Publications by authors named "Gabriela Viteri"

This work presents a year-long integral study of air quality parameters in Ciudad Real, a small city in the center of Spain, and its influence on the nearby national park, Las Tablas de Daimiel. The study covers meteorological parameters and criteria pollutants such as O, NO, NO, SO, and PM. Additionally, for each month, a 1-week campaign was performed sampling air in sorbent tubes with 8-h time resolution to analyze anthropogenic volatile organic compounds and the effects of seasons, daytime, and working-weekend days.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

New industries are proliferating in the recovery of agri-food wastes, such as those involved in the revaluation of alperujo, generated in the production of olive oil. Despite the potential environmental benefits, their activity is not exempt from new forms of emissions, aggravated by the massification of waste treatments. This work reports a six-month field campaign carried out in an alperujo desiccation plant which can serve as a proxy for these emerging industries in the Mediterranean countries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tablas de Daimiel National Park (TDNP) is one of the most important wetlands in the Iberian Peninsula. Due to its location near various cities and new industries focused on agricultural waste revalorization, we investigated concurrently the concentrations of particulate matter 2.5 (PM) mass, trace element composition, and associated microbial communities (bacteria and fungi) during a year-long study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

For Deinococcus radiodurans and other bacteria which are extremely resistant to ionizing radiation, ultraviolet radiation, and desiccation, a mechanistic link exists between resistance, manganese accumulation, and protein protection. We show that ultrafiltered, protein-free preparations of D. radiodurans cell extracts prevent protein oxidation at massive doses of ionizing radiation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mutation responsible for Hutchinson Gilford Progeria Syndrome (HGPS) causes abnormal nuclear morphology. Previous studies show that free radicals and reactive oxygen species play major roles in the etiology and/or progression of neurodegenerative diseases and aging. This study compares oxidative stress responses between progeric and normal fibroblasts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The proteasome is known to be the main enzymatic complex responsible for the intracellular degradation of altered proteins, and the age-related accumulation of modified lens proteins is associated to the formation of cataracts. The aim of this study was to determine whether the human lens proteasome becomes functionally impaired with age. The soluble and insoluble protein fractions of human lenses corresponding to various age-groups were characterized in terms of their levels of glyco-oxidative damage and found to show increasing anti-carboxymethyl-lysine immunoreactivity with age.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Time-resolved photolysis studies of riboflavin (RF) were carried out in the presence and absence of alpha-, betaH- and betaL-crystallins of bovine eye lens. The transient absorption spectra, recorded 5 micros after the laser pulse, reveal the presence of the absorption band (625-675 nm) of the RF neutral triplet state (tau = 42 micros) accompanied by the appearance of a long-lived absorption (tau = 320 micros) in the 500-600 nm region due to the formation of the semireduced RF radical. The RF excited state is quenched by the crystallin proteins through a mechanism that involves electron transfer from the proteins to the flavin, as shown by the decrease of the triplet RF band with the concomitant increase of the band of its semireduced form.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF