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
- Circulating N-terminal brain natriuretic peptide and cardiac function in response to acute systemic hypoxia in healthy humans (2014)
- Journal of Translational Medicine
- Differences in the Metabolic Response to Temperature Acclimation in Nine-Spined Stickleback (Pungitius pungitius) Populations From Contrasting Thermal Environments (2014)
- Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological Genetics and Physiology
- Hypoxia increases the release of salmon cardiac peptide (sCP) from the heart of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) under constant mechanical load in vitro (2014)
- Fish Physiology and Biochemistry
- Hypoxic conditions stimulate the release of B-type natriuretic peptide from human retinal pigment epithelium cell culture. (2014)
- Acta Ophthalmologica
- Revisiting redox-active antioxidant defenses in response to hypoxic challenge in both hypoxia-tolerant and hypoxia-sensitive fish species (2014)
- Fish Physiology and Biochemistry
- Spatial Variation in Transcript and Protein Abundance of Atlantic Salmon during Feeding Migration in the Baltic Sea (2014)
- Environmental Science and Technology
- Transcriptional divergence of the duplicated hypoxia-inducible factor alpha genes in zebrafish (2014)
- Gene
- What is biodiversity? Stepping forward from barcoding to understanding biological differences (2014)
- Marine Genomics
- Climate change and ocean acidification Interactions with aquatic toxicology (2013)
- Aquatic Toxicology
- Control of mucus secretion in airway inflammation - what is required to infer functions? (2013)
- Acta Physiologica
- Corticosterone secretion patterns prior to spring and autumn migration differ in free-living barn swallows (Hirundo rustica L.) (2013)
- Oecologia
- Developmental transcription of genes putatively associated with growth in two sturgeon species of different growth rate (2013)
- General and Comparative Endocrinology
- Environmental variations and toxicological responses (2013)
- Aquatic Toxicology
- Long-lasting effects of yolk androgens on phenotype in the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) (2013)
- Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
- Open access publishing in Aquatic Toxicology (2013)
- Aquatic Toxicology
- Oxidative status in nestlings of three small passerine species exposed to metal pollution (2013)
- Science of the Total Environment
- Oxygen and natriuretic peptide secretion from the heart (2013)
- International Journal of Cardiology
- Resistance to oxidative damage but not immunosuppression by organic tin compounds in natural populations of Daubenton's bats (Myotis daubentonii) (2013)
- Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology - Part C: Toxicology and Pharmacology
- SUBFUNCTIONALIZATION OF CYPRINID HYPOXIA-INDUCIBLE FACTORS FOR ROLES IN DEVELOPMENT AND OXYGEN SENSING (2013)
- Evolution
- The time course of L-gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase expression during the larval ontogeny of fish (Acipenser persicus) (2013)
- Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology