4.7 Article

Characterization of molecular and apical effects of legacy-contaminated groundwater on early life stages of fathead minnows

Journal

AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY
Volume 264, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2023.106734

Keywords

Risk assessment; Groundwater; Swimming behavior; Transcriptomics; EcoToxChip; New Approach Methods; Fish

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This study applied a novel transcriptomics tool, EcoToxChips, to characterize the effects of complex mixtures of contaminants in fish. The results show that concentration-dependent disruption of swimming behaviors, deformities, and mortality were observed in response to the contaminants. EcoToxChip analyses revealed different gene regulation patterns at different concentrations, with genes involved in oxidative stress, metabolic processes, growth, cell death, and signal transduction signaling processes being significantly differentially regulated. The findings suggest that molecular response patterns could be linked to apical outcomes in this study.
Mechanistic toxicology approaches represent a promising alternative to traditional live animal testing; however, the often-noted uncertainties concerning the linkages between effects observed at molecular and apical levels curtails the adoption of such approaches. The objective of this study was to apply a novel transcriptomics tool, EcoToxChips, to characterize the effects of complex mixtures of contaminants in fish and to compare molecular response patterns to higher-level biological responses including swimming behavior, deformities, and mortality. Fathead minnow (FHM) embryos were exposed for seven days to increasing concentrations of groundwater collected from moderate (MIAZ) and high (HIAZ) industrial activity zones of a legacy contaminated site. There was a concentration-dependent disruption of photo-dependent swimming responses associated with avoidance behavior patterns and spinal deformities (HIAZ and MIAZ), and an induction of pericardial edema and mortality (HIAZ-10%). Parallel EcoToxChip analyses showed a shift from a majority of upregulated genes at lower con-centrations to a majority of downregulated genes at higher concentrations for both treatment conditions. Many of the significantly differentially regulated genes were involved in biological pathways including induction of oxidative stress, activating of several metabolic processes and growth, cell death, and inhibition of signal transduction signaling processes. Several contaminants present in the groundwater mixtures could have contributed to an exceedance of antioxidant system capacities that possibly led to the deformities, altered swimming behaviours, and mortality observed in FHMs. Therefore, molecular response patterns could be linked to apical outcomes observed in this study. Overall, the results observed in this study demonstrate that tran-scriptomics approaches such as the EcoToxChip system could be supportive of risk assessment of complex contaminated sites.

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