100 research outputs found

    Seasonal Toxicity Observed with Amphipods (Eohaustorius estuarius) at Paleta Creek, San Diego Bay, USA

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    To assess potential impacts on receiving systems, associated with storm water contaminants, laboratory 10‐d amphipod (Eohaustorius estuarius) survival toxicity tests were performed using intact sediment cores collected from Paleta Creek (San Diego Bay, CA, USA) on 5 occasions between 2015 and 2017. The approach included deposition‐associated sediment particles collected from sediment traps placed at each of 4 locations during the 2015 to 2016 wet seasons. The bioassays demonstrated wet season toxicity, especially closest to the creek mouth, and greater mortality associated with particles deposited in the wet season compared with dry season samples. Grain size analysis of sediment trap material indicated coarser sediment at the mouth of the creek and finer sediment in the outer depositional areas. Contaminant concentrations of metals (Cd, Cu, Hg, Ni, Pb, and Zn) and organic compounds (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [PAHs], polychlorinated biphenyls [PCBs], and pesticides) were quantified to assess possible causes of toxicity. Contaminant concentrations were determined in the top 5 cm of sediment and porewater (using passive samplers). Whereas metals, PAHs, and PCBs were rarely detected at sufficient concentrations to elicit a response, pyrethroid pesticides were highly correlated with amphipod toxicity. Summing individual pyrethroid constituents using a toxic unit approach suggested that toxicity to E. estuarius could be associated with pyrethroids. This unique test design allowed delineation of spatial and temporal differences in toxicity, suggesting that storm water discharge from Paleta Creek may be the source of seasonal toxicity. Environ Toxicol Chem 2019;39:229–239. © 2019 SETACPeer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/152638/1/etc4619_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/152638/2/etc4619.pd

    Toxic and contaminant concerns generated by Hurricane Katrina

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    Journal of Environmental Engineering-Asce, 132(6): pp. 565-566

    Book Review

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    Assessing Contaminant Migration and Risk through Passive Interstitial Water Samplers -9347

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    ABSTRACT Soils and sediments account for a large proportion of the contaminated materials being managed under cleanup programs across the country, including at sites addressed by the U.S. Department of Energy and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Costs for managing a single sediment site can approach $1 billion, and overall program costs could exceed the trillion-dollar mark. Thus, using realistic information for contaminant levels in the risk calculations used to guide cleanup decisions for these sites is crucial. The risk-based decisions for contaminated soils and sediments are typically based on bulk solid concentrations. The reason for using that metric in the equations applied to estimate exposure and risk to biota and humans is that it is relatively easy to measure. However, the bulk concentration does not address the actual bioaccessibility or bioavailability of the contaminants. This can result in a substantial overestimate of risk, leading to cleanup decisions that are much more conservative than warranted. Such decisions can translate to unnecessary excavation or dredging that causes significant environmental damage to those natural systems, thus having the opposite effect intended by health and environmental protection programs. More realistic values that represent the bioavailable fraction of contaminants in soil and sediment are clearly needed to guide more effective cleanup decisions. Passive interstitial water samplers have emerged as a practical way to address this need

    Paired Moving Charges in Mitochondrial Energy Coupling

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    Low-level amplification of oncogenes correlates inversely with age for patients with nontypical meningiomas

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    BACKGROUND: This study sought to identify genes in nontypical meningiomas with gains in copy number (CN) that correlate with earlier age of onset, an indicator of aggressiveness. METHODS: Among 94 adult patients, 91 had 105 meningiomas that were histologically confirmed. World Health Organization grades I (typical), II (atypical), and III (anaplastic) were assigned to tumors in 76, 14, and 1 patient, respectively. Brain invasion indicated that two World Health Organization grade I meningiomas were biologically atypical. DNA from 15 invasive/atypical/anaplastic meningiomas and commercial normal DNA were analyzed with multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification. The CN ratios (fold differences from normal) for 78 genes were determined. The CN ratio was defined as [tumor CN]/[normal CN] for each gene to normalize results. RESULTS: Characteristic gene losses (CN ratio \u3c 0.75) occurred in \u3e50% of the invasive/atypical/anaplastic meningiomas at 22q11, 1p34.2, and 1p22.1 loci. Gains (CN ratio ≥ 2.0) occurred in each tumor for 2 or more of 19 genes. Each of the 19 genes\u27 CN ratio was ≥ 2.0 in multiple tumors, and their collective sums (up to 49.1) correlated inversely with age (r = -0.72), minus an outlier. In patients ≤ 55 versus \u3e55 years, 5 genes (BIRC2, BRAF, MET, NRAS, and PIK3CA) individually exhibited significantly higher CN ratios (P \u3c 0.05) or a trend for them (P \u3c 0.09), with corrections for multiple comparisons, and their sums correlated inversely with age (r = -0.74). CONCLUSIONS: Low levels of amplification for selected oncogenes in invasive/atypical/anaplastic meningiomas were higher in younger adults, with the CN gains potentially underlying biological aggressiveness associated with early tumor development
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