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Dive into the research topics where Denise A. Gordon is active.

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Featured researches published by Denise A. Gordon.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2005

Responses of molecular indicators of exposure in mesocosms: common carp (cyprinus carpio) exposed to the herbicides alachlor and atrazine

Lina W. Chang; Gregory P. Toth; Denise A. Gordon; David W. Graham; John R. Meier; Charles W. Knapp; F. Jerry deNoyelles; Scott Campbell; David L. Lattier

Common carp (Cyprinus carpio) were treated in aquatic mesocosms with a single pulse of the herbicides atrazine or alachlor to study the bioavailability and biological activity of these herbicides using molecular indicators: Liver vitellogenin gene expression in male fish for estrogenic activity, liver cytochrome P4501A1 gene expression, and DNA damage in blood cells using the single-cell gel electrophoresis method. Both alachlor and atrazine showed dose-related increases in DNA strand breaks at environmentally relevant concentrations (<100 ppb). Gene expression indicators showed that neither herbicide had estrogenic activity in the carp, whereas atrazine at concentrations as low as 7 ppb induced cytochrome P4501A1. These results support the study of molecular indicators for exposure in surrogate ecosystems to gauge relevant environmental changes following herbicide treatments.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

Assessing impacts of land-applied manure from concentrated animal feeding operations on fish populations and communities.

Jessica K. Leet; Linda S. Lee; Heather E. Gall; Reuben R. Goforth; Stephen A. Sassman; Denise A. Gordon; James M. Lazorchak; Mark E. Smith; Chad T. Jafvert; Maria S. Sepúlveda

Concentrated animal feeding operation (CAFO) manure is a cost-effective fertilizer. In the Midwest, networks of subsurface tile-drains expedite transport of animal hormones and nutrients from land-applied CAFO manure to adjacent waterways. The objective of this study was to evaluate impacts of land-applied CAFO manure on fish populations and communities. Water chemistry including hormone, pesticide, and nutrient concentrations was characterized from study sites along with fish assemblage structure, growth, and endocrine disruption assessed in selected fish species. Although most CAFO water samples had hormone concentrations <1 ng/L, equivalent concentrations for 17β-E2 and 17α-TB peaked at >30 ng/L each during the period of spawning, hatching, and development for resident fishes. CAFO sites had lower fish species richness, and fishes exhibited faster somatic growth and lower reproductive condition compared to individuals from the reference site. Fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) exposed to CAFO ditchwater during early developmental stages exhibited significantly skewed sex ratios toward males. Maximum observed hormone concentrations were well above the lowest observable effect concentrations for these hormones; however, complexities at the field scale make it difficult to directly relate hormone concentration and impacts on fish. Complicating factors include the consistent presence of pesticides and nutrients, and the difference in temperature and stream architecture of the CAFO-impacted ditches compared to the reference site (e.g., channelization, bottom substrate, shallow pools, and riparian cover).


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2013

An integrated assessment of sediment remediation in a midwestern U.S. stream using sediment chemistry, water quality, bioassessment, and fish biomarkers

John R. Meier; Steve Snyder; Victoria Sigler; Dave Altfater; Mike Gray; Bill Batin; Paul C. Baumann; Denise A. Gordon; Paul Wernsing; Jim Lazorchak

A comprehensive biological, sediment, and water quality study of the lower Little Scioto River near Marion, Ohio, USA, was undertaken to evaluate the changes or improvements in biotic measurements following the removal of creosote-contaminated sediment. The study area covered 7.5 river miles (RMs), including a remediated section between RMs 6.0 and 6.8. Fish and macroinvertebrate assemblages, fish biomarkers (i.e., polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon [PAH] metabolite levels in white sucker [Castostomus commersoni] and common carp [Cyprinus carpio] bile and DNA damage), sediment chemistry, and water quality were assessed at five locations relative to the primary source of historical PAH contamination-upstream (RM 9.2), adjacent (RM 6.5), and downstream (RMs 5.7, 4.4, and 2.7). Overall, the biomarker results were consistent with the sediment PAH results, showing a pattern of low levels of PAH bile metabolites and DNA damage at the upstream (reference or background location), as well as the remediated section, high levels at the two immediate downstream sites, and somewhat lower levels at the furthest downstream site. Results show that remediation was effective in reducing sediment contaminant concentrations and exposure of fish to PAHs and in improving fish assemblages (60% increase in index of biotic integrity scores) in remediated river sections. Additional remedial investigation and potentially further remediation is needed to improve the downstream benthic fish community, which is still heavily exposed to PAH contaminants.


Journal of Mammalogy | 1998

Determination of Genetic Diversity and Paternity in the Gray-Tailed Vole (Microtus canicaudus) by RAPD-PCR

Denise A. Gordon; David L. Lattier; Richard N. Silbiger; Joni Torsella; Jerry O. Wolff; M. Kate Smith

Genetic relatedness of gray-tailed voles ( Microtus canicaudus ) was determined by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD). This work is the first reported use of the RAPD method for pedigree analysis of M. canicaudus and demonstrates the feasibility of RAPD for assessing paternity and genetic similarity between inbred and outbred individuals. Amplified polymorphisms and two statistical approaches were used to evaluate genetic similarities between individual voles. DNA profiles of wild-caught (outbred) voles were significantly less similar than were inbred voles, using two different primers ( P ≤ 0.03 and P ≤ 0.003). In pedigree analyses using three unrelated males in a discrimination test, indication of paternity was based upon bands shared by the progeny and the male in question. Non-sire males produced bands that were not seen in the probable father or offspring and, conversely, bands were found in the progeny that were apparently inherited only from the probable sire. The RAPD procedure may have wide applications in identifying genetic relationships among individuals to estimate genetic heterogeneity, determine parentage, and address questions concerning gene flow and kinship in feral vole populations.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2017

Tools to minimize interlaboratory variability in vitellogenin gene expression monitoring programs

Aaron Jastrow; Denise A. Gordon; Kasie M. Auger; Elizabeth C. Punska; Kathleen F. Arcaro; Kristen Keteles; Dana L. Winkelman; David L. Lattier; Adam D. Biales; James M. Lazorchak

The egg yolk precursor protein vitellogenin is widely used as a biomarker of estrogen exposure in male fish. However, standardized methodology is lacking and little is known regarding the reproducibility of results among laboratories using different equipment, reagents, protocols, and data analysis programs. To address this data gap we tested the reproducibility across laboratories to evaluate vitellogenin gene (vtg) expression and assessed the value of using a freely available software data analysis program. Samples collected from studies of male fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) exposed to 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) and minnows exposed to processed wastewater effluent were evaluated for vtg expression in 4 laboratories. Our results indicate reasonable consistency among laboratories if the free software for expression analysis LinRegPCR is used, with 3 of 4 laboratories detecting vtg in fish exposed to 5 ng/L EE2 (n = 5). All 4 laboratories detected significantly increased vtg levels in 15 male fish exposed to wastewater effluent compared with 15 male fish held in a control stream. Finally, we were able to determine that the source of high interlaboratory variability from complementary deoxyribonucleic acid (cDNA) to quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analyses was the expression analysis software unique to each real-time qPCR machine. We successfully eliminated the interlaboratory variability by reanalyzing raw fluorescence data with independent freeware, which yielded cycle thresholds and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) efficiencies that calculated results independently of proprietary software. Our results suggest that laboratories engaged in monitoring programs should validate their PCR protocols and analyze their gene expression data following the guidelines established in the present study for all gene expression biomarkers. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:3102-3107. Published 2017 Wiley Periodicals Inc. on behalf of SETAC. This article is a US government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.


Aquatic Toxicology | 2016

Initial development of a multigene omics-based exposure biomarker for pyrethroid pesticides

Adam D. Biales; Mitchell S. Kostich; Angela L. Batt; Mary J. See; Robert W. Flick; Denise A. Gordon; Jim M. Lazorchak; David C. Bencic

Omics technologies have long since promised to address a number of long standing issues related to environmental regulation. Despite considerable resource investment, there are few examples where these tools have been adopted by the regulatory community, which is in part due to a focus of most studies on discovery rather than assay development. The current work describes the initial development of an omics based assay using 48h Pimephales promelas (FHM) larvae for identifying aquatic exposures to pyrethroid pesticides. Larval FHM were exposed to seven concentrations of each of four pyrethroids (permethrin, cypermethrin, esfenvalerate and bifenthrin) in order to establish dose response curves. Then, in three separate identical experiments, FHM were exposed to a single equitoxic concentration of each pyrethroid, corresponding to 33% of the calculated LC50. All exposures were separated by weeks and all materials were either cleaned or replaced between runs in an attempt to maintain independence among exposure experiments. Gene expression classifiers were developed using the random forest algorithm for each exposure and evaluated first by cross-validation using hold out organisms from the same exposure experiment and then against test sets of each pyrethroid from separate exposure experiments. Bifenthrin exposed organisms generated the highest quality classifier, demonstrating an empirical Area Under the Curve (eAUC) of 0.97 when tested against bifenthrin exposed organisms from other exposure experiments and 0.91 against organisms exposed to any of the pyrethroids. An eAUC of 1.0 represents perfect classification with no false positives or negatives. Additionally, the bifenthrin classifier was able to successfully classify organisms from all other pyrethroid exposures at multiple concentrations, suggesting a potential utility for detecting cumulative exposures. Considerable run-to-run variability was observed both in exposure concentrations and molecular responses of exposed fish across exposure experiments. The application of a calibration step in analysis successfully corrected this, resulting in a significantly improved classifier. Classifier evaluation suggested the importance of considering a number of aspects of experimental design when developing an expression based tool for general use in ecological monitoring and risk assessment, such as the inclusion of multiple experimental runs and high replicate numbers.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2014

A new approach for the laboratory culture of the fathead minnow, Pimephales promelas.

Denise A. Gordon; Mark E. Smith; Melissa C. Wratschko; David B. Agard; Lisa Holden; Steve Wilcox; James M. Lazorchak

Fathead minnows are routinely cultured for use in aquatic toxicology studies. A new mass culture system described in the present study consisted of 6 stainless steel tanks, each containing 68 fish and 20 spawning substrates. Spawning results are compared with a previous system of 22 individual glass aquaria, which contained 16 fish and 4 spawning substrates per tank. During a 19-mo period, the new system produced an average of 4105 eggs/d, compared with an average of 2465 eggs/d with the previous system. Labor and maintenance were reduced with the new system. The stainless steel tanks eliminated aquaria glass breakage, and daily water use was reduced by 45%. Analysis of reference toxicant data from fish cultured using both systems indicated no change in the sensitivity of the test animals. Analyses of 2009 egg production data determined that a 6:1 to 7:1 female to male ratio had a significantly positive impact on egg production levels and that 6-mo-old breeding stock should be introduced to the spawning tanks in mid-spring for optimal egg production during the rest of the year. Implementing a stainless steel mass culture system significantly increased efficiency of egg production; reduced turnaround delay of mature animal availability for toxicity and molecular testing; and reduced labor time, costs, and inherent safety hazards, compared with glass aquaria systems.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2001

Vitellogenin gene transcription: a relative quantitative exposure indicator of environmental estrogens

David L. Lattier; Denise A. Gordon; Douglas J. Burks; Gregory P. Toth


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2002

17α-ethynylestradiol-induced vitellogenin gene transcription quantified in livers of adult males, larvae, and gills of fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas)†

David L. Lattier; Tirumuru V. Reddy; Denise A. Gordon; James M. Lazorchak; Mark E. Smith; Daniel E. Williams; Barry Wiechman; Robert W. Flick; Ann L. Miracle; Gregory P. Toth


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 1998

Toxicity of 2, 3, 7, 8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin to early life stage brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) following parental dietary exposure

Rodney D. Johnson; Joseph E. Tietge; Kathleen M. Jensen; Joseph D. Fernandez; Ann Linnum; Douglas Lothenbach; Gary W. Holcombe; Philip M. Cook; S. A. Christ; David L. Lattier; Denise A. Gordon

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David L. Lattier

Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education

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James M. Lazorchak

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Mark E. Smith

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Gregory P. Toth

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Adam D. Biales

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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David B. Agard

Northern Kentucky University

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Heather E. Gall

Pennsylvania State University

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John R. Meier

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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