Mikko Nikinmaa
Ph.D., Professor of Zoology; FT, Eläintieteen professori
miknik@utu.fi +358 29 450 4222 +358 50 435 1637 Vesilinnantie 5 Turku |
animal physiology; fish biology; aquatic toxicology; environmental biology; respiration; membrane transport; gas transport
Mikko Nikinmaa got his high school diploma (International Baccalaureate)
from the United World College of the Atlantic, Llantwit Major, U.K. His
university education including the Ph. D. degree he accomplished at
University of Helsinki, Finland. He did postdoctoral work in Odense
University, Denmark, and Stanford University, USA. Thereafter he worked
in the University of Helsinki with research visits to University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, and Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova
Scotia. In 1995 he was appointed Professor of Zoology in the University
of Turku. He was the President of Scandinavian Physiological Society in
1994-1996, and a member of National Research Council of Environment and
Natural Resources in 1995-1997. He served as a Dean of the Faculty of
Mathematics and Natural Sciences in 2000-2004, and was the director of
the Center of Excellence in Evolutionary Genetics and Physiology
(appointed by the Academy of Finland) in 2006-2011. He has been chief
editor of Aquatic Toxicology since 2004 and subject (respiratory and
comparative physiology) editor of Acta Physiologica since 1997.
Presently he is editorial board member in four journals. His more than 200 publications include the books "Vertebrate Red Blood
Cells" (1990, Springer) and "Introduction to Aquatic Toxicology" (2014, Elsevier), and a review on Membrane Transport and the
Control of Haemoglobin Oxygen Affinity in Physiological Reviews. He has
reviewed grant applications to agencies from more than ten different
countries, and served as an evaluator of academic positions in USA,
Canada, U.K., Sweden, South Africa and Finland. More than 30 journals
have used him as peer reviewer. His research interests lie in how
environmental changes, particularly temperature, oxygen and toxicants,
affect cellular functions especially in fish. An important aspect of
research is environmental regulation of gene expression, for example how
toxicants, oxygen and temperature changes affect transcription,
translation and protein stability.
Comparative Physiology, Ecophysiology, Ecotoxicology, Effects of Climate Change on Organism Function, Environmental Regulation of Gene Expression
Responsible Professor of Animal Physiology teaching; Ecophysiology and ecotoxicology as teaching areas
- Physiological adaptations (2017) Biological Oceanography of the Baltic Sea Schubert Hendrik, Telesh Irina, Nikinmaa Mikko, Skarlato Sergei
- Regulatory Architecture of Gene Expression Variation in the Threespine Stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus (2017)
- G3: genes, genomes, genetics
- Systemic Hypoxia Increases Circulating Concentration of Apelin in Humans (2017)
- High Altitude Medicine and Biology
- Transcriptomic Analysis of Young and Old Erythrocytes of Fish (2017)
- Frontiers in Physiology
- Different Relationship between hsp70 mRNA and hsp70 Levels in the Heat Shock Response of Two Salmonids with Dissimilar Temperature Preference (2016)
- Frontiers in Physiology
- DNA Barcoding Marine Biodiversity: Steps from Mere Cataloguing to Giving Reasons for Biological Differences (2016) Marine Genomics: Methods and Protocols Mikko Nikinmaa, Miriam Götting
- Expiratory and sympathetic long-term facilitation and their interactions after acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH) (2016)
- Acta Physiologica
- Microarray analysis of di-n-butyl phthalate and 17 alpha ethinyl-oestradiol responses in three-spined stickleback testes reveals novel candidate genes for endocrine disruption (2016)
- Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
- The effects of the painkiller diclofenac and hypoxia on gene transcription and antioxidant system in the gills of three-spined stickleback (2016)
- Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology - Part C: Toxicology and Pharmacology
- What changes a manuscript from just another one to an important contribution in aquatic toxicology: Points that increase the chances of work getting published in Aquatic Toxicology-and being rewarded (2016)
- Aquatic Toxicology
- An addition to the editorial team of Aquatic Toxicology and the responsibilities of the different editors (2015)
- Aquatic Toxicology
- Expression of Hemoglobin Related Proteins in Nucleated and Enucleated Red Blood Cells (2015)
- FASEB Journal
- Hypoxia and the pharmaceutical diclofenac influence the circadian responses of three-spined stickleback (2015)
- Aquatic Toxicology
- More than hemoglobin – the unexpected diversity of globins in vertebrate red blood cells (2015)
- Physiological Reports
- Oxidative stress biomarkers in the copepod Limnocalanus macrurus from the northern Baltic Sea: effects of hydrographic factors and chemical contamination (2015)
- Marine Ecology Progress Series
- Responses of marine animals to ocean acidification (2015) Climate Change and Marine and Freshwater Toxins Mikko Nikinmaa, Katja Anttila
- The Evolution and Adaptive Potential of Transcriptional Variation in Sticklebacks-Signatures of Selection and Widespread Heritability (2015)
- Molecular Biology and Evolution
- Warm acclimation and oxygen depletion induce species-specific responses in salmonids (2015)
- Journal of Experimental Biology
- An Introduction to Aquatic Toxicology (2014) Nikinmaa M
- Antioxidant status in relation to age, condition, reproductive performance and pollution in three passerine species (2014)
- Journal of Avian Biology