Search results for "Reactive"

showing 10 items of 1469 documents

Chironomus riparius exposure to fullerene-contaminated sediment results in oxidative stress and may impact life cycle parameters

2015

A key component of understanding the potential environmental risks of fullerenes (C60) is their potential effects on benthic invertebrates. Using the sediment dwelling invertebrate Chironomus riparius we explored the effects of acute (12 h and 24 h) and chronic (10 d, 15 d, and 28 d) exposures of sediment associated fullerenes. The aims of this study were to assess the impact of exposure to C60 in the sediment top layer ((0.025, 0.18 and 0.48) C60 mg/cm2) on larval growth, oxidative stress and emergence rates and to quantify larval body burdens in similarly exposed organisms. Oxidative stress localization was observed in the tissues next to the microvilli and exoskeleton through a method fo…

Environmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesisved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesta1172010501 environmental sciencesBiologymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencescarbon nanoparticleChironomidaeArticleecotoxicologyLipid dropletmedicineAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistryEcotoxicologyWaste Management and Disposalta2180105 earth and related environmental sciencesChironomus ripariuschemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesved/biologyEcologySedimentAquatic animalInvertebratesPollutionOxidative StresschemistryBenthic zoneLarvaEnvironmental chemistryFullerenesOxidative stressJournal of Hazardous Materials
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Biological groundwater denitrification systems: Lab-scale trials aimed at nitrous oxide production and emission assessment

2018

Bio-trenches are a sustainable option for treating nitrate contamination in groundwater. However, a possible side effect of this technology is the production of nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas that can be found both dissolved in the liquid effluent as well as emitted as off gas. The aim of this study was to analyze NO3 − removal and N2O production in lab-scale column trials. The column contained olive nut as organic carbon media. The experimental study was divided into three phases (I, II and III) each characterized by different inlet NO3 − concentrations (30, 50, 75 mg NO3-N L−1 respectively). Sampling ports deployed along the length of the column allowed to observe the denitrification pro…

Environmental EngineeringDenitrificationSettore AGR/13 - Chimica Agrariachemistry.chemical_element010501 environmental sciencesNitrogen cycle01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPermeable reactive barriersBiological groundwater denitrificationEnvironmental ChemistryNitriteWaste Management and DisposalEffluentNitrogen cycle0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNitrous oxideSettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleBiotrench04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesNitrous oxidePollutionchemistryGreenhouse gasEnvironmental chemistry040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceCarbonGroundwater
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Short-term exposure of the European sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax to copper-based antifouling treated nets: copper bioavailability and biomarkers res…

2012

Abstract We studied if the levels of copper released from antifouling treated nets used in finfish mariculture could affect the immune defense mechanism and/or induce oxidative stress in Dicentrarchus labrax , after short term exposure in laboratory experiments. Dissolved copper concentration released from the treated nets, copper bioavailability and a set of biomarkers responses were measured. Biomarkers included hemoglobin concentration, activities of lysozyme, total complement, respiratory burst, glutathione S-transferase and acetycholinesterase and concentration of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances. Results indicated elevated copper concentration in seawater (184 μg L −1 ) but low…

Environmental EngineeringThiobarbituric acidBiofoulingHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesischemistry.chemical_elementAquacultureBiologymedicine.disease_causeThiobarbituric Acid Reactive SubstancesBiofoulingchemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsSeawaterSea bassGlutathione TransferaseMusclesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryGlutathionebiology.organism_classificationPollutionCopperBioavailabilityOxidative StresschemistryLiverEnvironmental chemistryAcetylcholinesteraseDicentrarchusBassOxidative stressBiomarkersCopperWater Pollutants ChemicalDisinfectantsChemosphere
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Role of Hydroxyl, Superoxide, and Nitrate Radicals on the Fate of Bromide Ions in Photocatalytic TiO2 Suspensions

2020

The influence of bromide ions on systems containing highly reactive radical species is of great interest for environmental remediation, atmospheric chemistry, and the synthesis of high-added-value ...

Environmental remediationbrominenitrate radicals2chemistry.chemical_element010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciencesCatalysisCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundNitrateTiOreactive oxygen specieschemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesBromine010405 organic chemistrySuperoxideGeneral Chemistrybromine; nitrate radicals; photocatalysis; reactive oxygen species; TiO; 20104 chemical scienceschemistryAtmospheric chemistryPhotocatalysisphotocatalysisACS Catalysis
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Sequestration of biological reactive intermediates by trapping as covalent enzyme-intermediate complex

2001

One important class of biological reactive intermediates arising in the course of human xenobiotic metabolism are arene and alkene oxides. The major safeguard against the potential genotoxic effects of these compounds is the microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH). This enzyme has a broad substrate specificity but--on the first sight--seems to be inadequately suited for this protection task due to its low turnover number with most of its substrates. The recent progress in the understanding of the mechanism of enzymatic epoxide hydrolysis has shed new light on this apparent dilemma: Epoxide hydrolases convert their substrates via the intermediate formation of a covalent enzyme-substrate complex, …

Epoxide hydrolase 2Reactive intermediateSubstrate (chemistry)10050 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology610 Medicine & health10079 Institute of Veterinary Pharmacology and ToxicologyTurnover numberchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistry1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMicrosomal epoxide hydrolaseStyrene oxideEpoxide HydrolasesBiophysics570 Life sciences; biologyEpoxide hydrolase
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Two Half-Truths Make a Whole? On Bias in Self-Reports and Tracking Data

2019

The pervasive use of mobile information technologies brings new patterns of media usage, but also challenges to the measurement of media exposure. Researchers wishing to, for example, understand the nature of selective exposure on algorithmically driven platforms need to precisely attribute individuals’ exposure to specific content. Prior research has used tracking data to show that survey-based self-reports of media exposure are critically unreliable. So far, however, little effort has been invested into assessing the specific biases of tracking methods themselves. Using data from a multimethod study, we show that tracking data from mobile devices is linked to systematic distortions in sel…

Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der SozialwissenschaftenSozialwissenschaften SoziologieNutzungComputer sciencebusiness.industrydigital traces; media exposure; nonreactive measurement; quantitative methods; self-reports; survey; tracking datautilizationGeneral Social SciencesInformation technologyDigitale MedienLibrary and Information SciencesData scienceComputer Science Applicationsdata captureMethods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis Statistical Methods Computer Methodsddc:300MessungTracking datameasurementDatengewinnungbusinessSocial sciences sociology anthropologyLawdigital mediaSocial Science Computer Review
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Phenoloxidase-dependent cytotoxic mechanism in ascidian (Styela plicata) hemocytes active against erythrocytes and K562 tumor cells.

1997

The cytotoxic activity against rabbit erythrocytes (RE) and human K562 tumor cells by Styela plicata hemocytes was significantly related to the phenoloxidase (PO) which converts phenols to quinone and initiates the melanogenic pathway. The effector hemocyte population, separated in a Percoll density gradient band, enriched in a granulocyte type named "morula cells", was examined with RE in a hemocyte cytotoxic assay and plaque forming cell assay. Inhibition experiments with the copper chelating agents 1-phenyl-2-thiourea and tropolone, the substrate analogue sodium benzoate and sodium ascorbate support the notion that hemocyte cytotoxic activity is a PO-dependent mechanism. Treatments of he…

ErythrocytesHemocytesMonophenol MonooxygenaseCytotoxicitySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaHemocyteHydrogen PeroxideTunicateCell FractionationNitric OxidePhenylthioureaTropoloneErythrocytePhenoloxidaseCentrifugation Density GradientTumor Cells CulturedAnimalsHumansQuinoneRabbitsUrochordataK562Settore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E CitologiaReactive Oxygen SpeciesEuropean journal of cell biology
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Dietary indicaxanthin from cactus pear (Opuntia ficus-indica L. Mill) fruit prevents eryptosis induced by oxysterols in a hypercholesterolaemia-relev…

2015

Toxic oxysterols in a hypercholesterolaemia-relevant proportion cause suicidal death of human erythrocytes or eryptosis. This process proceeds through early production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), release of prostaglandin (PGE2) and opening of PGE2-dependent Ca channels, membrane phosphatidylserine (PS) externalisation, and cell shrinkage. The present study was the first to reveal that a bioavailable phytochemical, indicaxanthin (Ind) from cactus pear fruit, in a concentration range (1·0–5·0 μM) consistent with its plasma level after a fruit meal, prevents PS externalisation and cell shrinkage in a dose-dependent manner when incubated with isolated healthy human erythrocytes exposed to…

ErythrocytesOxysterolEndotheliumPyridinesHypercholesterolemiaBetalainsEryptosisMedicine (miscellaneous)PhosphatidylserinesBiologyPharmacologyDinoprostonechemistry.chemical_compoundDietary indicaxanthin:Settore BIO/10 - BiochimicamedicineCell AdhesionHuman Umbilical Vein Endothelial CellsHumansHypercholesterolaemiachemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesNutrition and DieteticsCell DeathHuman erythrocytesEndothelial CellsOpuntiaGlutathionePhosphatidylserineOxysterolsGlutathioneBetaxanthinsDietEndothelial stem cellSterolsmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryBiochemistryFruit [Dietary indicaxanthin]lipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)CalciumReactive Oxygen SpeciesIndicaxanthinEx vivoThe British journal of nutrition
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Oxysterol mixture in hypercholesterolemia-relevant proportion causes oxidative stress-dependent eryptosis.

2014

Background/Aims: Oxysterol activity on the erythrocyte (RBC) programmed cell death (eryptosis) had not been studied yet. Effects of an oxysterol mixture in hyper-cholesterolemic-relevant proportion, and of individual compounds, were investigated on RBCs from healthy humans. Methods: Membrane phosphatidylserine (PS) externalization, calcium entry, ROS production, amino-phospholipid translocase (APLT) activity were evaluated by cytofluorimetric assays, cell volume from forward scatter. Prostaglandin PGE2 was measured by ELISA; GSH-adducts and lipoperoxides by spectrophotometry. Involvement of protein kinase C and caspase was investigated by inhibitors staurosporin, calphostin C, and Z-DEVD-FM…

ErythrocytesPhysiologyEryptosisApoptosisPharmacologylcsh:PhysiologyAntioxidantschemistry.chemical_compoundPhospholipid scramblingSettore BIO/10 - Biochimicapolycyclic compoundslcsh:QD415-436PhosphatidylserineKetocholesterolsProtein Kinase Clcsh:QP1-981OxysterolsPhosphatidylserineErythrocyteCalphostin CBiochemistryCaspaseslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)AntioxidantReactive Oxygen SpecieHumanProgrammed cell deathOxysterolHypercholesterolemiachemistry.chemical_elementPhosphatidylserinesCalciumCalcium ChannelDinoprostonelcsh:BiochemistryOxysterolLipid oxidationHumansCalphostinHypercholesterolemia Human red blood cell Oxysterols Eryptosis Oxidative stressKetocholesterolApoptosiOxidative StreCaspaseOxidative StresschemistryCalciumCalcium ChannelsReactive Oxygen SpeciesEryptosiHuman red blood cellCellular physiology and biochemistry : international journal of experimental cellular physiology, biochemistry, and pharmacology
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Digestive vacuoles of Plasmodium falciparum are selectively phagocytosed by and impair killing function of polymorphonuclear leukocytes.

2011

AbstractSequestration of parasitized erythrocytes and dysregulation of the coagulation and complement system are hallmarks of severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria. A link between these events emerged through the discovery that the parasite digestive vacuole (DV), which is released together with infective merozoites into the bloodstream, dually activates the intrinsic clotting and alternative complement pathway. Complement attack occurs exclusively on the membrane of the DVs, and the question followed whether DVs might be marked for uptake by polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMNs). We report that DVs are indeed rapidly phagocytosed by PMNs after schizont rupture in active human serum. Uptake …

ErythrocytesTime FactorsNeutrophilsPhagocytosisImmunologyPlasmodium falciparumVacuoleBiologyBiochemistryModels BiologicalMicrobiologySubstrate SpecificityPhagocytosisAnimalsHumansMalaria FalciparumOpsoninchemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesCell DeathMerozoitesPlasmodium falciparumCell BiologyHematologybiology.organism_classificationComplement systemRespiratory burstBlood Cell CountchemistryImmunologyVacuolesAlternative complement pathwayReactive Oxygen SpeciesBlood
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