| Literature DB >> 31655297 |
Siwen Kuang1, Qijun Le2, Jiabao Hu1, Yajun Wang3, Na Yu1, Xiaohuan Cao1, Man Zhang1, Yibo Sun1, Weiwei Gu1, Yang Yang1, Youyi Zhang1, Yaya Li1, Hanwei Liu4, Xiaojun Yan5.
Abstract
p-Nitrophenol (PNP) is one type of environmental pollutant, which is difficult to degrade and soluble in water. To investigate the effects of PNP on economically important marine fish species, we subjected Larimichthys crocea juvenile to five different concentrations of PNP for 96 h, and the semi-lethal concentration (LC50) was 6.218 mg/L. Then we collected the liver, kidney, and gill tissues to determine enzyme activity and gene expression levels, and analyzed histological changes. In histological analysis, the gills showed curling of lamella, epithelial lifting and hyperplasia; the parenchymal structure of hepatocytes was significantly damaged, with severe vacuolation and loss of original structure. The renal cells were damaged too, with congestion and renal tubular necrosis. Catalase and superoxide dismutase both showed an up- and down-tendency with the rise of concentration in the three tissues, and GSH-px had similar trend in the kidney, which decreased at 8 mg/L in the liver but showed no significant differences in the gills. Malondialdehyde of three tissues was increased with an increase in PNP concentration. The expression of four detoxification (cyp450, gst, gpx, hsp70) and one immune-related (mhc II) genes was induced at low PNP concentrations but inhibited at high PNP concentrations in the kidney. In liver, cyp450, hsp70 and mhc II showed similar trend but gst and gpx didn't increase at low PNP concentrations. Our results indicate that the fish possesses the ability to detoxify PNP; however, at high concentrations, PNP still causes serious damage to them. Our data not only help in understanding the ability of L. crocea to detoxify PNP but also should serve as a basis for the study of toxic effects of nitrobenzenes on marine fish.Entities:
Keywords: Detoxification genes; Fish toxicology; LC50; Marine pollution; Nitrobenzene compounds
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31655297 DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpc.2019.108638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol ISSN: 1532-0456 Impact factor: 3.228