Combined Toxicity of Xenobiotics Bisphenol A and Heavy Metals on Zebrafish Embryos ( Danio rerio ).
Davide Di PaolaFabiano CapparucciGiovanni LanteriMarika CordaroRosalia CrupiRosalba SiracusaRamona D'amicoRoberta FuscoDaniela ImpellizzeriSalvatore CuzzocreaNunziacarla SpanòEnrico GugliandoloAlessio Filippo PeritorePublished in: Toxics (2021)
Environmental pollutants may cause adverse effects on the immune system of aquatic organisms. This study revealed that combination of environmental pollutants and Bisphenol A(BPA) could cause an acute inflammatory response in zebrafish larvae as shown by body alterations, which may imply a common immunotoxicity mechanism for most environmental pollutants. In the present study we evaluated the toxicity after co-exposure of BPA and Cd or Cr (III) in zebrafish embryos and larvae, and the oxidative stress pathway involved. Evaluation of lethal and developmental endpoints such as hatching, edema, malformations, abnormal heart rate and survival rate were evaluated after 96 h of exposure. Combination of BPA at 10 μM with Cd or Cr at 0.5 μM exposure induce malformations at 96 hpf in zebrafish larvae, as well as significantly increases oxidative stress and induce apoptosis on larvae. Our study suggested how environmental pollutant showed a synergistic effect at common not-effective doses, promoting decrease of antioxidant defense and contrasted fish development.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- heavy metals
- heart rate
- inflammatory response
- blood pressure
- dna damage
- risk assessment
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- cell death
- heart rate variability
- aedes aegypti
- single cell
- emergency department
- drosophila melanogaster
- zika virus
- cell proliferation
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- climate change
- heat shock
- health risk assessment
- health risk
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- adverse drug