During the World Wars large quantities of phenylarsenic chemical warfare agents (CWAs) were dumped in the Baltic Sea. Many transformation products of these chemicals have been identified, but the pathways that produce the found chemicals has not been investigated. Here we studied the biotic and abiotic transformation of phenylarsenic CWAs under oxic and anoxic conditions and investigated how the sediment bacterial communities are affected by CWA exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreviously unknown phenylarsenic chemicals that originated from chemical warfare agents (CWAs) have been detected and identified in sediment samples collected from the vicinity of chemical munition dumpsites. Nontargeted screening by ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC-HRMS) was used for detection of 14 unknown CWA-related phenylarsenic chemicals. Methylated forms of Clark I/II, Adamsite, and phenyldichloroarsine were detected in all analyzed sediment samples, and their identification was based on synthesized chemicals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHere we demonstrate a novel homogeneous one-step immunoassay, utilizing a pair of recombinant antibody antigen-binding fragments (Fab), that is specific for HT-2 toxin and has a positive readout. Advantages over the conventional competitive immunoassay formats such as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) are the specificity, speed, and simplicity of the assay. Recombinant antibody HT2-10 Fab recognizing both HT-2 and T-2 toxins was developed from a phage display antibody library containing 6 × 10(7) different antibody clones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Toxicol Environ Health A
October 2013
The identification of chemicals that pose the greatest threat to human health from incidental releases is a cornerstone in public health preparedness for chemical threats. The present study developed and applied a methodology for the risk analysis and prioritization of industrial chemicals to identify the most significant chemicals that pose a threat to public health in Finland. The prioritization criteria included acute and chronic health hazards, physicochemical and environmental hazards, national production and use quantities, the physicochemical properties of the substances, and the history of substance-related incidents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci
April 2011
As a part of the project for screening unequivocal biomarkers after sulfur mustard exposure, a quantitative method for the determination of β-lyase metabolites 1,1'-sulfonylbis-[2-(methylsulfinyl)ethane] (SBMSE) and 1-methylsulfinyl-2-[2-(methylthio)ethylsulfonyl]ethane (MSMTESE) was validated. Full validation was conducted according to the FDA guidelines for method validation using pooled human urine as a sample matrix. The metabolites were extracted from urine with an optimized sample preparation procedure using ENV+ solid phase extraction cartridge with reduced volume of sample and solvents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA computational and experimental matrix isolation study of insertion of noble gas atoms into cyanoacetylene (HCCCN) is presented. Twelve novel noble gas insertion compounds are found to be kinetically stable at the MP2 level of theory, including four molecules with argon. The first group of the computationally studied molecules belongs to noble gas hydrides (HNgCCCN and HNgCCNC), and we found their stability for Ng = Ar, Kr, and Xe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn organic molecule containing krypton, HKrCCH, is reported. The preparation of HKrCCH includes 193-nm photolysis of H2C2/Kr solid mixtures at 8 K and subsequent thermal mobilization of hydrogen atoms at >/=30 K. The identification is based on infrared absorption spectroscopy and supported by ab initio calculations which show ionic and covalent contributions to the bonding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree novel Xe-containing organic compounds, HXeCCH, HXeCC (open-shell species), and HXeCCXeH, are identified using infrared absorption spectroscopy. They are prepared in a low-temperature Xe matrix using UV photolysis of acetylene and subsequent annealing at 40-45 K. The experimental observations are supported by extensive ab initio calculations.
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