Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dimitrios Zisimopoulos is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dimitrios Zisimopoulos.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2013

Method for the simultaneous determination of free/protein malondialdehyde and lipid/protein hydroperoxides

Konstantinos Grintzalis; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Tilman Grune; Daniela Weber; Christos D. Georgiou

A simple and sensitive method is presented for the simultaneous quantification (spectrophotometric and spectrofluorimetric) of the main lipid and protein peroxidation products after their initial fractionation: free malondialdehyde (FrMDA), protein-bound malondialdehyde (PrMDA), total hydroperoxides (LOOH), and protein hydroperoxides (PrOOH). FrMDA and PrMDA (released from proteins by alkaline hydrolysis) are measured after the reaction of MDA with thiobarbituric acid (TBA) under acidic conditions, by the specific fluorimetric quantification of the resulting MDA-(TBA)2 adduct chromophore. The measurement of LOOH and PrOOH is based on the reaction of Fe(3+) (resulting from the reaction of LOOH and PrOOH with Fe(2+)) with xylenol orange (XO) and the photometric quantification of the resulting XO-Fe complex. The sensitivity of the assays for FrMDA/PrMDA and LOOH/PrOOH is 20 and 100pmol, respectively. The method was applied successfully on human plasma and can be used for the evaluation of oxidative stress in both basic and clinical research.


Nature Communications | 2015

Evidence for photochemical production of reactive oxygen species in desert soils

Christos D. Georgiou; Henry J. Sun; Christopher P. McKay; Konstantinos Grintzalis; Ioannis Papapostolou; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Konstantinos Panagiotidis; Gaosen Zhang; Eleni Koutsopoulou; George E. Christidis; Irene Margiolaki

The combination of intense solar radiation and soil desiccation creates a short circuit in the biogeochemical carbon cycle, where soils release significant amounts of CO2 and reactive nitrogen oxides by abiotic oxidation. Here we show that desert soils accumulate metal superoxides and peroxides at higher levels than non-desert soils. We also show the photogeneration of equimolar superoxide and hydroxyl radical in desiccated and aqueous soils, respectively, by a photo-induced electron transfer mechanism supported by their mineralogical composition. Reactivity of desert soils is further supported by the generation of hydroxyl radical via aqueous extracts in the dark. Our findings extend to desert soils the photogeneration of reactive oxygen species by certain mineral oxides and also explain previous studies on desert soil organic oxidant chemistry and microbiology. Similar processes driven by ultraviolet radiation may be operating in the surface soils on Mars.


Redox biology | 2018

Protein and cell wall polysaccharide carbonyl determination by a neutral pH 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine-based photometric assay

Christos D. Georgiou; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Vasiliki Argyropoulou; Electra Kalaitzopoulou; George Salachas; Tilman Grune

A new 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH)-based photometric assay is developed for the quantification of carbonyls in protein samples from any biological source by protein carbonyl-DNPH hydrazone formation at acidic pH in the presence of denaturing urea, and subsequent hydrazone solubilization in the presence of SDS and stabilization from acid hydrolysis at pH 7.0. At this neutral (ntr) pH, interfering unreacted DNPH is uncharged and its thus increased hydrophobicity permits its 100% effective removal from the solubilizate with ethyl acetate/hexane wash. The ntrDNPH assay is more reliable and sensitive than the standard (std) DNPH photometric assay because it eliminates its main limitations: (i) interfering unreacted DNPH (pKa 1.55) that is nonspecifically bound to the TCA (pKa 0.7)-protein pellet is not effectively removed after wash with EtOH: ethyl acetate because it is positively charged, (ii) acid (TCA-induced) hydrolysis of the protein carbonyl-DNPH hydrazone, (iii) sample protein concentration re-determination, (iv) loss of sample acid (TCA)-soluble proteins, (v) DNA interference, and (vi) requires high protein quantity samples (≥ 1 mg). Considering ntrDNPH assay’s very low protein limit (1 µg), its cumulative and functional sensitivities are 2600- and 2000-fold higher than those of the stdDNPH assay, respectively. The present study elucidates the DNA interference mechanism on the stdDNPH assay, and also develops a standardized protocol for sample protein treatment and fractionation (into cytoplasmic/aqueous, membrane/lipid-bound, and histone/DNA-bound proteins; see Supplement section V) in order to ensure reproducible carbonyl determination on defined cell protein fractions, and to eliminate assay interference from protein samples containing (i) Cys sulfenic acid groups (via their neutralization with dithiothreitol), and (ii) DNA (via its removal by streptomycin sulfate precipitation). Lastly, the ntrDNPH assay determines carbonyl groups on cell wall polysaccharides, thus paving the way on studies to investigate cell walls acting as antioxidant defense in plants, fungi, bacteria and lichens.


Astrobiology | 2016

Martian Superoxide and Peroxide O2 Release (OR) Assay: A New Technology for Terrestrial and Planetary Applications

Christos D. Georgiou; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Konstantinos Panagiotidis; Konstantinos Grintzalis; Ioannis Papapostolou; Richard C. Quinn; Christopher P. McKay; Henry J. Sun

This study presents an assay for the detection and quantification of soil metal superoxides and peroxides in regolith and soil. The O2 release (OR) assay is based on the enzymatic conversion of the hydrolysis products of metal oxides to O2 and their quantification by an O2 electrode based on the stoichiometry of the involved reactions. The intermediate product O₂˙⁻ from the hydrolysis of metal superoxides is converted by cytochrome c to O2 and by superoxide dismutase (SOD) to ½ mol O2 and ½ mol H2O2, which is then converted by catalase (CAT) to ½ mol O2. The product H2O2 from the hydrolysis of metal peroxides and hydroperoxides is converted to ½ mol O2 by CAT. The assay method was validated in a sealed sample chamber by using a liquid-phase Clark-type O2 electrode with known concentrations of O₂˙⁻ and H2O2, and commercial metal superoxide and peroxide mixed with Mars analog Mojave and Atacama Desert soils. Carbonates and perchlorates, both present on Mars, do not interfere with the assay. The assay lower limit of detection, when using luminescence quenching/optical sensing O2-electrodes, is 1 nmol O2 cm(-3) or better. The activity of the assay enzymes SOD and cytochrome c was unaffected up to 6 Gy exposure by γ radiation, while CAT retained 100% and 40% of its activity at 3 and 6 Gy, respectively, which demonstrates the suitability of these enzymes for planetary missions, for example, on Mars or Europa.


Redox biology | 2018

Protein carbonyl determination by a rhodamine B hydrazide-based fluorometric assay

Christos D. Georgiou; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Vasiliki Argyropoulou; Electra Kalaitzopoulou; Panayiotis V. Ioannou; George Salachas; Tilman Grune

A new fluorometric assay is presented for the ultrasensitive quantification of total protein carbonyls, and is based on their specific reaction with rhodamine B hydrazide (RBH), and the production of a protein carbonyl-RBH hydrazone the fluorescence of which (at ex/em 560/585 nm) is greatly enhanced by guanidine-HCl. Compared to the fluorescein-5-thiosemicarbazide (FTC)-based fluorometric assay, the RBH assay uses a 24-fold shorter reaction incubation time (1 h) and at least 1000-fold lower protein quantity (2.5 µg), and produces very reliable data that were verified by extensive standardization experiments. The protein carbonyl group detection sensitivity limit of the RBH assay, based on its standard curve, can be as low as 0.4 pmol, and even lower. Counting the very low protein limit of the RBH assay, its cumulative and functional sensitivity is 8500- and 800-fold higher than the corresponding ones for the FTC assay. Neither heme proteins hemoglobin and cytochrome c nor DNA interfere with the RBH assay.


Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders | 2011

Communication assessment for individuals with Rett syndrome: A systematic review

Jeff Sigafoos; Debora M. Kagohara; Larah van der Meer; Vanessa A. Green; Mark F. O’Reilly; Giulio E. Lancioni; Russell Lang; Mandy Rispoli; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos


Education and training in autism and developmental disabilities | 2011

Using Video Prompting and Constant Time Delay to Teach an Internet Search Basic Skill to Students with Intellectual Disabilities

Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Jeff Sigafoos; George Koutromanos


Annals of Hepatology | 2013

Intestinal mucosal proliferation, apoptosis and oxidative stress in patients with liver cirrhosis

Stelios F. Assimakopoulos; Athanassios C. Tsamandas; Georgios I. Tsiaoussis; Elli Karatza; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Ioannis Maroulis; Eleni Kontogeorgou; Christos D. Georgiou; Chrisoula D. Scopa; Konstantinos Thomopoulos


Journal of Behavioral Education | 2010

Enhancing Multiplication Performance in Students with Moderate Intellectual Disabilities Using Pegword Mnemonics Paired with a Picture Fading Technique.

Dimitrios Zisimopoulos


Neuropharmacology | 2017

BNN-20, a synthetic microneurotrophin, strongly protects dopaminergic neurons in the "weaver" mouse, a genetic model of dopamine-denervation, acting through the TrkB neurotrophin receptor

Konstantinos Botsakis; Theodora Mourtzi; Vasiliki Panagiotakopoulou; Malamati Vreka; Georgios T. Stathopoulos; Iosif Pediaditakis; Ioannis Charalampopoulos; Achilleas Gravanis; Foteini Delis; Katerina Antoniou; Dimitrios Zisimopoulos; Christos D. Georgiou; Nikolaos Panagopoulos; Nikolaos Matsokis; Fevronia Angelatou

Collaboration


Dive into the Dimitrios Zisimopoulos's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeff Sigafoos

Victoria University of Wellington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge