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Dive into the research topics where María Verónica Cesio is active.

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Featured researches published by María Verónica Cesio.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2011

Detection of Pesticides in Active and Depopulated Beehives in Uruguay

Lucía Pareja; Marcos Colazzo; Andrés Pérez-Parada; Silvina Niell; Leonidas Carrasco-Letelier; Natalia Besil; María Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen

The influence of insecticides commonly used for agricultural purposes on beehive depopulation in Uruguay was investigated. Honeycombs, bees, honey and propolis from depopulated hives were analyzed for pesticide residues, whereas from active beehives only honey and propolis were evaluated. A total of 37 samples were analyzed, representing 14,800 beehives. In depopulated beehives only imidacloprid and fipronil were detected and in active beehives endosulfan, coumaphos, cypermethrin, ethion and chlorpyrifos were found. Coumaphos was present in the highest concentrations, around 1,000 μg/kg, in all the propolis samples from active beehives. Regarding depopulated beehives, the mean levels of imidacloprid found in honeycomb (377 μg/kg, Standard Deviation: 118) and propolis (60 μg/kg, Standard Deviation: 57) are higher than those described to produce bee disorientation and fipronil levels detected in bees (150 and 170 μg/kg) are toxic per se. The other insecticides found can affect the global fitness of the bees causing weakness and a decrease in their overall productivity. These preliminary results suggest that bees exposed to pesticides or its residues can lead them in different ways to the beehive.


Food Additives and Contaminants Part A-chemistry Analysis Control Exposure & Risk Assessment | 2010

Comparison of extraction solvents and conditions for herbicide residues in milled rice with liquid chromatography-diode array detection analysis (LC-DAD)

Silvina Niell; Lucía Pareja; L. Geis Asteggiante; María Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen

Different extraction procedures and clean-up methods were compared in order to develop a sample preparation procedure for the multi-residue analysis of six post-emergence herbicides (metsulfuron methyl, bensulfuron methyl, pyrazosulfuron ethyl, bentazone, bispyribac sodium and cyhalofop butyl) in rice grains followed by liquid chromatography-diode array detection (LC-DAD). Optimum results were obtained dispersing milled rice grain in water, followed by the addition of 1% acetic acid in acetonitrile, MgSO4 and sodium acetate as a modification of the quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged and safe (QuEChERS) method but no primary and secondary amine (PSA) sorbent was added due to the acidic nature of the herbicides. The method was further expanded to other post-emergence herbicides (quinclorac, clomazone and propanil). Except for quinclorac, which cannot be analysed with this method, the recoveries of the other eight herbicides were in the range 73–111%, with relative standard deviations lower than 12%. Limits of detection (LODs) ranged from 0.03 to 0.08 mg kg−1. A single analyst can extract twelve samples in 4 h. The method presented here allows the simultaneous residue determination of the most common post-emergence herbicides employed in cultivating rice. It is simple, rapid, sensitive, and can be applied routinely to polished rice grain herbicide residue analysis.


Food Chemistry | 2017

Determination of pesticide residues in globe artichoke leaves and fruits by GC–MS and LC–MS/MS using the same QuEChERS procedure

Ignacio Machado; Natalia Gérez; Mariela Pistón; Horacio Heinzen; María Verónica Cesio

Aiming to select the most suitable sample preparation for the multiresidue analysis of pesticides in globe artichoke (Cynara cardunculus L.), a modified QuEChERS, a matrix solid phase dispersion and a dispersive ethyl acetate extraction were compared. Trueness and precision were determined at 0.2mgkg-1 for the three methods. The modified QuEChERS showed the best performance. The scope of the method was enlarged to 35 GC and 63 LC amenable pesticides, its overall performance was evaluated and validated to artichoke leaves and fruits according to DG-SANTE Guidelines. Different matrix effects were observed for most of the pesticides which were higher for leaves than fruits. Difenoconazole and flutriafol suffered signal suppression in leaves extracts but showed positive matrix effects in fruits. All pesticides were analyzed at or below their Maximum Residue Levels fixed for globe artichoke by the European Union. The method was successfully applied for the analysis of commercial samples.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2016

Antimutagenic and antioxidant properties of the aqueous extracts of organic and conventional grapevine Vitis labrusca cv. Isabella leaves in V79 cells

Cristiano Trindade; Giovana Vera Bortolini; Bárbara Segalotto Costa; Joanna Carra Anghinoni; Temenouga N. Guecheva; Ximena Arias; María Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen; Dinara Jaqueline Moura; Jenifer Saffi; Mirian Salvador; João Antonio Pêgas Henriques

ABSTRACT Grapes are one of the most commonly consumed fruit, in both fresh and processed forms; however, a significant amount is disposed of in the environment. Searching for a use of this waste, the antigenotoxic, antimutagenic, and antioxidant activities of aqueous extracts from organic and conventional Vitis labrusca leaves were determined using V79 cells as model. The antigenotoxic activity was analyzed by the alkaline comet assay using endonuclease III and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase enzymes. The antimutagenic property was assessed through the micronucleus (MN) formation, and antioxidant activities were assessed using 2’,7’-dichlorodihydrofluorescin diacetate (DCFH-DA) assay and 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH●) radical scavenging, as well as with superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activity assays. In addition, phenolic content and ascorbic acid levels of both extracts were determined. Data showed that both organic and conventional grapevine leaves extracts possessed antigenotoxic and antimutagenic properties. The extract of organic leaves significantly reduced intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels in V79 cells, and displayed greater ability for DPPH● scavenging and higher SOD and CAT activities than extract from conventional leaves. Further, the extract from organic leaves contained higher phenolic and ascorbic acid concentrations. In summary, extracts from organic and conventional grape leaves induced important in vitro biological effects.


Talanta | 2016

Development of analytical methodologies to assess recalcitrant pesticide bioremediation in biobeds at laboratory scale

Anisleidy Rivero; Silvina Niell; M. Pía Cerdeiras; Horacio Heinzen; María Verónica Cesio

To assess recalcitrant pesticide bioremediation it is necessary to gradually increase the complexity of the biological system used in order to design an effective biobed assembly. Each step towards this effective biobed design needs a suitable, validated analytical methodology that allows a correct evaluation of the dissipation and bioconvertion. Low recovery yielding methods could give a false idea of a successful biodegradation process. To address this situation, different methods were developed and validated for the simultaneous determination of endosulfan, its main three metabolites, and chlorpyrifos in increasingly complex matrices where the bioconvertor basidiomycete Abortiporus biennis could grow. The matrices were culture media, bran, and finally a laboratory biomix composed of bran, peat and soil. The methodology for the analysis of the first evaluated matrix has already been reported. The methodologies developed for the other two systems are presented in this work. The targeted analytes were extracted from fungi growing over bran in semisolid media YNB (Yeast Nitrogen Based) with acetonitrile using shaker assisted extraction, The salting-out step was performed with MgSO4 and NaCl, and the extracts analyzed by GC-ECD. The best methodology was fully validated for all the evaluated analytes at 1 and 25mgkg(-1) yielding recoveries between 72% and 109% and RSDs <11% in all cases. The application of this methodology proved that A. biennis is able to dissipate 94% of endosulfan and 87% of chlorpyrifos after 90 days. Having assessed that A. biennis growing over bran can metabolize the studied pesticides, the next step faced was the development and validation of an analytical procedure to evaluate the analytes in a laboratory scale biobed composed of 50% of bran, 25% of peat and 25% of soil together with fungal micelium. From the different procedures assayed, only ultrasound assisted extraction with ethyl acetate allowed recoveries between 80% and 110% with RSDs <18%. Linearity, recovery, precision, matrix effect and LODs/LOQs of each method were studied for all the analytes: endosulfan isomers (α & β) and its metabolites (endosulfan sulfate, ether and diol) as well as for chlorpyrifos. In the first laboratory evaluation of these biobeds endosulfan was bioconverted up to 87% and chlorpyrifos more than 79% after 27 days.


Foods | 2018

Phenolic Profiling and Antioxidant Capacity of Eugenia uniflora L. (Pitanga) Samples Collected in Different Uruguayan Locations

Ignacio Migues; Nieves Baenas; Amadeo Gironés-Vilaplana; María Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen; Diego A. Moreno

The use of nutrient-rich foods to enhance the wellness, health and lifestyle habits of consumers is globally encouraged. Native fruits are of great interest as they are grown and consumed locally and take part of the ethnobotanic knowledge of the population. Pitanga is an example of a native fruit from Uruguay, consumed as a jelly or an alcoholic beverage. Pitanga has a red-violet pigmentation, which is a common trait for foods that are a good source of antioxidants. Hence, fruits from different Uruguayan regions were analyzed via miniaturized sample preparation method, HPLC-DAD-ESI/MSn and RP-HPLC-DAD techniques to identify and quantify phenolic compounds, respectively. The antioxidant capacity was evaluated via DPPH and ORAC (Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity) assays. A multivariate linear regression was applied to correlate the observed antioxidant capacity with the phenolic content. Furthermore, Principal Components Analysis was performed to highlight characteristics between the various samples studied. The main results indicated differences between northern and southern Uruguayan samples. Delphinidin-3-hexoside was present in southern samples (mean of 293.16 µmol/100 g dry weight (DW)) and absent in the sample collected in the north (sample 3). All the samples contain high levels of cyanidin-3-hexoside, but a noticeable difference was found between the northern sample (150.45 µmol/100 g DW) and the southern sample (1121.98 µmol/100 g DW). The antioxidant capacity (mean ORAC of 56370 µmol Trolox®/100 g DW) were high in all the samples compared to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) database of similar berry-fruits. The results of this study highlight the nutraceutical value of a native fruit that has not been exploited until now.


Talanta | 2018

Miniaturized QuEChERS based methodology for multiresidue determination of pesticides in odonate nymphs as ecosystem biomonitors

Florencia Jesús; Ricardo Hladki; Natalia Gérez; Natalia Besil; Silvina Niell; Grisel Fernández; Horacio Heinzen; María Verónica Cesio

The impacts of the modern, agrochemicals based agriculture that threatens the overall systems sustainability, need to be monitored and evaluated. Seeking for agroecosystems monitors, the present article focus in the occurrence and abundance of aquatic macroinvertebrates, that have been frequently used as bioindicators of water quality due to their relationship with land use. Some of these organisms are on the top of the food chain, where bioaccumulation and biomagnification processes can be observed, and they can turn into secondary pollution sources of systems and terrestrial organisms as well. Odonate nymphs, which belong to the functional group of predators, were selected for this study. A methodology to determine 73 pesticide residues in odonate nymphs by LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS was developed. A QuEChERS sample preparation strategy was adapted. As it is complex to obtain samples especially in disturbed ecosystems, the method was minimized to a sample size of 200mg of fresh nymphs. The method was validated and good recoveries (71-120%) with RSDs below 20% for the majority of the studied pesticides at least at two of the assayed levels 1, 10 and 50µgkg-1 were obtained. For 32 analytes the limit of quantitation was 1µgkg-1 and 10µgkg-1 for the others. The lineal range was observed between 1-100µgkg-1 in matrix-matched and solvent calibration curves for most of the assessed pesticides. LC-MS/MS matrix effects were evaluated, 40% of the analytes presented low or no signal suppression. Only flufenoxuron presented high matrix effects. The obtained methodology is adequate for pesticide multiresidue analysis in aquatic macroinvertebrates (odonates) aiming to contribute to the ecological state evaluation of freshwater ecosystems.


Microchemical Journal | 2016

Comparison of different sample treatments for the determination of As, Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn in globe artichoke (Cynara cardunculus L. subsp. Cardunculus)

Ignacio Machado; Isabel Dol; Esteban Rodríguez-Arce; María Verónica Cesio; Mariela Pistón


Journal of AOAC International | 2009

Liquid chromatographic-diode-array detection multiresidue determination of rice herbicides in drinking and paddy-field water.

Rafael Roehrs; Renato Zanella; Ionara Pizzuti; Martha B. Adaime; Lucía Pareja; Silvina Niell; María Verónica Cesio; Horacio Heinzen


Microchemical Journal | 2017

In vitro bioaccessibility study of As, Cd, Cu, Fe, Ni, Pb and Zn from raw edible artichoke heads (Cynara cardunculus L. subsp. Cardunculus)

Ignacio Machado; María Verónica Cesio; Mariela Pistón

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Silvina Niell

University of the Republic

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Lucía Pareja

University of the Republic

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Ignacio Machado

University of the Republic

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Mariela Pistón

University of the Republic

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