| Literature DB >> 30353126 |
Luís Gabriel Antão Barboza1,2, Luís Russo Vieira3, Vasco Branco4, Cristina Carvalho4, Lúcia Guilhermino3.
Abstract
The presence of microplastics and several other pollutants in the marine environment is of growing concern. However, the knowledge on the toxicity of mixtures containing microplastics and other contaminants to marine species is still scarce. The main goals of this study were to investigate the oxidative stress and lipid oxidative damage potentially induced by 96 h of exposure to mercury (0.010 and 0.016 mg/L), microplastics (0.26 and 0.69 mg/L), and mixtures of the two substances (same concentrations, full factorial) in the gills and liver of D. labrax juveniles, and the possible influence of microplastics on mercury bioconcentration (gills) and bioaccumulation (liver). The results indicate that the presence of microplastics in the water increased the concentration of mercury in gills and liver of D. labrax juveniles. Microplastics and mercury, alone and in mixtures, caused oxidative stress in both organs. Based on the total induction of antioxidant enzymatic activity, the type of toxicological interaction in fish exposed to the mixture containing the lowest concentration of the two substances was addition in gills, and addition or synergism in the liver. These results stress the need to further address the role of microplastics in the bioconcentration, bioaccumulation, and toxicity of other environmental contaminants in different species.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30353126 PMCID: PMC6199270 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-34125-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Concentrations of mercury (Hg) in Dicentrarchus labrax gills and liver (μg/g wet weight), bioconcentration factors (BCF) and bioaccumulation factors (BFA) after 96 hours of exposure.
| Treatments | Gills Hg Conc. (µg/g) | Post hoc test | BCF gills | Post hoc test | Liver Hg Conc. (µg/g) | Post hoc test | BAF liver | Post hoc test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hg low | 1.519 (±0.369) | A | 152 (±37) | a | 3.127 (±0.753) | A | 313 (±75) | a |
| Hg high | 2.836 (±0.535) | B | 177 (±33) | a,b | 5.419 (±1.826) | B | 339 (±92) | a |
| MPs low + Hg low | 2.670 (±0.918) | B | 267 (±92) | b,c | 2.571 (±0.903) | A | 257 (±86) | a |
| MPs low + Hg high | 4.310 (±0.965) | C | 269 (±60) | b,c | 4.370 (±2.296) | A,B | 273 (±96) | a |
| MPs high + Hg low | 2.995 (±1.158) | B | 300 (±86) | c | 5.040 (±1.179) | B | 504 (±87) | b |
| MPs high + Hg high | 4.825 (±0.881) | C | 302 (±55) | c | 8.169 (±1.398) | C | 511 (±80) | b |
In the columns of concentrations, BCF and BAF, the values are the mean and standard deviation of nine replicates (fish) after discounting the mean of control group. For each data set (i.e. gills or liver mercury concentrations, BCF and BAF) different letters in the post-hoc test columns indicate statistical significant differences (Kruskal-Wallis test + non-parametric multicomparison test, p ≤ 0.05).
Figure 1Potential influence of microplastics on mercury bioconcentration and bioaccumulation by fish.
Figure 2Contribution of enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), glutathione S-transferase (GST), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and glutathione reductase (GR) in the antioxidant defense system of Dicentrarchus labrax (A – gills; B – liver). Numbers above the columns indicate the total induction (fold).
Figure 3Gills (A) and liver (B) lipid peroxidation (LPO) in Dicentrarchus labrax exposed for 96 h to microplastics (MPs), mercury (Hg) or mixtures of the two substances. The values are the mean per treatment (9 animals) with corresponding standard error bars (SEM). Different letters indicate statistically significant differences between treatments (p < 0.05, Tukey test).
Figure 4Experimental design scheme.