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Dive into the research topics where Maria G. Chernysheva is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria G. Chernysheva.


Radiochimica Acta | 2012

Increase in the specific radioactivity of tritium-labeled compounds obtained by tritium thermal activation method

G. A. Badun; Maria G. Chernysheva; Alexander L. Ksenofontov

Abstract A method of tritium introduction into different types of organic molecules that is based on the interaction of atomic tritium with solid organic target is described. Tritium atoms are formed on the hot W-wire, which is heated by the electric current. Such an approach is called “tritium thermal activation method”. Here we summarize the results of labeling globular proteins (lysozyme, human and bovine serum albumins); derivatives of pantothenic acid and amino acids; ionic surfactants (sodium dodecylsulfate and alkyltrimethylammonium bromides) and nonionic high-molecular weight surfactants – pluronics. For the first time it is observed that if the target-compound is fixed and its radicals are stable the specific radioactivity of the labeled product can be drastically increased (up to 400 times) when the target temperature is ca. 295 K compared with the results obtained at 77 K. The influence of labeling parameters as tritium gas pressure, exposure time and W-wire temperature was tested for each target temperature that results in the optimum labeling conditions with high specific radioactivity and chemical yield of the resulting compound.


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2014

Collagen tissue treated with chitosan solutions in carbonic acid for improved biological prosthetic heart valves

Marat O. Gallyamov; Ivan S. Chaschin; Marina A. Khokhlova; Timofey E. Grigorev; Natalia P. Bakuleva; Irina G. Lyutova; Janna E. Kondratenko; G. A. Badun; Maria G. Chernysheva; Alexei R. Khokhlov

Calcification of bovine pericardium dramatically shortens typical lifetimes of biological prosthetic heart valves and thus precludes their choice for younger patients. The aim of the present work is to demonstrate that the calcification is to be mitigated by means of treatment of bovine pericardium in solutions of chitosan in carbonic acid, i.e. water saturated with carbon dioxide at high pressure. This acidic aqueous fluid unusually combines antimicrobial properties with absolute biocompatibility as far as at normal pressure it decomposes spontaneously and completely into H2O and CO2. Yet, at high pressures it can protonate and dissolve chitosan materials with different degrees of acetylation (in the range of 16-33%, at least) without any further pretreatment. Even exposure of the bovine pericardium in pure carbonic acid solution without chitosan already favours certain reduction in calcification, somewhat improved mechanical properties, complete biocompatibility and evident antimicrobial activity of the treated collagen tissue. The reason may be due to high extraction ability of this peculiar compressed fluidic mixture. Moreover, exposure of the bovine pericardium in solutions of chitosan in carbonic acid introduces even better mechanical properties and highly pronounced antimicrobial activity of the modified collagen tissue against adherence and biofilm formation of relevant Gram-positive and Gram-negative strains. Yet, the most important achievement is the detected dramatic reduction in calcification for such modified collagen tissues in spite of the fact that the amount of the thus introduced chitosan is rather small (typically ca. 1wt.%), which has been reliably detected using original tritium labelling method. We believe that these improved properties are achieved due to particularly deep and uniform impregnation of the collagen matrix with chitosan from its pressurised solutions in carbonic acid.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Estimation of uptake of humic substances from different sources by Escherichia coli cells under optimum and salt stress conditions by use of tritium-labeled humic materials.

N. A. Kulikova; Irina V. Perminova; Gennady A. Badun; Maria G. Chernysheva; O. V. Koroleva; Eugenia A. Tsvetkova

ABSTRACT The primary goal of this paper is to demonstrate potential strengths of the use of tritium-labeled humic substances (HS) to quantify their interaction with living cells under various conditions. A novel approach was taken to study the interaction between a model microorganism and the labeled humic material. The bacterium Escherichia coli was used as a model microorganism. Salt stress was used to study interactions of HS with living cells under nonoptimum conditions. Six tritium-labeled samples of HS originating from coal, peat, and soil were examined. To quantify their interaction with E. coli cells, bioconcentration factors (BCF) were calculated and the amount of HS that penetrated into the cell interior was determined, and the liquid scintillation counting technique was used as well. The BCF values under optimum conditions varied from 0.9 to 13.1 liters kg−1 of cell biomass, whereas under salt stress conditions the range of corresponding values increased substantially and accounted for 0.2 to 130 liters kg−1. The measured amounts of HS that penetrated into the cells were 23 to 167 mg and 25 to 465 mg HS per kg of cell biomass under optimum and salt stress conditions, respectively. This finding indicated increased penetration of HS into E. coli cells under salt stress.


Radiochimica Acta | 2010

A new technique for tritium labeling of humic substances

G. A. Badun; Maria G. Chernysheva; Z. A. Tyasto; N. A. Kulikova; A. V. Kudryavtsev; Irina V. Perminova

Abstract Humic substances (HS) of different origins have been labeled with tritium by the thermal activation method. Specific radioactivity of labeled HS ( 3H-HS) was sufficiently high and varied from 0.14 to 0.6 TBq/g. Parent HS and 3H-HS were analyzed by size exclusion chromatography with radioactivity and UV detection. The results allowed concluding that (1) neither partial decomposition nor polymerization of HS occurred during labeling and (2) tritium labeled molecules have a regular distribution among HS fractions of different molecular weights. The performed correlation analysis revealed that there was no significant relationship between HS properties and specific radioactivity of the obtained 3H-HS. Thus universality of the developed technique for radioactive labeling of HS with tritium could be demonstrated.


Radiochimica Acta | 2014

A novel approach radiolabeling detonation nanodiamonds through the tritium thermal activation method

G. A. Badun; Maria G. Chernysheva; Ruslan Yu. Yakovlev; Nikolai B. Leonidov; Mikhail N. Semenenko; G. V. Lisichkin

Abstract Tritium labeling was introduced into detonation nanodiamonds (ND) through the tritium thermal activation method. Two target preparation techniques were developed to increase the radioactivity and the specific radioactivity of the labeled product: the desiccation of the waterless solvent suspension and the lyophilization of the hydrosol. The specific radioactivity of the labeled product was shown to correlate with the hydrogen content in the starting material and to achieve 2.6 TBq/g.


Langmuir | 2011

Liquid scintillation spectrometry of tritium in studying lysozyme behavior in aqueous/organic liquid systems. The influence of the organic phase.

Maria G. Chernysheva; G. A. Badun

Liquid scintillation spectrometry of tritium in the application of the scintillation phase method was used for studying the adsorption of lysozyme at the liquid/liquid interface and its distribution in the bulk of the system. The goal of this research was to reveal the influence of the nature of the organic phase on the distribution and adsorption ability of the protein when it is placed in a system containing two immiscible liquids. Based on the radiochemical assay distribution coefficients and adsorption isotherms obtained for aqueous/octane, aqueous/p-xylene and aqueous/octanol systems, it was concluded that the interaction of the protein with the interface plays a dominant role in protein behavior in aqueous/organic liquid systems.


Radiochemistry | 2007

Nonequilibrium processes in reactions of hot tritium atoms with cooled solid targets. Influence of the atomizer temperature on formation of labeled substances

Maria G. Chernysheva; G. A. Badun; Z. A. Tyasto; V. Yu. Pozdnyakova; V. M. Fedoseev; Alexander L. Ksenofontov

A system consisting of a cold target and “hot” atoms generated by dissociation of tritium on a tungsten wire was studied with the aim to determine conditions for preparing tritium-labeled organic compounds with the maximal radiochemical yield. The influence of the atomizer temperature on the result of the reaction of tritium atoms with amino acids and tetraalkylammonium bromides was studied; homological series of the substrates were examined with the aim to evaluate the contributions of functional groups and hydrocarbon tail to the processes occurring in the target. The dependence of the yield of the labeled parent compound on the atomizer temperature varied in the range 1600–2000 K was determined. The rates of decarboxylation and deamination sharply grew with increasing temperature of the tungsten wire. The highest yield of labeled amino acids was attained at an atomizer temperature of 1800–1900 K, and at higher temperature their yield decreased. The difference between the activation energies of the elimination of the carboxy and amino groups and of the isotope exchange of hydrogen for tritium in the C-H bond appeared to be 93 and 59 kJ mol−1, respectively. For alkyltrimethylammonium bromides with the alkyl radicals C12H25, C14H29, and C16H33, the yield of the labeled parent compound reached 80–90% and was virtually independent of the atomizer temperature. The capability of tritium atoms to penetrate into the targets was evaluated. For the exponential model of the attenuation of the flow of tritium atoms inside the target, the attenuation factor for freeze-dried amino acids and alkyltrimethylammonium bromides as targets was 1.8 nm−1.


Radiochemistry | 2015

Efficiency of isotope exchange between sodium 4-phenylbenzoate and activated tritium

V. P. Shevchenko; I. A. Razzhivina; Maria G. Chernysheva; G. A. Badun; I. Yu. Nagaev; K. V. Shevchenko; N. F. Myasoedov

The efficiency of the protium–tritium isotope exchange in the sodium 4-phenylbenzoate (PBNa) molecule on activating the reaction on a tungsten filament at 1940 K (target temperature 77 and 295 K) and on heating the substrate supported on 5% Pd/C in the presence of gaseous tritium is compared. It is shown that the reaction mechanism is laregly determined by the properties of the material on which this reaction occurs and not only by the method of generation of activated tritium species. In the reaction of tritium atom with PBNa deposited on glass walls of the reaction vessel, the isotope substitution of tritium for protium occurred by the radical mechanism, leading to the formation of [3H]PBNa and hydrogenation products. It is assumed that the spillover of tritium atom over the support (carbon) surface is accompanied by polarization of the electronic shell and formation of the cluster (3+)(


Scientific Reports | 2016

Label Distribution in Tissues of Wheat Seedlings Cultivated with Tritium-Labeled Leonardite Humic Acid.

N. A. Kulikova; Dmitry P. Abroskin; Gennady A. Badun; Maria G. Chernysheva; V. I. Korobkov; Anton S. Beer; Eugenia A. Tsvetkova; Svetlana V. Senik; O. I. Klein; Irina V. Perminova


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2014

Humic Substances Enhance Growth and Respiration in the Basidiomycetes Trametes Maxima Under Carbon Limited Conditions

O. I. Klein; E. P. Isakova; Yulia I. Deryabina; N. A. Kulikova; G. A. Badun; Maria G. Chernysheva; E. V. Stepanova; O. V. Koroleva

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G. A. Badun

Moscow State University

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Z. A. Tyasto

Moscow State University

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