Ruiz Fernandez (inputfamily89)

New inhibitors of peptidoglycan biosynthesis are highly sought after as antimicrobial drugs, and organoarsenicals represent a new area for the development of novel compounds for combating the threat of antibiotic resistance.Soil contamination by heavy metals (HMs) is an environmental problem, and nanoremediation by using zero-valent iron nanoparticles (nZVI) has attracted increasing interest. We used ecotoxicological test and global transcriptome analysis with DNA microarrays to assess the suitability of C. elegans as a useful bioindicator to evaluate such strategy of nanoremediation in a highly polluted soil with Pb, Cd and Zn. The HMs produced devastating effect on C. EIDD-2801 clinical trial elegans. nZVI treatment reversed this deleterious effect up to day 30 after application, but the reduction in the relative toxicity of HMs was lower at day 120. We stablished gene expression profile in C. elegans exposed to the polluted soil, treated and untreated with nZVI. The percentage of differentially expressed genes after treatment decreases with exposure time. After application of nZVI we found decreased toxicity, but increased biosynthesis of defensive enzymes responsive to oxidative stress. At day 14, when a decrease in toxicity has occurred, genes related to specific heavy metal detoxification mechanisms or to response to metal stress, were down regulated gst-genes, encoding for glutathione-S-transferase, htm-1 (heavy metal tolerance factor), and pgp-5 and pgp-7, related to stress response to metals. At day 120, we found increased HMs toxicity compared to day 14, whereas the transcriptional oxidative and metal-induced responses were attenuated. These findings indicate that the profiled gene expression in C. elegans may be considered as an indicator of stress response that allows a reliable evaluation of the nanoremediation strategy.With the development of modern technologies, the exploitation and application of rare earth metals (REMs) have increased parallelly. Consequently, more REMs are entering into the environment and therefore there is a pressing need to assess their potential environmental hazards. Here, a standard toxicity test with wheat (Triticum aestivum) was conducted to investigate the single and mixture toxicity of La and Ce in solutions with different levels of calcium and nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) and results were deciphered by different modeling approaches. Both La and Ce caused adverse effect to wheat, but the presence of Ca and NTA alleviated their toxicity. The obtained EC50 for [La] or [Ce] changed by more than 28-fold and by 4-fold, respectively, with the increase of Ca or NTA. The biotic ligand model (BLM) explained approximately 93% variation of single La or Ce toxicity. The binding constants obtained were 4.14, 6.67, and 6.59 for logKCaBL, logKLaBL, and logKCeBL respectively. The electrostatic toxicity model (ETM) was proved as effective as the BLM, with R2 = 0.93 for La and R2 = 0.92 for Ce. For La-Ce mixtures, parameters from single toxicity approaches were applied successfully to predict the mixture toxicity with concentration addition (CA) model based on the BLM or ETM theory (R2 = 0.92 and RMSE = 8.56; R2 = 0.90 and RMSE = 9.6, respectively). Thus, the results obtained in this study prove that both ETM and BLM theories are appropriate to predict single and mixture REMs toxicity, providing coherent and promising tools for the risk assessment of REM pollution.Estimating bioaccessible content of mercury in soils is essential in evaluating risks that contaminated soils pose. In this study, soil samples spiked with HgCl2 through adsorption were used to test the effects of liming, soil organic matter, soil depth, and Hg concentration on the following bioaccessibility tests dilute nitric acid at room temperature, dilute nitric acid at body temperature, Simplified Bioaccessibility Extraction Test (SBET) method, and gastric phase of the In vitro Gastrointestinal (IVG) protocol. Soil and sediment sam