12 results match your criteria: "Center for Marine Research Rovinj[Affiliation]"

Aquatic organisms modulate the bioreactivity of engineered nanoparticles: focus on biomolecular corona.

Front Toxicol

August 2022

Department F.-A. Forel for Environmental and Aquatic Sciences, Environmental Biogeochemistry and Ecotoxicology, Faculty of Sciences, Earth and Environment Sciences, University of Geneva, Uni Carl Vogt, Geneva, Switzerland.

The increased use of nanoparticle (NP)-enabled materials in everyday-life products have raised concerns about their environmental implications and safety. This motivated the extensive research in nanoecotoxicology showing the possibility that NPs could cause harm to the aquatic organisms if present at high concentrations. By contrast, studies dealing with influence that organisms could exert on the fate and thus effects of NPs are still very rare.

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Effects of hypoxia on the osmorespiratory functions of the posterior gills of the shore crab Carcinus maenas acclimated to 12ppt seawater (DSW) were studied. Short-circuit current (Isc) across the hemilamella (one epithelium layer supported by cuticle) was substantially reduced under exposure to 1.6, 2.

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Organic matrices in metazoan calcium carbonate skeletons: Composition, functions, evolution.

J Struct Biol

November 2016

Laboratoire Biogéosciences UMR 6282, CNRS - Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté (UBFC) - 6 Boulevard Gabriel, 21000 DIJON, France; Ruder Boskovic Institute, Center for Marine Research Rovinj, Giordano Paliaga 5, 52210 ROVINJ, Croatia. Electronic address:

Calcium carbonate skeletal tissues in metazoans comprise a small quantity of occluded organic macromolecules, mostly proteins and polysaccharides that constitute the skeletal matrix. Because its functions in modulating the biomineralization process are well known, the skeletal matrix has been extensively studied, successively via classical biochemical approaches, via molecular biology and, in recent years, via transcriptomics and proteomics. The optimistic view that the deposition of calcium carbonate minerals requires a limited number of macromolecules has been challenged, in the last decade, by high-throughput approaches.

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The Bay of Bakar is one of the most heavily polluted bays at the Eastern Adriatic. Three major industrial companies potentially endanger the bay. The concentration of major, minor and trace elements in surface sediments from thirteen stations was discussed in relation to the sediment type and foraminiferal assemblages.

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Western mosquitofish as a bioindicator of exposure to organochlorine compounds.

Ecotoxicol Environ Saf

October 2008

Laboratory for Marine Molecular Toxicology, Center for Marine Research-Rovinj, Ruder Bosković Institute, G. Paliage 5, HR-52210 Rovinj, Croatia.

The evaluation of the alochthonous and cosmopolitan mosquitofish species Gambusia affinis suitability as a bioindicator species and the induction of its liver cytochrome P450-dependent mixed function oxygenase (MFO), measured as the 7-ethoxyresorfin-O-deethylase (EROD) activity, as well as changes in DNA integrity, measured by the Fast Micromethod, for the monitoring of organochlorine fresh water pesticide contamination, were the main aims of the study. The test mosquitofish were exposed under laboratory conditions to several doses (0.1, 10 and 100 microg l(-1)) of lindane in experimental basins for up to 7 days, and a subsequent field study was carried out at five natural ponds in the south-western Istrian peninsula, Croatia, where up to 10 fish were collected from each pond.

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Adriatic coast as a microcosm for global genotoxic marine contamination--a long-term field study.

Mar Pollut Bull

November 2005

Laboratory for Marine Molecular Toxicology, Center for Marine Research--Rovinj, Ruder Bosković Institute, G. Paliage 5, HR-52210 Rovinj, Croatia.

Global changes in the marine environment and the continuing disposal of genotoxic xenobiotics are increasing the importance of environmental pollution monitoring and of biomonitoring programs. Current approaches focus on investigations at regional and local levels in an attempt to precisely define the nature and extent of any potential environmental crisis. We have initiated, for the first time, a long-term biomonitoring program focusing on the Croatian coast of the Adriatic Sea to contribute to a more detailed understanding of marine genotoxic effects using the mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis Lam.

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Mineralogy of shells from two freshwater snails Belgrandiella fontinalis and B kuesteri.

Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol

January 2003

Ruder Bosković Institute, Center for Marine Research Rovinj, Giordano Paliaga 5, 52210 Rovinj, Croatia.

X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) was used to study the mineral composition of shells of snails Belgrandiella fontinalis and Belgrandiella kuesteri collected from three freshwater springs in northeastern Slovenia. The fractions of aragonite, calcite, dolomite and quartz in particular shells were determined. The analysed shells consisted of two or more distinct inorganic layers.

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DNA damage is an inescapable aspect of life in the biosphere. The presented investigations were an attempt to examine the response of a DNA damage as a biomarker of environmental quality in the mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis sampled at differently contaminated areas of Istrian coast, Northern Adriatic. The investigations were performed in order to get information about the genotoxic risk for marine organisms exposed to mixed environmental pollution, as well as the information about the presence of unknown mixture of genotoxic contaminants in the marine environment.

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Induction of apoptosis by tri-n-butyltin (TBT) in gill tissue of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis was investigated. The terminal dUTP nick-end labeling technique (TUNEL) was used to detect cells displaying DNA fragmentation within gill structures. Genomic DNA fragmentation was detected as characteristically ladder-like pattern of DNA fragments induced by single injection of different doses of TBT (1-5 microg/g) below the mantle, directly into the pallial fluid, after 24 h of incubation.

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Haemolymph inorganic osmolyte changes and Na,K-ATPase activities in trichobranchiate and epipodite tissues were examined in the spiny lobster Palinurus elephas gradually acclimated from seawater (SW; 38 ppt, salinity; 1291 mOsmol/l) down to dilute seawater (DSW; 20 ppt, salinity; 679 mOsmol/l). During acclimation to DSW haemolymph was only transiently hypoosmotic, becoming isosmotic to the medium over a 24-h period of acclimation. Na,K-ATPase specific activities in homogenates of the trichobranchiate gills from SW- and DSW-acclimated spiny lobsters were in the range of 2-3 µmol Pi/h/mg protein and were not significantly different.

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Distribution of Viruses and Dissolved DNA along a Coastal Trophic Gradient in the Northern Adriatic Sea.

Appl Environ Microbiol

December 1993

Institute of Zoology, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria, and Ruder Boskovic Institute, Center for Marine Research-Rovinj, 52210 Rovinj, Croatia.

The distribution of viral and other microbial abundances as well as the concentrations of dissolved DNA (D-DNA) along a trophic gradient in the northern Adriatic Sea were determined. Virus abundances, covering a range of 1.2 x 10 to 8.

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The effects of inhibitors on the efflux of ammonia (from the basolateral to the apical side, Jb----a) were studied in preparation of isolated Carcinus gills immersed in dilute seawater (DSW) that was identical to the perfusion solution. Adding 10(-4) M amiloride to the solution bathing the gill preparations reduces the efflux of ammonia by 29% relative to the control value. Under experimental conditions, it appears that only about 1% of the amiloride-sensitive influx of Na+ (Ja----b) can be exchanged with NH4+ on an equimolar basis.

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