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Dive into the research topics where A. de Vaufleury is active.

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Featured researches published by A. de Vaufleury.


Science of The Total Environment | 2012

Soil parameters are key factors to predict metal bioavailability to snails based on chemical extractant data.

Benjamin Pauget; Frédéric Gimbert; Renaud Scheifler; Michaël Coeurdassier; A. de Vaufleury

Although soil characteristics modulate metal mobility and bioavailability to organisms, they are often ignored in the risk assessment of metal transfer. This paper aims to determine the ability of chemical methods to assess and predict cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb) and zinc (Zn) environmental bioavailability to the land snail Cantareus aspersus. Snails were exposed in the laboratory for 28 days to 17 soils from around a former smelter. The soils were selected for their range of pH, organic matter, clay content, and Cd, Pb and Zn concentrations. The influence of soil properties on environmental availability (estimated using HF-HClO(4), EDTA, CaCl(2), NH(4)NO(3), NaNO(3), free ion activity and total dissolved metal concentration in soil solution) and on environmental bioavailability (modelled using accumulation kinetics) was identified. Among the seven chemical methods, only the EDTA and the total soil concentration can be used to assess Cd and Pb environmental bioavailability to snails (r²(adj)=0.67 and 0.77, respectively). For Zn, none of the chemical methods were suitable. Taking into account the influence of the soil characteristics (pH and CEC) allows a better prediction of Cd and Pb environmental bioavailability (r²(adj)=0.82 and 0.83, respectively). Even though alone none of the chemical methods tested could assess Zn environmental bioavailability to snails, the addition of pH, iron and aluminium oxides allowed the variation of assimilation fluxes to be predicted. A conceptual and practical method to use soil characteristics for risk assessment is proposed based on these results. We conclude that as yet there is no universal chemical method to predict metal environmental bioavailability to snails, and that the soil factors having the greatest impact depend on the metal considered.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2011

Use of chemical methods to assess Cd and Pb bioavailability to the snail Cantareus aspersus: a first attempt taking into account soil characteristics.

Benjamin Pauget; Frédéric Gimbert; Michaël Coeurdassier; Renaud Scheifler; A. de Vaufleury

Bioavailability is a key parameter in conditioning contaminant transfer to biota. However, in risk assessment of terrestrial contamination, insufficient attention is being paid to the influence of soil type on trace metal bioavailability. This paper addresses the influence of soil properties on the chemical availability of cadmium (Cd) and lead (Pb) (CaCl(2) extraction and ionic activity) and bioavailability (accumulation kinetics) to the land snail Cantareus aspersus. Snails were exposed to nine contaminated soils differing by a single characteristic (pH or organic matter content or clay content) for 28 days. Toxicokinetic models were applied to determine metal uptake and excretion rates in snails and multivariate regression was used to relate uptake parameters to soil properties. The results showed that alkalinisation of soil and an increase of the organic matter content decreased Pb and Cd bioavailability to snails whereas kaolin clay had no significant influence. The CaCl(2)-extractable concentrations tended to overestimate the effects of pH when used to explain metal uptake rate. We conclude that factors other than those controlling the extractable fraction affect metal bioavailability to snails, confirming the requirement of biota measurements in risk assessment procedures.


Environmental Pollution | 2010

Arsenic transfer and impacts on snails exposed to stabilized and untreated As-contaminated soils.

Michaël Coeurdassier; Renaud Scheifler; Michel Mench; Nadia Crini; J. Vangronsveld; A. de Vaufleury

An As-contaminated soil (Unt) was amended with either iron grit (Z), a coal fly ash (beringite, B) or B + Z (BZ) and placed in lysimeters in 1997. An uncontaminated soil (R) was also studied. In summer and autumn 2003, lettuces were cultivated in the lysimeters and snails were caged for one month. Lettuce As concentrations were higher during the summer, while no differences occurred in snails between seasons. Snail As concentrations (microg g(-1) DW) ranged from 2.5 to 7.0 in B, Z and BZ, and peaked at 17.5 in Unt. In summer, snail survival was affected in Unt and Z compared to R and B while no mortality was noticed in autumn. Snail growth decreased only in B, BZ and Unt in autumn. Snail As concentrations suggest a risk for their predators even on the remediated soils.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2009

Coping with cadmium exposure in various ways: the two Helicid snails Helix pomatia and Cantareus aspersus share the metal transcription factor‐2, but differ in promoter organization and transcription of their Cd‐metallothionein genes

Martina Höckner; K. Stefanon; D. Schuler; R. Fantur; A. de Vaufleury; Reinhard Dallinger

Gastropods are able to withstand fluctuating availabilities of nonessential trace elements such as cadmium by induction of Cd-specific metallothionein isoform (Cd-MT) expression. As in other species, the induction mechanism involves the binding of metal-regulatory transcription factors (MTF-1 or MTF-2) to metal responsive elements (MREs) in the MT promoter regions. Cd-dependent transcription of Cd-MT genes was assessed by quantitative real time PCR in two helicid gastropods, Helix pomatia and Cantareus aspersus, over a period of eight days. The promoter regions of the Cd-MT genes of the two species were sequenced and compared regarding the position of MREs and other relevant potential transcription factor binding sites (TFBs). Cd-MT gene transcription is induced after Cd exposure in Helix pomatia and Cantareus aspersus, showing a transient peak in Helix pomatia, contrasting with a persistent induction rate in Cantareus aspersus. Since the existence of MTF-2 was verified in both species, differing transcription patterns of Cd-MT genes must be due to functional differences in their metal-responsive promoter regions. Both promoters contain a proximal cluster of three MREs overlapping with TFBs for the transcriptional regulator Sp1. In contrast to Cantareus aspersus, however, the Cd-MT gene of Helix pomatia hosts an additional distal MRE overlapping with a Sp1 binding site and a CACCC box. Inhibitory effects of MRE overlapping Sp1 binding sites were observed in other MT genes. We therefore suggest that transient Cd-MT transcription upon Cd(2+) exposure in Helix pomatia may be the result of an inhibitory action of the distal MRE cluster.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2011

Differential liver proteome mapping of control and cadmium-fed rats.

F. Hispard; A. de Vaufleury; C. Schaeffer; Renaud Scheifler; P.-M. Badot; L. Richert; H. Martin

A comparative study of proteome maps from control and Cd-exposed rat liver was performed using a new technology of two-dimensional liquid chromatography separation method (PF-2D system, Beckman Coulter). Rats were fed for one month 0 or 100 μg Cd g(-1). The between-replicate and between-sample variations showed good repeatability and suitable reproducibility for the two dimensions of separation of proteins. In this complex mixture, PF-2D led to the separation of two major peaks which differed between control and Cd-exposed rat livers, one being identified by mass spectrometry as Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD), a well-known biomarker of Cd exposure, the other as phosphatidylethanolamine binding protein (PEBP). SOD content was decreased in Cd-exposed rat liver, compared to the control group which was corroborated by a significant decrease of SOD activity. PEBP content also tended to be decreased after Cd exposure. Present results demonstrate interest but also limitations of proteomic approach using PF-2D system to analyze effects of chemicals on organisms.


Science of The Total Environment | 2006

Lead concentrations in feathers and blood of common blackbirds (Turdus merula) and in earthworms inhabiting unpolluted and moderately polluted urban areas

Renaud Scheifler; Michaël Cœurdassier; C. Morilhat; N. Bernard; Bruno Faivre; P. Flicoteaux; Patrick Giraudoux; M. Noël; P. Piotte; Dominique Rieffel; A. de Vaufleury; P.-M. Badot


Science of The Total Environment | 2009

Contamination of woody habitat soils around a former lead smelter in the North of France

Francis Douay; Christelle Pruvot; Christophe Waterlot; Clémentine Fritsch; Hervé Fourrier; A. Loriette; Géraldine Bidar; Cécile Grand; A. de Vaufleury; Renaud Scheifler


Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2003

Bioconcentration of Cadmium and Toxic Effects on Life-History Traits of Pond Snails (Lymnaea palustris and Lymnaea stagnalis) in Laboratory Bioassays

Michaël Coeurdassier; A. de Vaufleury; P.-M. Badot


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2000

The snail as a target organism for the evaluation of industrial waste dump contamination and the efficiency of its remediation.

François Pihan; A. de Vaufleury


Applied Soil Ecology | 2007

Earthworms influence metal transfer from soil to snails

Michaël Coeurdassier; Renaud Scheifler; A. de Vaufleury; Nadia Crini; C. Saccomani; L. Salomon du Mont; P.-M. Badot

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Renaud Scheifler

University of Franche-Comté

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P.-M. Badot

University of Franche-Comté

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D. Schuler

University of Innsbruck

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F. Hispard

University of Franche-Comté

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H. Martin

University of Franche-Comté

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L. Richert

University of Franche-Comté

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K. Stefanon

University of Innsbruck

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