pp 3-5
11; D R 11; 1b R ell Ic R Cl; Id R Br.
3
Ila It = III R (ell ) 1'.(Cli Ilb R H. R (ell N(C113
2 2 3 2 2 3 )2
lie R ~ ell 31 It, = (C) 1, 2zZ(a 3)2 ; Hd R ell 3p R (ell 2)3 N(ClI 3)2;
Ile R Cl, R (ell
1"(CH IIf R C1, R N(cl
2 2 3) 2; :(C"2)2' '3)2~*
IT'r' 1, - br, R - (e112 )2 1,'.(Cll3)2; 11h R Br, R (ell 2) 3 1')1(ell 3)2
TH'i R ~ R = 11; 111b R ~ c"i R 11; IlIc R If., R CO(Cif ) cl;
.3' 2 2 1
H, R'= COCIII C112117(cif ell Me R 11, It'= CO(CII '.1(c it
2 2 4 2 2 2 2 5)2
76 -
.................. . .. . ...............
A, L. A., e L Kldmko-Farm, atsevticheskiy Zhurnal, Val 5, No 11, 1971,
by the- cyclization of correspond-ing ary1hy'drozoas
of others (Ila-Hh), by tile reaction of dialkyl
arl~n(~'I"vi chlorle't-:; witAh N'a derivatives of oxepinoindoles (Ia-Id). The
by treating oxepinoindoles (la-ld) with Nall in di-
(j,1. f"".UICL"Oll Of oxen inoindoics Ia and Ib with Zn dust in HCI,
ill Hit- "I, vielded corresponding IIIa -and Illb. Reaction of
chloride yielded 111c which in turn fomed IIId
and ITI,: piperidine and diethylamne. Pliamiaco logical
tt-!-u; md !ipasmolytic ar-Livity were carried
ow. wit-h forvailas ilid moItim! poitics for TTb-ITh
I deLatled a Cime reac L i oils.
U
13
USSR UDC 615.217:547. 751
Laboratory of the Pharma-
PIDEVICH, I. N. , SENOVA, Z. P_ andjXWM
ap.
cology of Cardio-Vascular System and.the Psychopharm Laboratory of the
Institute of Pharmacology Ac. Med. Sc. USSR, Moscow
"Study of the Peripheral Antiserotonin Properties of a Series of Novel Indole
Derivatives"
Moscow, Farmakologiya i Toksikologiya, Vol 34, No 2, Mar-Apr 71, pp 155-159
Abstract: The investigated indole derivatives exhibit different effect on the
serotonin reactive structures of the D-, M-, and the T- type. The strongest
D-antiserotonin properties are shown by diamind and indocarb, strongest 114-
antiserotonin activity is exhibited by K-277, and T-antiBerotonln properties
by tipindol. The serotonin-reactive structures leading to positive inotropic
effect of serotonin on isolated rabbit's atrium are closely related to-T-
serotonin reactive structures of the cardio-pulmonary,reflexogenic zone of
cats, as far as the sensitivity to the investigated blocking agent is con-
cerned.
di,
-----------
USSR UDC 77
AVRAMEHKO, L. F. , VILENSKIY, YU, B. IVANOV, B.
POCHOOK, V. YA, , SKRIPIIIK, L. 1. , FIDOROVA, L. 11. ,FED04011A,J. Y4
"Synthesis of TetraLoles, Triazoles, Triazenes,and,A7o Compounds and a Study of
Them as Additives to Silver Halide Photographic Emillisions. 11. FhotQgraphic
Study of Material"
Uspekhi nauchn. fotogr. (Advances in Scientific Pb6tngrap~y) 1970, Vol. 111,
pp 12-23 (From RZ!i-Fizika, No 12(1), Dec 70, Abstn:ict a 12D13310
Translation: Three indices are introduced to evalu--:ite qu-rt1tat_-j(_0.y various
'~Y_ies -of Photographic activity of materials synthapized previouslv: "?Z111-
Fiz-;),a, No12(1), Dec 70, AJ)stract No 12D1333): Band
defoggring effects and certain combinaticns of thr-~,,,e nawcnmeters ;-I) the kinetic
curves for sensitivity and fagginr, in the second aging bPrqra and aftt2r intro-
duct-ion of the substances tested. If -the cubrutance- wto., ~,-A thf-, u:litv~ tl,-v., an
optical sensitizer, the value of the depressing index wau
the testing of substance5 in At,,,Cl- and AgBr(l)-emulsLonti, the kirietic.-; of
their adscrptian by AgHal, the spectrwil -tn oolution and af',;i*-r ad-
1 I'd L-.
_Ajf',~-L nn~i thc! oen!,ifization
USSR
AVRPI-01K.O. L.F., et al, Uspekhi nauchn. fotcg---. 19"0, Vol IL, p 12-23
I -P
was found for caj-donsed
tetrazoles between the stabilizer ana the irreversible adsarDtj.,-,n of M"Ite"ial
and between the depressing and defogging agents and~~revernible adscrptIcn; ir-
rever-5ible adsorpt-ion on a small portion of the Aglial 31xf~jce was sufficient
for total svibilization. The same was true for the stabilLzation of, trlazf~-ries.
Depression of fogging wan apparently a-Iways associated wlth thn slo-wing dcwn
of the appearance of reversibly adsorbed substances, althou0i in many c.-1sr-----; there
simultaneously occurred desensitization or slowing down of aging. Cerf:ain con-
nections were established between photographic activity arid tlhti structurr! and
substitutes in moMcules of triazoles- and optical sansitiz~-,rs va -the banis of
their quaternary salts and also in molecules oC hett~rocyolLc azo ccailicunds.
Of the material with
The formation of iono-dipole or coordinated compoun(!,
Aglial was necessary for stabilization, which requirf.'-ts the coincidence of their
dipole distances; the latter partially-eyplains the,dIfferences in the h-A---avicr
of materials in AgCl- and AgBr(I) -emuls ions. One rn%ist take into account, Inc-u-
ever, that in view of the large homeopolarity of tht~ bond In AgBr, e---C-P. in
AgCl, the latter requires more polar stabilizers. J.2 referencns.
2/2
USS R UDC 77
AVRAMENKO, L. F. VILENSIUY, YU. B. , IVAN, B. M.
POCHINOK, V. YA., SKRIPIIIK, L. I., FEDOROVA, L. N,~,~'TE-'
I'Synt esis of Tetrazoles, Triazoles, Triazenes,and Azro Compounds and a Stixiy o F
Them di; 'Additives to Silver Halide Photographic Emulsions. L. Synthesis, Struc-
ttwe, Chemical Properties,and Photographic Activity"
UsDekhi nauchn. ffot2g~r. (Advances in Scientific Photography), 1970, Vol. 14,
pp 5-11 (from RZh-Y'izika, Ito 12(l), Dec .70, Abstract Ito i2DI333)
Translation: DaVa on the synthesis, structure, and propertles of over,30(1' organic
compounds intended for stabilizing and defogging or depressing additiv.~s in Agilal
emulsions are presented; in certain cases these substances were 113o op-clcal
sensitizers. Among the 40 -'etrazoles not all were stalhilizo~rs of the photoemul-
sions; there was also established a difference in the clieviical bebavior in similar
-reactions. This duality is explained by the existence of azido-tetrazole tautc-
merism in many condensed tetrazoles; stabilization is caused-by adscrption byions
1/2
L tron
of the Aglial lattice of these azido forms in which there ai, increase(4 elec
~de'nsity on the heterocyclic 1j a,,or,,. 1,1iiny stabilizers Were amonj, the
triazoles, and not only ccndensed triazoles; amcng these mcag covild b~ co%,,rertted
into cyanin dyes by combining stabilizers and cptir-il sensitizors. it is shown
that it is necessary for d stahilizer t~,at three N at(,,,Tls enb~r 1-ito thp ring,
as in triazoles: a considerable nurber of stabilizcrs of A Oil 1,*'r,
also found among the triazenes. These compounds are simultantiously optical sen-
sitizers, defoCgers,and depressers; in AgBr-emulslons,only.the last -t7.qo proper-
ties are retained, in, view of differences in the formation of ion-dipole ccmnpounds
of AgCl and AgBr lattices with a polar triazene molecule. Of the azo compounds
only nonsymetric substances with heterocyclic radicals were photographically
active. 31 references.
2/2
-1/3 022
UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--090CT70
T.ITLE-THE EFFECTS OF MUTATIONS TOWARDS ULTRAVIOLET SENSI TIVITY IN YEAST
_U_
.AUTfiUR-(03)-lAKllARUV, I.A.v KOZINAt T-N-t FEDUROVAY I.V.I-
C GUNTRY.OF INFO--USSR
,SOURCE--MUTAT RES 9(l): 31-39. ILLUS. 1970-
.DATE PUBLISHEID------70
5UBJECT ARLAS-01OLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
:-TOPIC TAGS-YEAST, MICROORGANISM MUTATIONt UV RADIATIONt RADIATION
,-',SENSITIVITY, SACCHAKOMYCES, ESCHERIACOLLY UNA# RADIArION UAMAGE
,-cr-NTROL MARK[NG--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
~_,PRQXY REEL/FRAME--1993/0591 STEP NO--NE/0000/70/009/001/0031/0039
CIAG ACCESSION N(J-AP0113481
UNCLASS lFli~D
2/3 022 UNCLA~SIFIED PROCESSING DATE--090CT70
c,iRc ~CCESSIUN NO-AP0113481
A.bSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. UV SENSITlV,EMUIA14TS WERE INDUCED
aY_THE ACTION OF UV LIGHT AND WERE.ISOLATED BY THE REPLICA PLATING
'~METHOD. HIGHLY HOMOZYGOUS STOCKS OF YEAST SACCHA~OMYCES CEREVISIAE
DESCENDING FROM RACE XII wEkE UTILITZED. TWO RUTANTSt DESIGNATED UVS
SUBI AND UVS SUB2, CARRYING NONALLELIC MUTATIONS OF RADIOSEN51r[VITYi
WERE STUDIED MORE CAREFULLY. UV SENSITIVITY APPEARED TO BE OF A
RECESSIVE MONOGENIC CHARACTER; HETEROZYGOUS DIPLOIDS wEIZE UV RESISTANT
AND SEGREGATED 1:1 RESISTANT AND SENSITIVE CLONES~IN THE RANDOM
ASCOSPORk SAMPLES. THE UV SENSITIVITY OF THE STRAINS BEARING MUTANTS
UVS SUB1 AND UVS SUB2 DIFFERS. THE HAPLOID UVS.S U81 MUTANT AND THE
11APLOID UV5 SUBZ MUTANT HAVE SENSITIVITIES 25 AND 1.8.TIMES HIGHER,
:.-RESPECTIVELY, THAN THE WILD TYPE HAPLOIO* THE UVS SUB1 MUTANTS EXHIBIT
AN- EXPONENTIAL SURVIVAL CUR'VE9' WHILI~''THE'~UVS' SU821 MurANrS AND THE WILD
TYPE HAPLOID HAVE StGMOIDAL SHAPED CURVES. THE RADIORESISTANCE OF THE
ISOGENIC STRAINS, CARRYING THE MUTATIONS AT THE UVS SUB1 LOCUS,
-INCREASES WITH PULYPLOIDY. WE WERE ABLE TO STUDY THE EFFECT OF UVS
MUtATItJNS ON T14E FREQUENCY OF INDUCEDGENIC HUTAUXONS~DVF TO THE FACT
JHAT THE RESISTANT MUTANTS COULD EASILY BE DETECTED IN THE MEDIA WITH A
HIGH SERINE CONCENTRATION. THE RESULTS INDICATEjHAT THE UVS~SUBI AND
UVS*SUB2 MUTATIONS SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASE THE SENSITIVITY OF HAPLOIDS TO
'MUTAGENIC ACTION OF UV LIGHT. THE UVS SUBT AND UVS SUBZ PUTATIONS, ALSO
RESULT IN AN INCREASE IN SENSITIVITY TO,MUTAGENIC ACTION OF UV LIGHT TO
REGARD TO CYTOPLASMIC DETERMINANTS.
3/3 022 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--090CT70
C61RC ACCESSION NO--AP0113481
~ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-THE DIPLUIUS HOMOZYGOUS FOR UVS -SUBI AND UVS SU82
MUTATIUNS PROVED TO BE HIGHLY SENSITIVE TO THE ACTION OF UV LIGHT
CAUSING RECOMBINATION WHEN THE FREQUENCY OF IND,UCED MITOTIC
RECOMBINATION IN RESISTANT AND SENSITIVE DIPLOIOS,HETEROZYGOUS FOR AD
SUBI AND Au SUB2 GENES "AS kECURDED. THE 1--REQUE.NCY uF SPONTAuEuUS
MUTATIONS INDEPENDENT OF ADENINE WAS RECORDED IN HAPLUIDS OF Gr--NOTYPt: AD-
SU82, AD SUB2 UVS SUB1 AND AO SUB2 UVS SU82.o THE MUTATIONS TOWARDS UV
SENSITIVITY CAUSE A SHARP IfiCREASE IN SPONTANEOUS MUTABILITY, THE RISE
BEING EXPECIALLY SIGNIFICANT DUE TO UVS:SUB2 MUTATIONS. THE SPECIFIC
FEATURES OF UVS SU32 14UTANTS OF SACCHAROMYCES ARE~ SIMILAR 'TO THOSE 01: UV
SENSITIVE MUTANTS OF E. COLI; THEREFORE,;ONE MIGHT SUGG *EST THAT, THE lJVs
MUTANTS IN YEAST ALSO HAVE A LESS EFFICIENT OR BLOCKED SYSTEM FOR REPAIR
~OF UV DAMAGE IN THE DNA. THE FACT THAT THE UV SENSITIVE MUTANTS ARE
SENSITIVE NOT ONLY TO THE LETHAL ACTION OF UV LIGHT OUT ALSO TJ THE
MUTAGENIC AND RECOMBINIJGENIC ONES SUGGESTS THAT SIMILAR MOLECULAR
,DAMAGES OF THE.DNA UNDERLIE ALL THESE EFFECTS* THE INDUCTION OF
CYTOPLASMIC MUTAfIUNS IN UV SENSITIVE MUTANTS SUOGESTS THAT THE REPAIR
,SYSTEM UNDER CONSIDERATION IS LOCALIZED NOT ONLY'LIN THE NUCLEOUS BUT
ALSO-IN THE CYTOPLASM OF THE CELL* THE SHARP INCREASE IN SPONTANEOUS
14UTA61LITY IN UV SENSITIVE MUTANTS INDICATES THAT THE:MAIN FUNCTION OF
-THE REPAIR SYSTEM IS TO MAINTAIN THESTABILITY 00 GE14EI-IC MATEAIAL UNDER
NATURAL CONDITIONS. FACILITY: INST. PHYS. TECH.p A. F. IOFFE
ACAD. SCI., LENINGRAD. USSR.
Up4rLASCIFILD
7-~
Acc. Nr Abs ice., 4,-7.4 P.Ref. Code
'4f#04'1(;04-,H,'MIraCAcLt'An.8 Serv 0000,
ST
I r 871400P Effects of mutatiovs.~.Itraviolef sensitivity in
yeast. Zakharov, 1. A Kozina T 9 1. 1".
(Inst- Phvs.-Tech., Leninzrad, tss~):
90), 31-9 (Fr;-- liv-sensitive mutants ol SaMwronrycax cere-
t4si4e were induced by tiv ligl~t and ivereisolaieil by the replica
plating. Two mutants, designated, tirs, and 4t.~, carrying non-
allelic mutations of radiosensitivity, ivere-studiO more curefully.
Uv sensitivity appeared to be of a recessive monogenic chaiacter;
heterozygous diploids were, Uv-resistant and 'segregtited 1:1
resistant mid sensitive clones in the randorn as6ospore ~sainples.
The haploid urs, mutant arid the-haploid -u-st 63utantjtave uV
sensitvities 25 and 1.8 times higher, resp., thah, the wild-type
haploid. The radiovesistance of the isogenic $trains, ew.Tying
the mutations at, the uvsl locus, increvs6 %vitli'li6typloidy. The
effect of uts mutations on the frequency ijf indtl~ed geltic nlutjL-
tions could be studied easily~due to the fact. that the resistant
mutants could easily he detected in the media with a high serine
c?ncn. The results indicate that the urst and uvsi muiations
significantly increase the sensitivity of haploids to inutagenic
REEL/ FRME
197171280
AP0044604
action of uv light. The urs, and urss mutations also result in an
increase in sensitivity to mutagenic action of uv 114ht in regard to
cytoplasmic determinants, The diploids hoino4gous lor ur;j
and uvs2 mutations proved to be highly sensitive io the action of
uv light causing -recombination whea the fre5u6cy of induced
mitotic recombination in resistant and sensitive diploids lietero-
zygous for ad, and adj geues was recorded. The freq ' ney of
ue
spontaneous mutations independent of adenine was recorded in
haploids of genotype adj, ad. w-st and ad2 ur-st. The mutations
towards uv sensitivity cause a sharp increase in spontaneous
Tutabifity, the rise being especially sigizifi~ant dtkll to uz-12 rnuta-
tions. The specific features of in-st inutants of Sacchatomyces
suggest that the urs inutants iii. yeast also have a less efficient or
blocked system for repair of uV44mage in tbe DNA. Uv-
sensitive mutants are sensitive nof only to the lethal action of uv
light but also to the mutagepic and recombinagenic actions.
This suggests that simillar mol. daniages of the WNA is rtsponsi-
ble for all these effects., The iridoction of cytoplawnic mutations
in uv-sensitive inutailts suggesisthat the D.N-A. m
pair system is
lecalized not only in the nucleus but also in the cktop)asrn of the
cell. The sharp increase in spontaneous mutability in uv-sensi-
tive mutants indicates that the main function of ther repair system
is to maintain the stability of genetic material lunder natural
conditions. RCIA4 R _A
4->
...........
--30OCT70
1/2 020 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING OATE
TITLE--SECOND SERIES DRUGS IN THE TREATMENT GF PATIENTS WITH CHRUNIC
OLSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS -U-
A LTHOR- UTK IN, V.V.yRUDOY, N.M.
COUNTRY OF INFO-USSR
r
'-SGURCE--VRACHE8NOYE DELO, 1970, NR 4, PP 136-13a
~OATE PUBLISHED------70
SUBJECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
TOPIC TAGS--TLBERCULOSIS, LUNG, ANTITUBERCULAR DRUG, CHEMOTHERAPYt DRUG
RESISTANCE
CCNTRLL MARKING-NO RESTRICTICNS
CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
STEP NU--Uft/0475/70/000/004/0136/0138
REEL/FRAME--3001/1597
CHIC ACCESSICN NO--A110127068
I. AI F I C 0
o.196:539.4
15'31721:62
UDr, 669. 7
S - Yu."A
USSR Y, G.
ESHUY10V I
Yu- P
GALATSK'Ey' and FEDOR;VA, Y_ A. actor and Degree
T. B
SAGALOVA, e on Shape y
f Te-ture and Mechanical Prop rties I
Alloy Product9l
IlDePendence c
of Extruded Aluminu'D'- VILSa (Technology Of Light
Of Deformation 14- ~Jhn. byul. ,Institute Of
luchno-te ~he Al*l-ljnion 70,
eVhnOl- le9kil"11 Splavov ~Ccjjnical Bulletin of letallurg'y*l No 12, Dec
T ific and 11-M
Scient
Alloys. No 3, pp 28-35 WOI~' RZ
joys), 19701
Light Al 12 1757 by E. KADmrR) cond-ucted on Alloy D16 produced uader
Abstract NO nt ey-
j.,,tiol) was jT~S rethod with subseque
ranslatiOn! An Invest 'he selnicontinuo"s Cast , i'llpo factor of
T ndi tions by t I an increase in the q~ iroln biaXial
dustrial c0 's. 141
'gim t1