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Dive into the research topics where Norbert Szoboszlai is active.

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Featured researches published by Norbert Szoboszlai.


Talanta | 2008

Direct sample introduction of wines in graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry for the simultaneous determination of arsenic, cadmium, copper and lead content

Zsolt Ajtony; Norbert Szoboszlai; Emőke Klaudia Suskó; Pál Mezei; Krisztina György; László Bencs

A multi-element graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS) method was elaborated for the simultaneous determination of As, Cd, Cu, and Pb in wine samples of various sugar contents using the transversally heated graphite atomizer (THGA) with end-capped tubes and integrated graphite platforms (IGPs). For comparative GFAAS analyses, direct injection (i.e., dispensing the sample onto the IGP) and digestion-based (i.e., adding oxidizing agents, such as HNO(3) and/or H(2)O(2) to the sample solutions) methods were optimized with the application of chemical modifiers. The mixture of 5 microg Pd (applied as nitrate) plus 3 microg Mg(NO(3))(2) chemical modifier was proven to be optimal for the present set of analytes and matrix, it allowing the optimal 600 degrees C pyrolysis and 2200 degrees C atomization temperatures, respectively. The IGP of the THGA was pre-heated at 70 degrees C to prevent the sputtering and/or foaming of sample solutions with a high organic content, dispensed together with the modifier solution, which method also improved the reproducibility of the determinations. With the digestion-based method, the recovery ranged between 87 and 122%, while with the direct injection method it was between 96 and 102% for Cd, Cu, and Pb, whereas a lower, compromise recovery of 45-85% was realized for As. The detection limits (LODs) were found to be 5.0, 0.03, 1.2, and 0.8 microg l(-1) for As, Cd, Cu, and Pb, respectively. The characteristic mass (m(0)) data were 24 pg As, 1.3 pg Cd, 13 pg Cu, and 35 pg Pb. The upper limits of the linear calibration range were 100, 2, 100, and 200 microg l(-1) for As, Cd, Cu, and Pb, respectively. The precisions were not worse than 4.8, 3.1, 3.7, and 2.3% for As, Cd, Cu, and Pb, respectively. For arsenic, a higher amount of the modifier (e.g., 20 microg Pd plus 12 microg Mg(NO(3))(2)) could be recommended to overcome the interference from the presence of sulphate and phosphate in wines. Although this method increased the sensitivity for As (m(0)=20 pg), it also enhanced the background noise, thus only a slight improvement in the LOD of As (3.9 microg l(-1)) was realized. For the 35 red and white wine samples studied, the highest metal contents were observed for Cu ranging from 20 to 640 microg l(-1) (average: 148 microg l(-1)), followed by Pb from 6 to 90 microg l(-1) (average: 32.3 microg l(-1)), and Cd from 0.05 to 16.5 microg l(-1) (average: 1.06 microg l(-1)), whereas the As content was below the LOD. This wide fluctuation in the trace metal content could be associated with the origin of wines from various regions (i.e., different trace metal level and/or quality of soil, and/or anthropogenic impact), and with diverse materials (e.g., additives and containers) involved in the wine production processes. The Cu content of wine samples was significantly correlated with Pb, whereas its weak anti-correlation was found with Cd. Interestingly, the level of Pb was anti-correlated with the year of production of the wines. This is likely due to the gradual decrease in the Pb content of soils of vineyards by time, which certainly causes less Pb-uptake of the grape plant, thus a decrease in the Pb content of wines as well.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009

Recent trends in total reflection X-ray fluorescence spectrometry for biological applications

Norbert Szoboszlai; Zsófia Polgári; Victor G. Mihucz; Gyula Záray

This review is focused on the application of total reflection X-ray fluorescence (TXRF) spectrometry in the field of biological research. In the last decade, most papers were published by authors who applied laboratory-scale TXRF equipments. The application of synchrotron radiation as excitation source (SR-TXRF) shows a slowly increasing tendency. In the cited papers the micro-, trace and multielement capability of these TXRF techniques was demonstrated in the clinical and medical laboratory practice, as well as in various plant physiological studies. For speciation of elements in biological matrices, the TXRF was used as element specific detector following an off-line separation step (e.g., thin layer chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography), however, these off-line methods are not competitive with the on-line coupled HPLC-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2014

Complex forming competition and in-vitro toxicity studies on the applicability of di-2-pyridylketone-4,4,-dimethyl-3-thiosemicarbazone (Dp44mT) as a metal chelator

Anikó Gaál; Gábor Orgován; Zsófia Polgári; Andrea Réti; Victor G. Mihucz; Szilvia Bősze; Norbert Szoboszlai; C. Streli

Di-2-pyridylketone-4,4,-dimethyl-3-thiosemicarbazone (Dp44mT) is a potential candidate in chelation therapy as an iron chelator. This study showed that a combined treatment with 2μM easily available Fe(II), Cu(II) and Zn(II) each and 5μM Dp44mT on eight different cancer cell lines resulted in a 10-40-fold increase in the intracellular Cu content compared to control samples. The uptake of Cu and Cu-dependent cytotoxicity strictly depend on the Cu concentration of the culture medium. Even as low concentration of Dp44mT as 0.1μM can transport high amounts of copper inside the cells. The Cu accumulation and toxicity through Dp44mT can hardly be influenced by Fe. Copper uptake and toxicity triggered by 2μM extracellular Cu(II) and 5μM Dp44mT could not be influenced by Fe(II) extracellular concentrations even 50-times higher than that of Cu(II). A 50-times higher Co(II) extracellular concentration hindered the Cu(II) uptake almost completely and a 10-times higher Co(II) concentration already decreased the Dp44mT-mediated Cu toxicity. Conditional complex stability constant determinations for Dp44mT with Cu(II), Co(II), Fe(II), Ni(II) and Zn(II) revealed that the metal-to-ligand ratio is 1:1 in [Cu(II)Dp44mT] complex, while for Co(II), Fe(II) and Ni(II) is 1:2. The highest stability constant was obtained for Cu(II) (lg β=7.08±0.05) and Co(II) (lg β2=12.47±0.07). According to our results, Dp44mT in combination with Cu is highly toxic in vitro. Therefore, the use of Dp44mT as an iron chelator is limited if biologically available Cu is also present even at low concentrations.


Food Chemistry | 2013

Determination of ethyl carbamate in wine by high performance liquid chromatography

Zsolt Ajtony; Norbert Szoboszlai; László Bencs; Erna Viszket; Victor G. Mihucz

Kinetics of pre-column derivatization with 9-xanthydrol for the determination of ethyl carbamate (EC) in wine by a previous high performance liquid chromatographic method with fluorescence detection was studied and further developed. The life-time of the derivatized product and its excitation/absorption spectra were systematically investigated. Using low acidity (pH=2.5 set by phosphate buffers) only 3% of 9-xanthyl ethyl carbamate (XEC) decomposes in ∼48h, allowing a prolonged storage time of the derivatized EC conferring more accurate determination for large sample batches. Detection limit of this method is 3μgL(-1), while its average recovery is 98.5±4.9%. Calibration is linear up to 400μgL(-1). The EC content in 33 Hungarian wine samples ranges from 4.9 to 39.9μgL(-1) (average: 17.7μgL(-1), median: 16.7μgL(-1)), while only three of them was slightly over 30μgL(-1) EC, it being the maximum allowed concentration in countries already having legislation.


BMC Cancer | 2014

MEK1 is associated with carboplatin resistance and is a prognostic biomarker in epithelial ovarian cancer

Zsófia Pénzváltó; András Lánczky; Julianna Lénárt; Nora Meggyeshazi; Tibor Krenács; Norbert Szoboszlai; Carsten Denkert; Imre Pete; Balázs Győrffy

BackgroundPrimary systemic treatment for ovarian cancer is surgery, followed by platinum based chemotherapy. Platinum resistant cancers progress/recur in approximately 25% of cases within six months. We aimed to identify clinically useful biomarkers of platinum resistance.MethodsA database of ovarian cancer transcriptomic datasets including treatment and response information was set up by mining the GEO and TCGA repositories. Receiver operator characteristics (ROC) analysis was performed in R for each gene and these were then ranked using their achieved area under the curve (AUC) values. The most significant candidates were selected and in vitro functionally evaluated in four epithelial ovarian cancer cell lines (SKOV-3-, CAOV-3, ES-2 and OVCAR-3), using gene silencing combined with drug treatment in viability and apoptosis assays. We collected 94 tumor samples and the strongest candidate was validated by IHC and qRT-PCR in these.ResultsAll together 1,452 eligible patients were identified. Based on the ROC analysis the eight most significant genes were JRK, CNOT8, RTF1, CCT3, NFAT2CIP, MEK1, FUBP1 and CSDE1. Silencing of MEK1, CSDE1, CNOT8 and RTF1, and pharmacological inhibition of MEK1 caused significant sensitization in the cell lines. Of the eight genes, JRK (p = 3.2E-05), MEK1 (p = 0.0078), FUBP1 (p = 0.014) and CNOT8 (p = 0.00022) also correlated to progression free survival. The correlation between the best biomarker candidate MEK1 and survival was validated in two independent cohorts by qRT-PCR (n = 34, HR = 5.8, p = 0.003) and IHC (n = 59, HR = 4.3, p = 0.033).ConclusionWe identified MEK1 as a promising prognostic biomarker candidate correlated to response to platinum based chemotherapy in ovarian cancer.


Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy | 1999

Several methods to determine heavy metals in the human brain

Erzsébet Andrási; Sarolta Igaz; Norbert Szoboszlai; Éva Farkas; Zsolt Ajtony

The determination of naturally occurring heavy metals in various parts of the human brain is discussed. The patients had no diseases in their central nervous systems (five individuals, mean age 70 years). Twenty brain parts were selected from both hemispheres. The analysis was carried out by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry, inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry and instrumental neutron activation analysis methods. Accuracy and precision of the applied techniques were tested by using standard reference materials. Two digestion methods were used to dissolve the brain samples for ICP-AES and GF-AAS. One was performed in a Parr-bomb and the second in a microwave oven. The present results show a non-homogeneous distribution of the essential elements (Cu, Fe, Mn, Zn) in normal human brain. Corresponding regions in both hemispheres showed an almost identical concentration of these elements. In the case of toxic elements (Pb, Cd) an average value in different brain regions can not be established because of the high variability of individual data. This study indicates that beside differences in Pb and Cd intake with foods or cigarette smoke inhalation, the main factors of the high inter-individual variability of these element concentrations in human brain parts may be a marked difference in individual elimination or accumulation capabilities.


Talanta | 2011

Microanalytical method development for Fe, Cu and Zn determination in colorectal cancer cells

Zsófia Polgári; Zsolt Ajtony; P. Kregsamer; C. Streli; Victor G. Mihucz; Andrea Réti; Barna Budai; Judit Kralovánszky; Norbert Szoboszlai; Gyula Záray

Microanalytical methods suitable for the determination of Fe, Cu in HT-29 (human colon adenocarcinoma) cells treated with different iron compounds (Fe(II) sulfate, Fe(III) chloride, Fe(III) citrate and Fe(III) transferrin) and cultured in medium supplemented or not with 10% (v/v) fetal calf serum (FCS) by total reflection X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (TXRF) and simultaneous graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GF-AAS) were developed. The developed TXRF method was also suitable for Zn determination in the samples. The main advantage of the proposed methods is the execution of all sample preparation steps following incubation and prior to the elemental analysis in the same Eppendorf tubes. Sample preparation was performed at microscale (115 μL sample volume) with 65% nitric acid and 30% hydrogen peroxide. According to scanning electron microscopic measurements, the organic matrix of the cell samples could be eliminated to the extent that accurate results were obtained for Cu and Fe by analyzing the same samples by TXRF and GF-AAS. Concerning the iron uptake, HT-29 cells incubated in FCS-free medium contained Fe in cca. 5-50 times higher amounts compared to cells cultured in FCS supplemented medium. Pronounced differences in the iron uptake compared to the iron supply (inorganic vs. organic chelated as well as iron(II) vs. iron(III)) were observed in the case of cell lines incubated in FCS-free medium.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2012

Impact of two iron(III) chelators on the iron, cadmium, lead and nickel accumulation in poplar grown under heavy metal stress in hydroponics.

Victor G. Mihucz; Árpád Csog; Ferenc Fodor; Enikő Tatár; Norbert Szoboszlai; Luminiţa Silaghi-Dumitrescu; Gyula Záray

Poplar (Populus jacquemontiana var. glauca cv. Kopeczkii) was grown in hydroponics containing 10 μM Cd(II), Ni(II) or Pb(II), and Fe as Fe(III) EDTA or Fe(III) citrate in identical concentrations. The present study was designed to compare the accumulation and distribution of Fe, Cd, Ni and Pb within the different plant compartments. Generally, Fe and heavy-metal accumulation were higher by factor 2-7 and 1.6-3.3, respectively, when Fe(III) citrate was used. Iron transport towards the shoot depended on the Fe(III) chelate and, generally, on the heavy metal used. Lead was accumulated only in the root. The amounts of Fe and heavy metals accumulated by poplar were very similar to those of cucumber grown in an identical way, indicating strong Fe uptake regulation of these two Strategy I plants: a cultivar and a woody plant. The Strategy I Fe uptake mechanism (i.e. reducing Fe(III) followed by Fe(II) uptake), together with the Fe(III) chelate form in the nutrient solution had significant effects on Fe and heavy metal uptake. Poplar appears to show phytoremediation potential for Cd and Ni, as their transport towards the shoot was characterized by 51-54% and 26-48% depending on the Fe(III) supply in the nutrient solution.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2012

Determination of trace elements in lithium niobate crystals by solid sampling and solution-based spectrometry methods

László Bencs; Krisztina György; Márta Kardos; János Osán; Bálint Alföldy; Imre Varga; Zsolt Ajtony; Norbert Szoboszlai; Zsolt Stefánka; Éva Széles; László Kovács

Solid sampling (SS) graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS) and solution-based (SB) methods of GFAAS, flame atomic absorption spectrometry (FAAS), inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) were elaborated and/or optimized for the determination of Cr, Fe and Mn trace elements used as dopants in lithium niobate optical crystals. The calibration of the SS-GFAAS analysis was possible with the application of the three-point-estimation standard addition method, while the SB methods were mostly calibrated against matrix-matched and/or acidic standards. Spectral and non-spectral interferences were studied in SB-GFAAS after digestion of the samples. The SS-GFAAS method required the use of less sensitive spectral lines of the analytes and a higher internal furnace gas (Ar) flow rate to decrease the sensitivity for crystal samples of higher (doped) analyte content. The chemical forms of the matrix produced at various stages of the graphite furnace heating cycle, dispensed either as a solid sample or a solution (after digestion), were studied by means of the X-ray near-edge absorption structure (XANES). These results revealed that the solid matrix vaporized/deposited in the graphite furnace is mostly present in the metallic form, while the dry residue from the solution form mostly vaporized/deposited as the oxide of niobium.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2014

Determination of energy metabolites in cancer cells by porous graphitic carbon liquid chromatography electrospray ionization mass spectrometry for the assessment of energy metabolism

Norbert Szoboszlai; Xinghua Guo; Olivér Ozohanics; Julianna Oláh; Ágnes Gömöry; Victor G. Mihucz; A. Jeney; Károly Vékey

A high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) tandem mass spectrometric (MS/MS) method has been developed for the simultaneous determination of fifteen glucose, or acetate derived metabolites isolated from tumor cells. Glycolytic and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolites as well as acidic amino acids were separated on a HPLC porous graphitic carbon (PGC) column and simultaneously determined by means of triple quadrupole MS/MS using multiple reaction monitoring (MRM). Target compounds were eluted within 10 min with 8% v/v formic acid as an electronic modifier added to a 4:1 v/v methanol water mobile phase. The calibration is linear in the 1-100 μM concentration range for each analyte. The limit of detection ranges between 0.39 and 2.78 μM for the analytes concerned. To test the PGC-HPLC-MS/MS method in metabolomic studies, ZR-75.1 human mammary adenocarcinoma cells were labeled with U-(13)C glucose or 1-(13)C acetate. Applying the MRM mode, the incorporation of (13)C into metabolites, isolated from the tumor cells, and derived from glucose or acetate, could be properly identified.

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Victor G. Mihucz

Eötvös Loránd University

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Gyula Záray

Eötvös Loránd University

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Zsolt Ajtony

University of West Hungary

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C. Streli

Vienna University of Technology

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László Bencs

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Zsófia Polgári

Eötvös Loránd University

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D. Ingerle

Vienna University of Technology

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Anikó Gaál

Eötvös Loránd University

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Erzsébet Andrási

Eötvös Loránd University

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