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Dive into the research topics where Emilia Maneiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Emilia Maneiro.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2009

Microalgae fiber optic biosensors for herbicide monitoring using sol–gel technology

Elena Peña-Vázquez; Emilia Maneiro; C. Pérez-Conde; María C. Moreno-Bondi; Eduardo Costas

Three microalgal species (Dictyosphaerium chlorelloides (D.c.), Scenedesmus intermedius (S.i.) and Scenedesmus sp. (S.s.)) were encapsulated in silicate sol-gel matrices and the increase in the amount of chlorophyll fluorescence signal was used to quantify simazine. Influence of several parameters on the preparation of the sensing layers has been evaluated: effect of pH on sol-gel gelation time; effect of algae density on sensor response; influence of glycerol (%) on the membrane stability. Long term stability was also tested and the fluorescence signal from biosensors remained stable for at least 3 weeks. D.c. biosensor presented the lowest detection limits for simazine (3.6 microg L(-1)) and the broadest dynamic calibration range (19-860 microg L(-1)) with IC(50) 125+/-14 microg L(-1). Biosensor was validated by HPLC with UV/DAD detection. The biosensor showed response to those herbicides that inhibit the photosynthesis at photosystem II (triazines: simazine, atrazine, propazine, terbuthylazine; urea based herbicides: linuron). However, no significant increases of fluorescence response was obtained for similar concentrations of 2,4-D (hormonal herbicide) or Cu(II). The combined use of two biosensors that use two different genotypes, sensitive and resistant to simazine, jointly allowed improving microalgae biosensor specificity.


Veterinary Record | 2008

Mass wildlife mortality due to cyanobacteria in the Donana National Park, Spain.

Victoria López-Rodas; Emilia Maneiro; M. P. Lanzarot; Nieves Perdigones; Eduardo Costas

THE conservation of waterfowl often involves the setting up of wildlife refuges situated along major migratory routes. Donana National Park in south-west Spain is the main waterfowl refuge in Europe; more than 70 per cent of all European bird species are represented at the park, which has been


Phycological Research | 2009

Living in Vulcan's forge: Algal adaptation to stressful geothermal ponds on Vulcano Island (southern Italy) as a result of pre‐selective mutations

Victoria López-Rodas; Eduardo Costas; Emilia Maneiro; Fernando Marvá; Mónica Rouco; Antonio Delgado; Antonio Flores-Moya

Four species of eukaryotic algae proliferate in the sulfureous, acidic (pH 3.1) water of the largest geothermal pond on Vulcano Island (southern Italy). Consequently, this pond constitutes a natural laboratory for analysis of adaptation by phytoplankters to extremely stressful conditions. To distinguish between the pre‐selective or post‐selective origin of adaptation processes allowing the existence of phytoplankters in the pond, a Luria‐Delbrück fluctuation test was carried out with the chlorophycean Dictyosphaerium chlorelloides and the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa, both isolated from non‐extreme waters; natural water from the Vulcano Island pond was used as selective factor. Preselective, resistant D. chlorelloides cells appeared with a frequency of 4.7 × 10−7 per cell per generation. We propose that the micro‐algae inhabiting this stressful pond could be the descendents of chance mutants that arrived in the past or are even arriving at the present. The genetic adaptation of D. chlorelloides to Vulcano waters could help to explain the survival of photosynthesizers in very stressful geothermal waters during the Neoproterozoic ‘snowball Earth’, a period when primary production collapsed in the biosphere. On the other hand, adaptation to these conditions was not observed in M. aeruginosa, suggesting that cyanobacteria may not be able to develop any kind of adaptation to Vulcano pond water.


Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2007

Microalgal fiber-optic biosensors for water quality monitoring

Guillermo Orellana; Laura Villén; David Haigh; Emilia Maneiro; Fernando Marvá; Eduardo Costas

Novel fiber-optic biosensors have been developed for the analysis of pesticides in water based on Chlorophyceae microalgae immobilized into a porous silicone layer as recognition element, and on measurements of the photogenerated O2 as chemical transducer. The inhibition of O2 production by the photosynthetic green algae in the presence of the pesticide (simazine) was used as the biological signal. Luminescent thin films and a dedicated optoelectronic unit based on emission phase-shift measurements provide the tools for the sensitive O2 measurements. Fluctuation analysis allows selection of sensitive and resistant microalgae mutants without genetic manipulation for maximum biosensing selectivity.


Evolutionary Ecology | 2007

Resistance to glyphosate in the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa as result of pre-selective mutations

Victoria López-Rodas; Antonio Flores-Moya; Emilia Maneiro; Nieves Perdigones; Fernando Marvá; Marta E. García; Eduardo Costas


New Phytologist | 2007

How eukaryotic algae can adapt to the Spain's Rio Tinto: a neo‐Darwinian proposal for rapid adaptation to an extremely hostile ecosystem

Eduardo Costas; Antonio Flores-Moya; Nieves Perdigones; Emilia Maneiro; Jose L. Blanco; Marta E. García; Victoria López-Rodas


Human Reproduction | 1990

Morphometric categorization of the human oocyte and early conceptus

Vicente J. Goyanes; A. Ron-Corzo; Eduardo Costas; Emilia Maneiro


Limnetica | 2006

Adaptation of cyanobacteria and microalgae to extreme environmental changes derived from anthropogenic pollution

Eduardo Costas; Emilia Maneiro; Victoria López Rodas


Archive | 2006

Harmful algal blooms, red tides and human health: Diarrhetic shellfish poisoning and colorectal cancer

Victoria López-Rodas; Emilia Maneiro; Juan Daniel Martínez; Macarena Navarro; Eduardo Costas


Anales De La Real Academia Nacional De Farmacia | 2006

Proliferaciones algales tóxicas, mareas rojas y salud: envenenamiento diarreico por moluscos y cáncer colorrectal

Victoria López Rodas; Emilia Maneiro; Juan Daniel Martínez; Macarena Navarro; Eduardo Costas

Collaboration


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Eduardo Costas

Complutense University of Madrid

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Victoria López-Rodas

Complutense University of Madrid

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Fernando Marvá

Complutense University of Madrid

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Nieves Perdigones

Complutense University of Madrid

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Macarena Navarro

Complutense University of Madrid

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Marta E. García

Complutense University of Madrid

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Victoria López Rodas

Complutense University of Madrid

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Juan Daniel Martínez

Pontifical Bolivarian University

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Antonio Delgado

Spanish National Research Council

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