Ewa Mulkiewicz
University of Gdańsk
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Featured researches published by Ewa Mulkiewicz.
Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2007
Ewa Mulkiewicz; Bernd Jastorff; Andrzej Skladanowski; Konrad Kleszczyński; Piotr Stepnowski
The acute biological activity of a homologous series of perfluorinated carboxylic acids - perfluorohexanoic acid (PFHxA), perfluoroheptanoic acid (PFHpA), perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA) and perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDA) - was studied. To analyze the potential risk of the perfluorinated acids to humans and the environment, different in vitro toxicity test systems were employed. The cytotoxicity of the chemicals towards two different types of mammalian cell lines and one marine bacteria was investigated. The viability of cells from the promyelocytic leukemia rat cell line (IPC-81) and the rat glioma cell line (C6) was assayed calorimetrically with WST-1 reagent. The evaluation was combined with the Vibrio fischeri acute bioluminescence inhibition assay. The biological activity of the compounds was also determined at the molecular level with acetylcholinesterase and glutathione reductase inhibition assays. This is the first report of the effects of perfluorinated acids on the activity of purified enzymes. The results show these compounds have a very low acute biological activity. The observed effective concentrations lie in the millimole range, which is well above probable intracellular concentrations. A relationship was found between the toxicity of the perfluorinated carboxylic acids and the perfluorocarbon chain length: in every test system applied, the longer the perfluorocarbon chain, the more toxic was the acid. The lowest effective concentrations were thus recorded for perfluorononanoic and perfluorodecanoic acids.
Ecotoxicology | 2009
Dorota Napierska; Janina Baršienė; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Magdalena Podolska; Aleksandras Rybakovas
The objective of this study was to investigate the pattern of enzymatic activities, environmental genotoxicity and cytotoxicity in flounder, Platichthys flesus, from the Polish coastal area of the Baltic Sea. Fish were sampled in different contaminated sites in the Gulf of Gdansk and in a reference area outside the gulf. The activities of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), glutathione s-transferase (GST), catalase (CAT), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), creatine kinase (CK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), were studied, as well as the frequency of micronuclei, nuclear buds and fragmented-apoptotic cells. A higher mean activity level of muscular AChE and a lower activity level of hepatic GST were evident in samples taken from the reference site, relative to those found in the gulf. Modeled CAT activity (in both liver and gill tissue), blood plasma LDH and CK activities were all significantly higher in flounder collected at locations within the Gulf of Gdansk than at the reference site. No statistically significant alterations were observed in the activities of ALT and AST in the blood plasma of flounder in this study. Fish collected from a location at the mouth of the Vistula River showed the highest hepatic GST and CAT, the highest gill CAT activity, and the highest frequency of blood micronuclei, nuclear buds and fragmented-apoptotic cell inductions, as well as the lowest level of blood plasma CK. The present study confirms that compared to fish from the reference area, flounder from the Gulf of Gdansk clearly demonstrate a different enzyme activity, genotoxicity and cytotoxicity biomarker response pattern.
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2015
Marta Wagil; Anna Białk-Bielińska; Alan Puckowski; Katarzyna Wychodnik; Joanna Maszkowska; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Jolanta Kumirska; Piotr Stepnowski; Stefan Stolte
Flubendazole (FLU) and fenbendazole (FEN) belong to benzimidazoles—pharmaceuticals widely used in veterinary and human medicine for the treatment of intestinal parasites as well as for the treatment of systemic worm infections. In recent years, usage of these drugs increased, which resulted in a larger contamination of the environment and possible negative effects on biota. Hence, in our research, we investigated an aquatic ecotoxicity of these pharmaceuticals towards: marine bacteria (Vibrio fischeri), green algae (Scenedesmus vacuolatus), duckweed (Lemna minor) and crustacean (Daphnia magna). Ecotoxicity tests were combined with chemical analysis in order to investigate the actual exposure concentration of the compounds used in the experiment as well as to stability and adsorption studies. As a result, study evaluating sensitivity of different aquatic organisms to these compounds and new ecotoxicological data is presented. The strongest negative impact of FLU and FEN was observed to D. magna.
Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2017
Alicja Mikolajczyk; Natalia Sizochenko; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Anna Malankowska; Michał Nischk; Przemyslaw Jurczak; Seishiro Hirano; Grzegorz Nowaczyk; Adriana Zaleska-Medynska; Jerzy Leszczynski; Agnieszka Gajewicz; Tomasz Puzyn
Titania-supported palladium, gold and bimetallic nanoparticles (second-generation nanoparticles) demonstrate promising photocatalytic properties. However, due to unusual reactivity, second-generation nanoparticles can be hazardous for living organisms. Considering the ever-growing number of new types of nanoparticles that can potentially contaminate the environment, a determination of their toxicity is extremely important. The main aim of presented study was to investigate the cytotoxic effect of surface modified TiO2-based nanoparticles, to model their quantitative nanostructure–toxicity relationships and to reveal the toxicity mechanism. In this context, toxicity tests for surface-modified TiO2-based nanoparticles were performed in vitro, using Gram-negative bacteria Escherichia coli and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO-K1) cells. The obtained cytotoxicity data were analyzed by means of computational methods (quantitative structure–activity relationships, QSAR approach). Based on a combined experimental and computational approach, predictive models were developed, and relationships between cytotoxicity, size, and specific surface area (Brunauer–Emmett–Teller surface, BET) of nanoparticles were discussed.
Archive | 2016
Paulina Łukaszewicz; Joanna Maszkowska; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Jolanta Kumirska; Piotr Stepnowski; Magda Caban
The use of veterinary pharmaceuticals (VPs) is a result of growing animal production. Manure, a great crop fertilizer, contains a significant amount of VPs. The investigation of VPs in manure is prevalent, because of the potential risk for environmental organisms, as well as human health. A re-evaluation of the impact of veterinary pharmaceuticals on the agricultural environment is needed, even though several publications appear every year. The aim of this review was to collate the data from fields investigated for the presence of VPs as an inevitable component of manure. Data on VP concentrations in manure, soils, groundwater and plants were collected from the literature. All of this was connected with biotic and abiotic degradation, leaching and plant uptake. The data showed that the sorption of VPs into soil particles is a process which decreases the negative impact of VPs on the microbial community, the pollution of groundwater, and plant uptake. What was evident was that most of the data came from experiments conducted under conditions different from those in the environment, resulting in an overestimation of data (especially in the case of leaching). The general conclusion is that the application of manure on crop fields leads to a negligible risk for plants, bacteria, and finally humans, but in future every group of compounds needs to be investigated separately, because of the high divergence of properties.
Environmental science. Nano | 2018
Alicja Mikolajczyk; Agnieszka Gajewicz; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Bakhtiyor Rasulev; Martyna Marchelek; Magdalena Diak; Seishiro Hirano; Adriana Zaleska-Medynska; Tomasz Puzyn
The human health and environmental risk assessment of engineered nanomaterials (NPs) is nowadays of high interest. It is important to assess and predict the biological activity, toxicity, physicochemical properties, fate and transport of NPs. In this work, a combined experimental and computational study is performed in order to estimate the toxicity and develop a predictive model for heterogeneous NPs (i.e. modified NPs, created from more than one type of NPs). Quantitative structure–activity relationship (QSAR) methods have not been yet adopted for predicting the toxicity/physicochemical properties of modified heterogeneous nanoparticles (so-called heterogeneous NPs). Since the main problem for nano-QSAR/nano-QSPR modeling of heterogeneous NPs was a lack of appropriate descriptors that are able to express the specific characteristics of 2nd generation NPs, we developed here a novel approach. The novel approach to encode heterogeneous NPs is based on the idea of additive descriptors for mixture systems previously applied only to mixtures of organic/inorganic compounds. Thus, based on the proposed novel approach, we have performed experimental and theoretical studies to develop nano-QSAR models describing the cytotoxicity of 34 TiO2-based NPs modified by (poly)metallic clusters (Au, Ag, Pt) to the Chinese hamster ovary cell line. The models showed a good predictive ability and robustness. This approach can be used as an efficient tool for assessing the toxicity as well as physicochemical properties of unexplored heterogeneous NPs.
Toxicology in Vitro | 2007
Konrad Kleszczyński; Paweł Gardzielewski; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Piotr Stepnowski; Andrzej Skladanowski
Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology | 2008
Magdalena Podolska; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Dorota Napierska
Journal of Biotechnology | 2015
Daria Krefft; Agnieszka Zylicz-Stachula; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Aliaksei Papkov; Joanna Jezewska-Frackowiak; Piotr M. Skowron
Chemosphere | 2017
Anna Białk-Bielińska; Ewa Mulkiewicz; Marcin Stokowski; Stefan Stolte; Piotr Stepnowski