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Chronic exposure to a pervasive pharmaceutical pollutant erodes among-individual phenotypic variation in a fish
2020
Shan, Hong | Polverino, Giovanni | Martin, Jake M. | Bertram, Michael G. | Wiles, Sarah C. | Palacios, Maria M. | Bywater, Candice L. | White, Craig R. | Wong, Bob B.M.
Pharmaceutical pollution is now recognised as a major emerging agent of global change. Increasingly, pharmaceutical pollutants are documented to disrupt ecologically important physiological and behavioural traits in exposed wildlife. However, little is known about potential impacts of pharmaceutical exposure on among-individual variation in these traits, despite phenotypic diversity being critical for population resilience to environmental change. Furthermore, although wildlife commonly experience multiple stressors contemporaneously, potential interactive effects between pharmaceuticals and biological stressors—such as predation threat—remain poorly understood. To redress this, we investigated the impacts of long-term exposure to the pervasive pharmaceutical pollutant fluoxetine (Prozac®) on among-individual variation in metabolic and behavioural traits, and the combined impacts of fluoxetine exposure and predation threat on mean metabolic and behavioural traits in a freshwater fish, the guppy (Poecilia reticulata). Using a mesocosm system, guppy populations were exposed for 15 months to one of two field-realistic levels of fluoxetine (nominal concentrations: 30 and 300 ng/L) or a solvent control. Fish from these populations were then tested for metabolic rate (oxygen uptake) and behaviour (activity), both before and after experiencing one of three levels of a predation treatment: an empty tank, a non-predatory fish (Melanotaenia splendida) or a predatory fish (Leiopotherapon unicolor). Guppies from both fluoxetine treatments had ∼70% lower among-individual variation in their activity levels, compared to unexposed fish. Similarly, fluoxetine exposure at the higher dosage was associated with a significant (26%) reduction in individual-level variation in oxygen uptake relative to unexposed fish. In addition, mean baseline metabolic rate was disrupted in low-fluoxetine exposed fish, although mean metabolic and behavioural responses to predation threat were not affected. Overall, our study demonstrates that long-term exposure to a pervasive pharmaceutical pollutant alters ecologically relevant traits in fish and erodes among-individual variability, which may be detrimental to the stability of contaminated populations globally.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Effects of ketoprofen on rice seedlings: Insights from photosynthesis, antioxidative stress, gene expression patterns, and integrated biomarker response analysis
2020
Wang, Huan | Jin, Mingkang | Xu, Linglin | Xi, Hao | Wang, Binhui | Du, Shaoting | Liu, Huijun | Wen, Yuezhong
Pharmacologically active compounds found in reclaimed wastewater irrigation or animal manure fertilizers pose potential risks for agriculture. The mechanism underlying the effects of ketoprofen on rice (Oryza sativa L.) seedlings was investigated. The results showed that low concentrations (0.5 mg L⁻¹) of ketoprofen slightly stimulate growth of rice seedlings, while high concentrations can significantly inhibit growth by reducing biomass and causing damage to roots. Ketoprofen affects photosynthetic pigment content (Chla, Chlb, and carotenoids) and chlorophyll synthesis gene (HEMA, HEMG, CHLD, CHLG, CHLM, and CAO) expression. Fluorescence parameters such as minimum fluorescence (F₀), maximum fluorescence (Fₘ), variable fluorescence (Fᵥ), potential photosynthetic capacity (Fᵥ/F₀), maximum quantum efficiency of PSII photochemistry (Fᵥ/Fₘ), electron transfer rate (ETR), and Y(II), Y(NPQ), Y(NO) values were affected, showing photosynthetic electron transfer was blocked. Active oxygen radical (O₂•−and H₂O₂), malondialdehyde and proline content increased. Superoxide dismutase, catalase and ascorbate peroxidase activities, glutathione content and antioxidant-related gene (FSD1, MSD1, CSD1, CSD2, CAT1, CAT2, CAT3, APX1, APX2) expression were induced. Higher integrated biomarker response values of eight oxidative stress response indexes were obtained at higher ketoprofen concentrations. Ultrastructure observation showed that ketoprofen causes cell structure damage, chloroplast swelling, increase in starch granules, and reduction in organelles. This study provides some suggested toxicological mechanisms and biological response indicators in rice due to stress from pharmacologically active compounds.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Levels, spatial distribution, and source identification of airborne environmentally persistent free radicals from tree leaves
2020
Environmentally persistent free radicals (EPFRs) are receiving increasing concern due to their toxicity and ubiquity in the environment. To avoid restrictions imposed when using a high-volume active sampler, this study uses tree leaves to act as passive samplers to investigate the spatial distribution characteristics and sources of airborne EPFRs. Tree leaf samples were collected from 120 sites in five areas around China (each approximately 4 km × 4 km). EPFR concentrations in particles (<2 μm) on the surface of 110 leaf samples were detected, ranging from 7.5 × 10¹⁶ to 4.5 × 10¹⁹ spins/g. For the 10 N.D. samples, they were all collected from areas inaccessible by vehicles. The g-values of EPFRs on 68% leaf samples were larger than 2.004, suggesting the electron localized on the oxygen atom, and they were consistent with the road dust sample (g-value: 2.0042). Significant positive correlation was found between concentrations of elemental carbon (tracer of vehicle emissions) and EPFRs. Spatial distribution mapping showed that EPFR levels in various land uses differed noticeably. Although previous work has linked atmospheric EPFRs to waste incineration, the evidence in this study suggests that vehicle emissions, especially from heavy-duty vehicles, are the main sources. While waste incinerators with low emissions or effective dust-control devices might not be an important EPFR contributor. According to our estimation, over 90% of the EPFRs deposited on tree leaves might be attributed to automotive exhaust emissions, as a synergistic effect of primary exhausts and degradation of aromatic compounds in road dust. With adding the trapping agent into the particle samples (<2 μm), signals of hydroxyl radicals were observed. This indicates that EPFRs collected from this phytosampling method can lead to the release of reactive oxygen species (ROS) once they are inhaled by human beings. Thus, this study helps highlight EPFR “hotspots” for potential health risk identification.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]An urban polluted river as a significant hotspot for water–atmosphere exchange of CH4 and N2O
2020
Wang, Rui | Zhang, Han | Zhang, Wei | Zheng, Xunhua | Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus | Li, Siqi | Han, Shenghui
Polluted urban river systems might be a strong source of atmospheric methane (CH₄) and nitrous oxide (N₂O), but so far only a few urban river systems have been quantified with regard to their source strength for greenhouse gases (GHGs). In this study, we measured loads of dissolved inorganic nitrogen and organic carbon, dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations, and fluxes of CH₄ and N₂O from an urban river in Beijing, China during the course of an entire year. Fluxes calculated using the floating chamber approach or via the diffusion method with measurements of river water GHG concentrations showed comparable temporal variations. However, the flux magnitude based on the diffusion method was found to strongly depend on the underlying parameterization of the gas transfer velocity. In view of the large differences while applying different methodologies to estimate surface water GHG fluxes further studies are still needed to prove and eventually quantify the systematic errors which are likely caused by either the chamber technique or the approaches of individual diffusion models. For both the floating chamber and the diffusion-based flux estimates, strong seasonal variations in CH₄ and N₂O fluxes from the river surface were observed, with fluxes ranging from 3 to 8374 μg C m⁻² h⁻¹ for CH₄ and 1–3986 μg N m⁻² h⁻¹ for N₂O. The CH₄ fluxes were strongly negatively correlated with the DO concentration (P < 0.01). The highest N₂O fluxes were observed at times with low CH₄ fluxes (i.e., in spring and autumn). Annual CH₄ and N₂O fluxes totaled 19.3–79.4 and 17.4–44.8 kg C (N) ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹, respectively. These high fluxes are in agreement with estimates from the few other studies carried out for urban river systems to date and indicate that urban polluted river systems are a significant regional source of atmospheric GHGs.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Low endogenous NO levels in roots and antioxidant systems are determinants for the resistance of Arabidopsis seedlings grown in Cd
2020
Terrón-Camero, Laura C. | del Val, Coral | Sandalio, Luisa M. | Romero-Puertas, María C.
Cadmium (Cd), which is a toxic non-essential heavy metal capable of entering plants and thus the food chain, constitutes a major environmental and health concern worldwide. An understanding of the tools used by plants to overcome Cd stress could lead to the production of food crops with lower Cd uptake capacity and of plants with greater Cd uptake potential for phytoremediation purposes in order to restore soil efficiency in self-sustaining ecosystems. The signalling molecule nitric oxide (NO), whose function remains unclear, has recently been involved in responses to Cd stress. Using different mutants, such as nia1nia2, nox1, argh1-1 and Atnoa1, which were altered in NO metabolism, we analysed various parameters related to reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS) metabolism and seedling fitness following germination and growth under Cd treatment conditions for seven days. Seedling roots were the most affected, with an increase in ROS and RNS observed in wild type (WT) seedling roots, leading to increased oxidative damage and fitness loss. Mutants that showed lower NO levels in seedling roots under Cd stress were more resistant than WT seedlings due to the maintenance of antioxidant systems which protect against oxidative damage.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Hazardous impact of diclofenac exposure on the behavior and antioxidant defense system in Nauphoeta cinerea
2020
Adedara, Isaac A. | Awogbindin, Ifeoluwa O. | Afolabi, Blessing A. | Ajayi, Babajide O. | Rocha, Joao B.T. | Farombi, Ebenezer O.
Environmental pollution by pharmaceuticals such as diclofenac (DCF) is globally acknowledged to be a threat to the ecosystems. Nauphoeta cinerea is an important insect with valuable ecological role. The present investigation aimed to elucidate the impact of DCF on insects by assessing the behavior and antioxidant defense response in nymphs of N. cinerea exposed to DCF-contaminated food at 0, 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 μg kg⁻¹ feed for 42 successive days. Subsequent to exposure period, neurobehavioral analysis using video-tracking software in a novel apparatus was performed before estimation of biochemical endpoints in the head, midgut and hemolymph of the insects. Results indicated that DCF-exposed insects exhibited marked reduction in the maximum speed, total distance traveled, mobile episodes, total mobile time, body rotation, absolute turn angle and path efficiency, whereas the total freezing time was increased compared with the control. The diminution in the exploratory activities of DCF-exposed insects was substantiated by heat maps and track plots. Additionally, DCF elicited marked diminution in antioxidant enzyme and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activities along with increase in nitric oxide (NO), reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS), and lipid peroxidation (LPO) levels in the head, midgut and hemolymph of the insects. Taken together, DCF elicited neurotoxicity and oxido-inflammatory stress in exposed insects. N. cinerea may be a suitable model insect for environmental risk assessment of pharmaceuticals in non-target insect species.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Hypoxia modifies the response to flutamide and linuron in male three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus)
2020
Fitzgerald, Jennifer A. | Trznadel, Maciej | Katsiadaki, Ioanna | Santos, Eduarda M.
Hypoxia is a major stressor in aquatic environments and it is frequently linked with excess nutrients resulting from sewage effluent discharges and agricultural runoff, which often also contain complex mixtures of chemicals. Despite this, interactions between hypoxia and chemical toxicity are poorly understood. We exposed male three-spined stickleback during the onset of sexual maturation to a model anti-androgen (flutamide; 250 μg/L) and a pesticide with anti-androgenic activity (linuron; 250 μg/L), under either 97% or 56% air saturation (AS). We assessed the effects of each chemical, alone and in combination with reduced oxygen concentration, by measuring the transcription of spiggin in the kidney, as a marker of androgen signalling, and 11 genes in the liver involved in some of the molecular pathways hypothesised to be affected by the exposures. Spiggin transcription was strongly inhibited by flutamide under both AS conditions. In contrast, for linuron, a strong inhibition of spiggin was observed under 97% AS, but this effect was supressed under reduced air saturation, likely due to interactions between the hypoxia inducible factor and the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) pathways. In the liver, hypoxia inducible factor 1α was induced following exposure to both flutamide and linuron, however this was independent of the level of air saturation. This work illustrates the potential for interactions between hypoxia and pollutants with endocrine or AhR agonist activity to occur, with implications for risk assessment and management.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Low O2 level enhances CH4-derived carbon flow into microbial communities in landfill cover soils
2020
He, Ruo | Su, Yao | Leewis, Mary-Cathrine | Chu, Yi-Xuan | Wang, Jing | Ma, Ruo-Chan | Wu, Donglei | Zhan, Liang-Tong | Herriott, Ian Charold | Leigh, Mary Beth
CH₄ oxidation in landfill cover soils plays a significant role in mitigating CH₄ release to the atmosphere. Oxygen availability and the presence of co-contaminants are potentially important factors affecting CH₄ oxidation rate and the fate of CH₄-derived carbon. In this study, microbial populations that oxidize CH₄ and the subsequent conversion of CH₄-derived carbon into CO₂, soil organic C and biomass C were investigated in landfill cover soils at two O₂ tensions, i.e., O₂ concentrations of 21% (“sufficient”) and 2.5% (“limited”) with and without toluene. CH₄-derived carbon was primarily converted into CO₂ and soil organic C in the landfill cover soils, accounting for more than 80% of CH₄ oxidized. Under the O₂-sufficient condition, 52.9%–59.6% of CH₄-derived carbon was converted into CO₂ (CECO₂₋C), and 29.1%–39.3% was converted into soil organic C (CEₒᵣgₐₙᵢc₋C). A higher CEₒᵣgₐₙᵢc₋C and lower CECO₂₋C occurred in the O₂-limited environment, relative to the O₂-sufficient condition. With the addition of toluene, the carbon conversion efficiency of CH₄ into biomass C and organic C increased slightly, especially in the O₂-limited environment. A more complex microbial network was involved in CH₄ assimilation in the O₂-limited environment than under the O₂-sufficient condition. DNA-based stable isotope probing of the community with ¹³CH₄ revealed that Methylocaldum and Methylosarcina had a higher relative growth rate than other type I methanotrophs in the landfill cover soils, especially at the low O₂ concentration, while Methylosinus was more abundant in the treatment with both the high O₂ concentration and toluene. These results indicated that O₂-limited environments could prompt more CH₄-derived carbon to be deposited into soils in the form of biomass C and organic C, thereby enhancing the contribution of CH₄-derived carbon to soil community biomass and functionality of landfill cover soils (i.e. reduction of CO₂ emission).
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Nano-FeS incorporated into stable lignin hydrogel: A novel strategy for cadmium removal from soil
2020
Liu, Yonglin | Huang, Yongdong | Zhang, Cong | Li, Wenyan | Chen, Chengyu | Zhang, Zhen | Chen, Huayi | Wang, Jinjin | Li, Yongtao | Zhang, Yulong
Strategies for reducing cadmium (Cd) content in polluted farmland soils are currently limited. A type of composite with nanoparticles incorporated into a hydrogel have been developed to efficiently remove heavy metals from sewage, but their application in soils faces challenges, such as organic hydrogel degradation due to oxygen exposure and slow Cd²⁺ release from soil constituents. To overcome these challenges, a composite with superior stability for long-term application in soil is required. In this study, ferrous sulfide (FeS) nanoparticle@lignin hydrogel composites were developed. The lignin-based hydrogels inherited lignin’s natural mechanical and environmental stability and the FeS nanoparticles efficiently adsorbed Cd²⁺ and enhanced Cd²⁺ desorption from soils by producing H⁺. The high sorption capacity (833.3 g kg⁻¹) of the composite was attributed to four proposed mechanisms, including cadmium sulfide (CdS) precipitation via chemical reaction (84.06%), lignin complexation (13.19%), hydrogel swelling (0.61%), and nanoparticle sorption (2.15%). In addition, Fe²⁺ displaced from the composite was gradually oxidized to form solid iron oxide hydroxide, which increased Cd²⁺ sorption. The composite significantly reduced the total, surfactant-soluble, and fixed Cd in heavily and lightly polluted paddy soils by 22.4–49.6%, 13.5–68.6%, and 40.1–16.6%, respectively, in 7 days.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Silver nanoparticle and Ag+-induced shifts of microbial communities in natural brackish waters: Are they more pronounced under oxic conditions than anoxic conditions?
2020
Zou, Xiaoyan | Li, Penghui | Wang, Xiaodan | Zheng, Shenghui | Dai, Fuqiang | Zhang, Hongwu
With the burst of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) applications, their potential entry into the environment has attracted increasing concern. To date, researches about the impacts of AgNPs on microbial communities have been scarcely conducted in the brackish waters. Here, the effects of interactions of AgNPs and Ag⁺ (as a positive control) with dissolved oxygen on natural brackish water microbial communities were investigated for 30 d. The introduction of AgNPs and Ag⁺ in natural brackish waters resulted in distinct bacterial community composition and structure as well as reduction of the richness and diversity, effects that were not eliminated completely during the tested periods. Anoxic conditions could attenuate the effects of AgNPs and Ag⁺ on the community, and dissolved oxygen made more contributions to community compositions for short-term exposure. High doses of AgNPs had more pronounced long-term impacts than Ag⁺ amendment. Compared with the controls, two general AgNP and Ag⁺ responses, namely, sensitivity and resistance, were observed. Sensitive species mainly included those of the genera Synechococcus and unclassified_f_Rhodobacteraceae, while resistant species mostly belonged to the phylum Bacteroidetes and participated in carbon metabolic processes. Our results indicated that the microbial communities that were involved in nutrient cycles (such as carbon, nitrogen, and sulfide) and photoautotrophic bacteria that contained bacteriochlorophyll were adversely affected by AgNPs and Ag⁺. In addition, dissolved oxygen could further change the microbial communities. These results implied that under different oxygen conditions AgNPs possibly resulted in varying microbial survival strategies and affected the biogeochemical cycling of nutrients in natural brackish waters.
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