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Potential Link between Equol Pollution and Field-Observed Intersex in Wild So-iuy Mullets (Mugil soiuy).

Chen WangLihui AnShimin WuAi JiaJianxian SunChong HuangDi MuJianying Hu
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2020)
Gonadal intersex has been observed in wild fishes and is attributed to endocrine-disrupting chemicals but the specific causes remain controversial. Here, a forensic analysis utilizing field and laboratory studies was conducted to explore the causal agent(s). In a 2008-2009 survey of Liaodong Bay, China, 20.7-33.3% incidences of gonadal intersex were observed in male so-iuy mullets (Mugil soiuy), a wild sentinel fish species. Steroidal estrogen (estrone, 17β-estradiol, estriol, and ethinylestradiol) and phytoestrogen (equol) were detected in seawater where the fishes were collected with median concentrations of 0.42 ng/L (0.02-1.42 ng/L) E2 equivalent (EEQ-E2) and 22.81 ng/L (0.10-155.99 ng/L) equol. A probabilistic model was used to evaluate the ecological risk of these estrogenic chemicals based on their distribution in the field and dose-response relationship from the laboratory surrogate Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) fish. The probability of the incidences of gonadal intersex due to equol exposure was estimated to be 13.5 ± 12.1%, which is considerably higher than that for EEQ-E2, (7.2 ± 68.8) × 10-4. The agonistic activity of equol to the estrogen receptor α of so-iuy mullets was 3.5-fold higher than that to the estrogen receptor α of Japanese medaka, indicating that equol shows a stronger potential for inducing intersex in so-iuy mullets than in medaka. These results demonstrate that equol, rather than steroid estrogens, is a more likely causal agent for the field-observed intersex in male wild so-iuy mullets.
Keyphrases
  • estrogen receptor
  • human health
  • genetic diversity
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • particulate matter
  • high resolution
  • water quality