Mamadou Fall
Cheikh Anta Diop University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Mamadou Fall.
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.
Human & Experimental Toxicology | 2012
Mathilde Cabral; Denis Dieme; A Verdin; G Garçon; Mamadou Fall; S Bouhsina; D Dewaele; F Cazier; Anta Tall-Dia; Amadou Diouf; P Shirali
This study deals with the health effects within a child population, neighbouring a landfill. After detecting metals in soil and air samples collected in the surroundings of the landfill and in a control site, we have studied: (i) levels of lead (Pb) and exposure biomarkers in blood and urine, (ii) oxidative stress biomarkers and (iii) renal injury by applying a set of early effect biomarkers. Levels of Pb were higher in the exposed site (i.e. 1129 mg/kg and 640 ng/m3 in soil and air samples, respectively) versus those in the control site (i.e. 14.3 mg/kg and 9.3 ng/m3 in soil and air samples, respectively). Pb impregnation and levels of delta-aminolevulinic acid in urine were influenced by the living site that shows the prevailingly alarming situation in the Mbeubeuss landfill. Malondialdehyde changes indicated Pb-induced excessive production of reactive oxygen species. Lactate dehydrogenase activities and proteinuria were found to be higher in the children living in the exposed site. These evidences may reveal the usefulness of these two effect biomarkers to monitor the kidney injury entailed by relatively low-environmental exposure to Pb. Overall, these results show that the Mbeubeuss landfill constitutes a real source of environmental and health risk, be it living or working on site, of the surrounding population, predominantly for children.
Toxicological & Environmental Chemistry | 2011
Mamadou Fall; Hasnaà Haddouk; Stéphane Loriot; Amadou Diouf; Frédéric Dionnet; Roy Forster; Jean-Paul Morin
The aim of this study was to investigate the potential mutagenic activity of diesel engine exhaust in the Ames/Salmonella assay using a direct aerosol exposure system. So, TA 98 and TA 100 strains, with or without added S9 mix, were exposed to diesel emissions after varying degrees of filtration. Variants of these two strains, deficient in nitroreductase (TA 98NR and TA 100NR) or over-expressing O-Acetyl Transferase (YG 1024 and YG 1029), were also exposed to total (unfiltered) diesel exhaust to highlight the putative mutagenicity of any nitro-PAHs present in these emissions. Mutagenic activity of the diesel exhaust was demonstrated on Salmonella typhimurium, strains TA 100 and variants TA 100 NR and YG1029. The use of a particle filter did not modify the genotoxicity of the diesel emissions, indicating a major contribution of the gas phase to the mutagenicity of these diesel emissions. The prominent role of the particulate-associated nitro-polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (nitro-PAHs) claimed by some authors working on diesel exhaust organic extracts was not confirmed by our results with native diesel exhaust exposure. Our results show that the gas phase is potentially more mutagenic than the particles alone.
Toxicology reports | 2016
Aminata Touré; Mathilde Cabral; A. Niang; Cheikh Diop; A. Garat; L. Humbert; Mamadou Fall; Amadou Diouf; F. Broly; M. Lhermitte; D. Allorge
Isoniazid (INH), recommended by WHO (World Health Organization) in the treatment of tuberculosis (TB), is metabolized primarily by the genetically polymorphic N-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) enzyme. The human population is divided into three different phenotypic groups according to acetylation rate: slow, intermediate, and fast acetylators. The objective of this study was to explore the relationship between NAT2 genotypes and the serum concentrations of INH. Blood samples from 96 patients with TB were taken for the analysis. NAT2 polymorphisms on coding region were examined by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) direct sequencing; the acetylation status was obtained by measuring isoniazid (INH) and its metabolite, acetylisoniazid (AcINH) in plasma was obtained by using the liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. TB patients were distributed into two groups of fast and slow acetylators according to the acetylation index calculated based on the plasma concentration of INH in the 3rd hour (T3) after an oral dose. Our PCR analysis identified several alleles, where NAT2*4, NAT2*5A, NAT2*6A, and NAT2*13A were the most important. The concentrations of INH varied between 1.10 mg/L and 13.10 mg/L at the 3rd hour and between 0.1 and 9.5 mg/L at the 6th hour. The use of the acetylating index I3 allowed the classification of tested patients into two phenotypic groups: slow acetylators (44.3% of TB patients), and rapid acetylators (55.7%). Patient’s acetylation profile provides valuable information on their therapeutic, pharmacological, and toxicological responses.
Molecular Biology Reports | 2012
Aminata Touré; Cheikh Diop; Mathilde Cabral; Mamadou Fall; Michel Lhermitte; Amadou Diouf; Franck Broly; Delphine Allorge
Revue des sciences de l’eau / Journal of Water Science | 2012
Cheikh Diop; Dorothée Dewaele; Aminata Touré; Mathilde Cabral; Fabrice Cazier; Mamadou Fall; Baghdad Ouddane; Amadou Diouf
Toxicology Letters | 2018
A. Ndong; Anthony Verdin; J. Thomas; F. Cazier; M. Cabral; A. Garat; Delphine Allorge; Guillaume Garçon; J.-M. Loguidice; Amadou Diouf; Dominique Courcot; M. Gualtieri; Mamadou Fall
Toxicologie Analytique et Clinique | 2018
A. Lam; M. Cabral; A. Touré; Mamadou Fall; A. Diouf; J.P. Chippaux
Toxicologie Analytique et Clinique | 2018
Aïssata Diakité; Laetitia A. Bedi; Djédjé Sébastien Dano; Mamadou Fall