Dorothée Dewaele
university of lille
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Featured researches published by Dorothée Dewaele.
Environmental Pollution | 2015
Mathilde Cabral; Aminata Touré; Guillaume Garçon; Cheikh Diop; Saâd Bouhsina; Dorothée Dewaele; Fabrice Cazier; Dominique Courcot; Anta Tall-Dia; Pirouz Shirali; Amadou Diouf; Mamadou Fall; Anthony Verdin
The purpose of the study was to determine Pb and Cd concentrations in humans and to assess the effect of co-exposure to these metals on biomarkers of oxidative stress and nephrotoxicity. Blood and urine levels of Pb and Cd, oxidative stress and urinary renal biomarkers were measured in 77 subjects neighboring a discharge and 52 in the control site. Exposed subjects showed significantly higher levels of lead and cadmium in blood and urine than the controls. Excessive production of reactive oxygen species induced by these metals in exposed subjects conducted to a decrease in antioxidant defense system (GPx, Selenium, GSH) and an increase in lipid peroxidation (MDA). Moreover, changes in markers of nephrotoxicity (high urinary concentrations of total protein, RBP and CC16, as well as GSTα and LDH increased activities) suggested the occurrence of discrete and early signs of impaired renal function for the discharge neighboring population.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2014
Cheikh Diop; Dorothée Dewaele; Mamadou Diop; Aminata Touré; Mathilde Cabral; Fabrice Cazier; Mamadou Fall; Amadou Diouf; Baghdad Ouddane
The water column from Dakar coast and Saint Louis estuary in Senegal, West Africa, was sampled in order to measure the contamination level by trace metals. The speciation of metals in water allowed performing a distribution between dissolved and particulate trace metals. For the dissolved metals, the metallic concentration and repartition between the organic fraction and the inorganic fraction were performed. The results show that the pollution of the estuary was more serious than in Dakar coast for Co, Cr, Ni, Pb and Zn; while, Cd and Cu were higher in Dakar coast. A strong affinity between metals and suspended particles has been revealed. Dissolved metals that have a tendency to form organic metal complexes are in decreasing order: Cd, Zn, Pb, Co=Cr=Mn, Cu and Ni. The results showed that the mobility of trace metals in estuary is controlled by dissolved organic carbon, while in coast it depends on chlorides.
Journal of Environmental Sciences-china | 2016
Fabrice Cazier; Paul Genevray; Dorothée Dewaele; Habiba Nouali; Anthony Verdin; Frédéric Ledoux; Adam Hachimi; Lucie Courcot; Sylvain Billet; Saâd Bouhsina; Pirouz Shirali; Guillaume Garçon; Dominique Courcot
Atmospheric aerosol samples (PM2.5-0.3, i.e., atmospheric particles ranging from 0.3 to 2.5μm) were collected during two periods: spring-summer 2008 and autumn-winter 2008-2009, using high volume samplers equipped with cascade impactors. Two sites located in the Northern France were compared in this study: a highly industrialised city (Dunkirk) and a rural site (Rubrouck). Physicochemical analysis of particulate matter (PM) was undertaken to propose parameters that could be used to distinguish the various sources and to exhibit seasonal variations but also to provide knowledge of chemical element composition for the interpretation of future toxicological studies. The study showed that PM2.5-0.3 concentration in the atmosphere of the rural area remains stable along the year and was significantly lower than in the urban or industrial ones, for which concentrations increase during winter. High concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), dioxins, furans and dioxin like polychlorinated biphenyls (DL-PCBs), generated by industrial activities, traffic and municipal wastes incineration were detected in the samples. Specific criteria like Carbon Preference Index (CPI) and Combustion PAHs/Total PAHs ratio (CPAHs/TPAHs) were used to identify the possible sources of atmospheric pollution. They revealed that paraffins are mainly emitted by biogenic sources in spring-summer whereas as in the case of PAHs, they have numerous anthropogenic emission sources in autumn-winter (mainly from traffic and domestic heating).
Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2014
Capucine Lepers; Véronique André; Mona Dergham; Sylvain Billet; Anthony Verdin; Guillaume Garçon; Dorothée Dewaele; Fabrice Cazier; François Sichel; Pirouz Shirali
Airborne particulate matter (PM) toxicity is of growing interest as diesel exhaust particles have been classified as carcinogenic to humans. However, PM is a mixture of chemicals, and respective contribution of organic and inorganic fractions to PM toxicity remains unclear. Thus, we analysed the link between chemical composition of PM samples and bulky DNA adduct formation supported by CYP1A1 and 1B1 genes induction and catalytic activities. We used six native PM samples, collected in industrial, rural or urban areas, either during the summer or winter, and carried out our experiments on the human bronchial epithelial cell line BEAS‐2B. Cell exposure to PM resulted in CYP1A1 and CYP1B1 genes induction. This was followed by an increase in EROD activity, leading to bulky DNA adduct formation in exposed cells. Bulky DNA adduct intensity was associated to global EROD activity, but this activity was poorly correlated with CYPs mRNA levels. However, EROD activity was correlated with both metal and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) content. Finally, principal components analysis revealed three clusters for PM chemicals, and suggested synergistic effects of metals and PAHs on bulky DNA adduct levels. This study showed the ability of PM samples from various origins to generate bulky DNA adducts in BEAS‐2B cells. This formation was promoted by increased expression and activity of CYPs involved in PAHs activation into reactive metabolites. However, our data highlight that bulky DNA adduct formation is only partly explained by PM content in PAHs, and suggest that inorganic compounds, such as iron, may promote bulky DNA adduct formation by supporting CYP activity. Copyright
Sensors | 2016
Rabih Maamary; Xiaojuan Cui; Eric Fertein; Patrick Augustin; Marc Fourmentin; Dorothée Dewaele; Fabrice Cazier; Laurence Guinet; Weidong Chen
A room-temperature continuous-wave (CW) quantum cascade laser (QCL)-based methane (CH4) sensor operating in the mid-infrared near 8 μm was developed for continuous measurement of CH4 concentrations in ambient air. The well-isolated absorption line (7F2,4 ← 8F1,2) of the ν4 fundamental band of CH4 located at 1255.0004 cm−1 was used for optical measurement of CH4 concentration by direct absorption in a White-type multipass cell with an effective path-length of 175 m. A 1σ (SNR = 1) detection limit of 33.3 ppb in 218 s was achieved with a measurement precision of 1.13%. The developed sensor was deployed in a campaign of measurements of time series CH4 concentration on a site near a suburban traffic road in Dunkirk (France) from 9 to 22 January 2013. An episode of high CH4 concentration of up to ~3 ppm has been observed and analyzed with the help of meteorological parameters combined with back trajectory calculation using the Hybrid Single Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory (HYSPLIT) model of NOAA.
Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases Supplements | 2015
Ahmed Karoui; Clément Crochemore; Malik Mekki; David Préterre; Fabrice Cazier; Dorothée Dewaele; Jean-Marie Vaugeois; Cécile Corbière; Valérie Lecureur; Vincent Richard; Paul Mulder; Christelle Monteil
Traffic air pollution is a major health problem and is recognized as an important risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Even so the role of particles-induced adverse health effects is well established, recent studies outlined the contribution of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) in these effects, in particular on the cardiovascular function. The main sources of this pollutant are oxidation catalysts used to reduce emissions of carbon monoxide and non-methane hydrocarbons from the exhaust of diesel engines and also to facilitate filter regeneration. However, the contribution of NO2 compared to other gaseous and particulate pollutants remains unknown. Consequently, the main objective of this study was to analyze the specific contributions of NO2 in the traffic-related air pollution-induced cardiovascular adverse effects. For this, Wistar rats were exposed for 3 weeks (3h/day, 5 days/week) to either a continuous flow of catalyzed diesel exhaust (DE), particle free or whole DE (particles concentration 2mg/m3), either to a continuous flow of NO2 used at a concentration identical to that measured in the exhaust line. The composition of the emission and the NO2 analyses were monitored on-line during the whole experiment. We evaluated cardiac function and biological effects after 16h recovery in clean air. DE or NO2 exposures induced a modest cardiac dysfunction characterized by an increase in left ventricular diameters and a decrease in fractional shortening. In the case of DE, the presence of particles did not worsen the impairment of cardiac function. In parallel to this effect, mitochondrial function was altered as illustrated by the reduction of the oxygen consumption and of the ATP production. Mitochondrial reactive oxygen species was increased only by the NO2 exposure. In conclusion, these results suggest that DE-induced cardiac dysfunction is due to, at least in part, to NO2 present in DE.
Environmental Pollution | 2007
Géraldine Bidar; Guillaume Garçon; C. Pruvot; Dorothée Dewaele; Fabrice Cazier; Francis Douay; Pirouz Shirali
Chemosphere | 2015
Cheikh Diop; Dorothée Dewaele; Fabrice Cazier; Amadou Diouf; Baghdad Ouddane
Procedia environmental sciences | 2011
Fabrice Cazier; Dorothée Dewaele; Agnes Delbende; Habiba Nouali; Guillaume Garçon; Anthony Verdin; Dominique Courcot; S. Bouhsina; Pirouz Shirali
Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy & Radiative Transfer | 2008
Julien Cousin; Weidong Chen; Marc Fourmentin; Eric Fertein; D. Boucher; Fabrice Cazier; Habiba Nouali; Dorothée Dewaele; Marc Douay; Laurence S. Rothman