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Featured researches published by Surya G. K. Prakash.


Mutation Research-genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 1999

Mutagenicity studies of methyl-tert-butylether using the Ames tester strain TA102.

Donna Williams-Hill; Colin Paul Spears; Surya G. K. Prakash; George A. Olah; Tatyana Shamma; Tannaz Moin; Luci Y. Kim; Colin K. Hill

Methyl-tert-butylether (MTBE) is an oxygenate widely used in the United States as a motor vehicle fuel additive to reduce emissions and as an octane booster [National Research Council, Toxicological and Performance Aspects of Oxygenated Motor Vehicle Fules, National Academy Press, Washington, DC, 1996]. But it is the potential for MTBE to enter drinking water supplies that has become an area of public concern. MTBE has been shown to induce liver and kidney tumors in rodents but the biochemical process leading to carcinogenesis is unknown. MTBE was previously shown to be non-mutagenic in the standard Ames plate incorporation test with tester strains that detect frame shift (TA98) and point mutations (TA100) and in a suspension assay using TA104, a strain that detects oxidative damage, suggesting a non-genotoxic mechanism accounts for its carcinogenic potential. These strains are deficient in excision repair due to deletion of the uvrB gene. We hypothesized that the carcinogenic activity of MTBE may be dependent upon a functional excision repair system that attempts to remove alkyl adducts and/or oxidative base damage caused by direct interaction of MTBE with DNA or by its metabolites, formaldehyde and tert-butyl alcohol (TBA), established carcinogens that are mutagenic in some Ames strains. To test our hypothesis, the genotoxicity of MTBE-induced DNA alterations was assayed using the standard Ames test with TA102, a strain similar to TA104 in the damage it detects but uvrB + and, therefore, excision repair proficient. The assay was performed (1) with and without Aroclor-induced rat S-9, (2) with and without the addition of formaldehyde dehydrogenase (FDH), and (3) with human S-9 homogenate. MTBE was weakly mutagenic when tested directly and moderately mutagenic with S-9 activation producing between 80 and 200 TA102 revertants/mg of compound. Mutagenicity was inhibited 25%-30% by FDH. TA102 revertants were also induced by TBA and by MTBE when human S-9 was substituted for rat S-9. We conclude that MTBE and its metabolites induce a mutagenic pathway involving oxidation of DNA bases and an intact repair system. These data are significant in view of the controversy surrounding public safety and the environmental release of MTBE and similar fuel additives.


Archive | 2006

Efficient and selective conversion of carbon dioxide to methanol, dimethyl ether and derived products

George A. Olah; Surya G. K. Prakash


Archive | 2006

Selective oxidative conversion of methane to methanol, dimethyl ether and derived products

George A. Olah; Surya G. K. Prakash


Meeting Abstracts | 2009

Lithium-Ion Electrolytes Containing Flame Retardant Additives for Increased Safety Characteristics

Marshall C. Smart; Kiah Smith; Ratnakumar V. Bugga; Surya G. K. Prakash; Frederick C. Krause


Archive | 2007

Low temperature electrochemical cell

Jay F. Whitacre; Rachid Yazami; Ratnakumar V. Bugga; Surya G. K. Prakash; Marshall C. Smart; William West; André Hamwi


Archive | 2014

INEXPENSIVE METAL-FREE ORGANIC REDOX FLOW BATTERY (ORBAT) FOR GRID-SCALE STORAGE

Sri R. Narayan; Surya G. K. Prakash; Bo Yang; Lena Hoober-Burkhardt; Sankarganesh Krishnamoorthy


Archive | 2002

Magnesium mediated preparation of fluorinated alkyl silanes

Surya G. K. Prakash; Jinbo Hu; George A. Olah


Archive | 2001

Membrane electrode assembly for a fuel cell

Surya G. K. Prakash; S. R. Narayanan; Anthony Atti; George A. Olah; Marshall C. Smart


Catalysis Letters | 2010

Microwave-Assisted Nafion-H Catalyzed Friedel–Crafts Type Reaction of Aromatic Aldehydes with Arenes: Synthesis of Triarylmethanes

Surya G. K. Prakash; Gabriella Fogassy; George A. Olah


Macromolecules | 1996

Anionic synthesis of narrow molecular weight distribution poly(trimethylvinylsilane) (PTMVS), Polystyrene-PTMVS block copolymers, and poly(phenyldimethylvinylsilane). Conversion of poly(phenyldimethylvinylsilane) into poly(fluorodimethylvinylsilane)

Yaodong Gan; Surya G. K. Prakash; George A. Olah; William P. Weber; Thieo E. Hogen-Esch

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Marshall C. Smart

University of Southern California

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S. R. Narayanan

University of Southern California

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Jinbo Hu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Frederick C. Krause

University of Southern California

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Ratnakumar V. Bugga

California Institute of Technology

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Subbarao Surampudi

California Institute of Technology

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Eugene Vamos

University of Southern California

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Gerald Halpert

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Kiah Smith

University of Southern California

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