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"Law" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Lignin phenol abundances and ratios are modulated by their interactions with iron hydroxides in sediments Moritz A; Ezzati M; Gélinas Y; 41500137
CHEMBIOCHEM
2 A systematic analysis of disability inclusion in domestic climate policies Jodoin S; Bowie-Edwards A; Lofts K; Mangat S; Adjei B; Lesnikowski A; 40046455
CONCORDIA
3 Violence, Misrecognition, and Place: Legal Envelopment and Colonial Governmentality in the Upper Skeena River, British Columbia, 1888 Matthew P Unger 38726046
SOCANTH
4 Criminal Code reform of HIV non-disclosure is urgently needed: Social science perspectives on the harms of HIV criminalization in Canada Hastings C; French M; McClelland A; Mykhalovskiy E; Adam B; Bisaillon L; Bogosavljevic K; Gagnon M; Greene S; Guta A; Hindmarch S; Kaida A; Kilty J; Massaquoi N; Namaste V; O' Byrne P; Orsini M; Patterson S; Sanders C; Symington A; Wilson C; 38087186
PSYCHOLOGY
5 New Megastigmane and Polyphenolic Components of Henna Leaves and Their Tumor-Specific Cytotoxicity on Human Oral Squamous Carcinoma Cell Lines Orabi MAA; Orabi EA; Awadh AAA; Alshahrani MM; Abdel-Wahab BA; Sakagami H; Hatano T; 38001804
CHEMBIOCHEM
6 Winter's Topography, Law, and the Colonial Legal Imaginary in British Columbia Matthew P Unger 37885918
CONCORDIA
7 Structural determination and anticholinesterase assay of C-glycosidic ellagitannins from Lawsonia inermis leaves: A study supported by DFT calculations and molecular docking Orabi MAA; Orabi EA; Abdel-Sattar ES; English AM; Hatano T; Elimam H; 36423882
CHEMBIOCHEM
8 Differences in MEG and EEG power-law scaling explained by a coupling between spatial coherence and frequency: a simulation study. Bénar CG, Grova C, Jirsa VK, Lina JM 31292816
PERFORM

 

Title:Lignin phenol abundances and ratios are modulated by their interactions with iron hydroxides in sediments
Authors:Moritz AEzzati MGélinas Y
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41500137/
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.181322
Publication:The Science of the total environment
Keywords:Iron hydroxidesLignin oxidation productsOrganic matterSedimentsSt Lawrence Estuary and Gulf
PMID:41500137 Category: Date Added:2026-01-08
Dept Affiliation: CHEMBIOCHEM
1 Geotop and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Qc, H3P-1R6, Canada.
2 Geotop and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Qc, H3P-1R6, Canada. Electronic address: yves.gelinas@concordia.ca.

Description:

Iron hydroxides play a key role in the preservation of organic matter in soils and sediments, yet the specificity and extent of their interactions with lignin-derived phenols-important source indicators for terrestrial organic matter-remain poorly understood in aquatic systems. In this study, we analyzed surface and downcore sediments along the terrestrial-to-marine continuum of the St. Lawrence Estuary and Gulf, as well as from a boreal lake (Lake Brock), to better characterize iron-lignin associations. Using CuO oxidation (lignin) and buffered dithionite (iron), we quantified lignin oxidation products before and after the reductive dissolution of reactive iron with dithionite and evaluated association patterns through multivariate analyses. Our results show that lignin is consistently associated with reactive iron, with losses upon iron dissolution ranging from ~20 % for the marine sites to over 40 % in terrestrial and freshwater sediments. Strikingly, 3,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (3,5-Bd) showed the highest sensitivity to iron reduction, suggesting a unique and possibly distinct origin or sorptive behavior. Despite substantial lignin oxidation products losses, source-indicating S/V and C/V ratios remained relatively stable, and acid-to-aldehyde ratios-proxies for lignin degradation-were not significantly affected by iron binding. Principal component analysis confirmed that compositional shifts following iron hydroxides reduction are small and limited to one terrestrially influenced sample. These findings reveal that iron hydroxides not only shield lignin-rich organic matter from degradation but also act as selective shuttles for phenolic terrestrial compounds across dynamic redox boundaries in aquatic sediments.





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