Cyanobacteria may be especially effective accumulators: certain types excrete hydroxamate chelating agents (Murphy et al., 1976) that can act as carrier molecules or increase the trace metal pool available near the cell surface. Experiments demonstrate that Spirulina platensis accumulates trace metals more effectively than Chlorella vulgaris (Gribovskay et al., 1980), an advantage with regard to trace elements essential to humans but a liability if toxic metals are present.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3824145/
Yesterday I definitely ingested some aluminum dust from my "experiment" - early in the morning. And this morning when I woke up - I noticed my speech seemed a bit slurred - like my tongue was slow. Maybe I am just being paranoid but probably not. So I am taking lots of spirulina now. I'll get another bottle of the stuff and just keep a strong dose of the powder every day.
What does that mean? Hydroxamate chelating agents?
Murphy T.P., Lean R.S., Nalewajko C. Blue-green algae: their excretion of iron-selective chelators enables them to dominate other algae. Science. 1976;192:900–902.
Blue-green algae: their excretion of iron-selective chelators enables them to dominate other algae
Wow - so it's a Yang Qi energy!the demand forFerric iron is chelated by acetohydroxamic
iron often induces the excretion of siderochromes,
which are trihydroxamates
(or catechols) of low molecular weight
that can selectively chelate ferric iron.
acid several orders of magnitude
greater than are other cations (1). Neilands
(2) believes that many of these chelators
act as carrier molecules transporting
iron across membranes.
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