Molecular diagnostics in the age involving COVID19
0 and 16.0 mg L-1 in acute exposure, and 4.0 mg L-1 in chronic exposure. The study reinforces the risk that environmental pollutants pose to the ecosystem, even in low concentrations. Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivation in cadmium (Cd) polluted soil is a core concern to food quality and food security all over the world. Cadmium toxicity is mainly associated with a Cd influx from contaminated soils to human via grain consumption. Organic amendments are widely used for Cd immobilization and enhancement in plant growth, but the residual effects of these amendments are mostly unknown. The present study addressed the long-term effects of organic amendments in contaminated soils by evaluating their residual effects on 3rd crop (wheat) in the sequence. Initially six organic amendments viz. rice husk biochar (RHB), wheat-straw biochar (WSB), cotton-stick biochar (CSB), poultry manure (PM), press mud (PrMd) and farm manure (FM) were applied once at a rate of 2% in Cd (50 mg kg-1) contaminated soil with wheat-rice rotation. After the harvest of wheat and rice crops, wheat (Var. Galaxy) was again grown in the same pots. Results revealed that plants grown under Cd stress (without any amendment) contain more tissue (root, shoot and grain) and soil AB-DTPA extractable Cd. The soil amended with RHB has shown lowest AB-DTPA extractable Cd (69% lower than control). Similarly, RHB application has significantly reduced wheat root, shoot and grain Cd concentrations compared to control and other amendments. Results have confirmed the effectiveness of RHB residual contents as an active amendment for restriction of Cd in non-bioavailable pool of soil and better growth and yield of wheat. Selenium (Se) is the most common micronutrient and that becomes toxic when present at higher concentrations in aquatic environments. Astaxanthin (AST) has been documented to possess antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. The aim of this study was to explore the potential of dietary AST and Se exposure on oxidative stress, and inflammatory response in Channa argus. After acclimation, 540 fish were randomly distributed into nine groups housed in twenty-seven glass tanks. The fish were exposed for 8 weeks to waterborne Se at 0, 100 and 200 μg L-1 or dietary AST at 0, 50 and 100 mg kg-1. The results shown that Se accumulation in the kidney, liver, spleen, intestine and gill were significantly increased following Se exposure, dietary 50 and 100 mg kg-1 AST supplementation decreased the accumulation of Se in the kidney, liver, spleen, and intestine. In addition, AST supplementation can decrease oxidative stress and inflammatory response in the liver and spleen following exposure to waterborne Se. These results indicate that AST has the potential to alleviate the effects of Se toxicity in C. argus. Bacterial mercury oxidation coupled to denitrification offers great potential for simultaneous removal of elemental mercury (Hg0) and nitric oxide (NO) in a denitrifying membrane biofilm reactor (MBfR). Four potentially contributory mechanisms tested separately, namely, membrane gas separation, medium absorption, biosorption and biotransformation, which contributed 4.9%/7.2%, 8.1%/8.9%, 38.8%/9.5% and 48.2%/84.9% of overall Hg0/NO removal in MBfR. Herein, Hg0 bio-oxidation, oxidative Hg0 biosorption and denitrification played leading roles in simultaneous removal of Hg0 and NO. Living microbes performed simultaneous Hg0 bio-oxidation and denitrification, in which Hg0 as electron donor was biologically oxidized to oxidized mercury (Hg2+), while NO as the terminal electron acceptor was denitrified to N2. The Hg2+ further complexed with humic acids in extracellular polymeric substances via functional groups (-SH, -OH, -NH- and -COO-) and formed humic acids bound mercury (HA-Hg). Non-living microbial matrix performed oxidative Hg0 biosorption, in which Hg0 may be physically adsorbed by cellular matrix, then non-metabolically oxidized to Hg2+ via oxidative complexation with -SH in humic acids and finally cleavage of S-H bond and surface charge transfer led to formation of HA-Hg. Therefore, bioconversion of Hg0 to HA-Hg by Hg0 bio-oxidation and oxidative Hg0 biosorption coupled with NO denitrification to N2 dynamically cooperated to accomplish simultaneous removal of Hg0 and NO in MBfR. Environmentally friendly and cost-effective techniques are required to reclaim land degraded during mining activities. Bioaccumulation of heavy metals (HMs) in vegetables grown on contaminated soils can increase human health risks. The potential effects of hardwood biochar (HWB) was assessed for chromium (Cr), zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), manganese (Mn) and lead (Pb) bioavailability in mine-contaminated soils and their subsequently bioaccumulation in crops and associated health risk. HWB was applied to chromium-manganese mine contaminated soils at the rate of 3% to investigate the efficiency of HWB for the second crop in crop rotation technique. Cilantro (Coriandrum sativum) and spinach (Spinaccia oleracea) were grown as second crop in the same pots which were already used for rice cultivation as first crop (without adding further amendments). Application of HWB decreased the concentrations of Cr, Zn, Cu, Mn, and Pb in cilantro by 25.5%, 37.1%, 42.5%, 34.3%, and 36.2%, respectively as compared to control. In spinach, the reduction in concentrations of Cr was 75.0%, Zn 24.1%, Cu 70.1%, Mn 78.0%, and Pb 50.5% as compared to control. HWB significantly (P less then 0.01) reduced the HMs uptake in spinach cultivated in the amended soils as compared to the spinach in control. Bioaccumulation factor results also indicate that HWB decreased the bioaccumulation of selected HMs in cilantro and spinach, thus reducing health risks. Results of the study clearly demonstrate that the use of HWB can significantly reduce HMs in vegetables, associated health risk and improve food quality, therefore can be used as soil amendment for reclamation of mine-degraded soils. Chironomus dilutus is a prominent model species in conventional sediment toxicity testing and sediment contamination diagnosis. Quizartinib solubility dmso However, lack of genomic data significantly limited its application in identifying toxicological mode of action (MOA) and molecular biomarkers of toxicants. Here the transcriptome of C. dilutus in full life span and both sexes (1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th instar larvae, pupae, and adults) were developed and temporal gene expression across adjacent life stages were investigated to understand the regulation of development. Furthermore, transcriptional response of Midges (the 4th instar larvae) exposed to chemicals of different MOAs (CdCl2, nonylphenol and triclosan) were profiled based on the reference transcriptome. Consequently, a complete transcriptome of 31132 unigenes with N50 of 3117bp, covering 98.8% of the arthropod single-copy orthologs were assembled. While 364 genes were differentially expressed among adjacent larval stages, 7142 and 2127 of transcripts were significantly changed for the transition of larvae-pupae and pupae-adults, respectively.