16 research outputs found

    Probing the Behaviors of Gold Nanorods in Metastatic Breast Cancer Cells Based on UV-vis-NIR Absorption Spectroscopy

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    In this work, behaviors of positively-charged AuNRs in a highly metastatic tumor cell line MDA-MB-231 are examined based on UV-vis-NIR absorption spectroscopy in combination with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and dark-field microscopic observation. It is found that characteristic surface plasmon resonance (SPR) peaks of AuNRs can be detected using spectroscopic method within living cells that have taken up AuNRs. The peak area of transverse SPR band is shown to be proportionally related to the amount of AuNRs in the cells determined with ICP-MS, which suggests a facile and real time quantification method for AuNRs in living cells. The shape of longitudinal SPR band in UV-vis-NIR spectrum reflects the aggregation state of AuNRs in the cells during the incubation period, which is proved by TEM and microscopic observations. Experimental results reveal that AuNRs are internalized by the cells rapidly; the accumulation, distribution and aggregation of AuNRs in the cells compartments are time and dose dependent. The established spectroscopic analysis method can not only monitor the behaviors of AuNRs in living cells but may also be helpful in choosing the optimum laser stimulation wavelength for anti-tumor thermotherapy

    Distinct responses of Gulf of Mexico phytoplankton communities to crude oil and the dispersant corexit® Ec9500A under different nutrient regimes

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    This study examines the potential effects of exposure to South Louisiana sweet crude oil (LSC), Corexit(A (R)) EC9500A, and dispersed oil on enclosed phytoplankton communities under different nutrient regimes. Three distinct microcosm experiments were conducted for 10 days to assess changes to the structure of natural communities from the Gulf of Mexico as quantified by temporal changes in the biomasses of different phytoplankton groups. Concentration of NO3, Si and PO4 were 0.83, 0.99 and 0.09 mu M for the unenriched treatments and 14.07, 13.01 and 0.94 mu M for the enriched treatments, respectively. Overall, the contaminants LSC and Corexit(A (R)) EC9500A led to a decrease in the number of sensitive species and an increase in more resistant species. Phytoplankton communities showed more sensitivity to LSC under nutrient-limited conditions. The addition of nutrients to initially nutrient-limited treatments lessened the inhibitory effect of LSC in the short term. Centric diatoms benefited most from this enrichment, but pennate diatoms demonstrated considerably greater tolerance to crude oil at low crude oil concentrations in nutrient-enriched treatments. Dinoflagellates showed relatively higher tolerance in nutrient-limited treatments and high crude oil concentrations. Corexit(A (R)) EC9500A inputs significantly increased the toxicity of crude oil. Corexit(A (R)) EC9500A alone had a highly inhibitory effect at 63 ppm on phytoplankton communities. This study highlights the fact that different nutrient regimes play a major role in determining the shifts of the phytoplankton community in response to exposure to different concentrations of crude oil and dispersant. Determination of the functional equivalence of shifted phytoplankton groups could complement our research and allow for more pertinent extrapolation to real world conditions

    Harmful Algal Blooms and the Importance of Understanding Their Ecology and Oceanography

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    17 pages, 1 figure, 1 tableOver the decades of the 1980s and 1990s, as the expansion in harmful algal blooms (HABs) was gaining recognition (e.g., Anderson 1989; Hallegraeff 1993; GEOHAB 1998; Smayda 2002), no longer was it sufficient to study bloom events in isolation; many countries were facing a bewildering array of impacts caused by species not previously known or recognized in those regions. The complexity of the HAB problem, its causative factors, and the impacts HABs have on the environment were becoming well characterized. The benefits of collaborative, cooperative, and comparative studies on HABs were recognized to advance the understanding of this phenomenon and to provide scientific guidance to managers. The aim of this chapter is to introduce several aspects of this complex phenomenon, and why an understanding of ecology and oceanography of HAB species and their associated events is so important. This chapter also briefly introduces the effects of global changes in nutrients and climate that are developed more fully in subsequent chapters [see Chap. 4, Glibert et al. (2018b), and Chap. 5, Wells and Karlson (2018)], as well as a number of concepts relating to the adaptive strategies of HABs which help to explain why they are so successful in environments subject to many anthropogenic changesPeer reviewe
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