PUBLICATION

Environmental glucocorticoids corticosterone, betamethasone and flumethasone induce more potent physiological than transcriptional effects in zebrafish embryos

Authors
Willi, R.A., Salgueiro-González, N., Faltermann, S., Hettich, T., Fent, K.
ID
ZDB-PUB-190408-2
Date
2019
Source
The Science of the total environment   672: 183-191 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Keywords
Betamethasone, Corticosterone, Flumethasone, Glucocorticoids, Physiological effects, Zebrafish embryos
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Betamethasone/toxicity*
  • Corticosterone/toxicity*
  • Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology*
  • Flumethasone/toxicity*
  • Glucocorticoids/toxicity*
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity*
  • Zebrafish/embryology*
  • Zebrafish/physiology
PubMed
30954817 Full text @ Sci. Total Environ.
Abstract
Many glucocorticoids occur in the aquatic environments but their adverse effects to fish are poorly known. Here we investigate effects of the natural glucocorticoid corticosterone and the synthetic glucocorticoids betamethasone and flumethasone in zebrafish embryos. Besides studying the effects of each steroid, we compared effects of natural with synthetic glucocorticoids, used as drugs. Exposure at concentrations of 1 μg/L and higher led to concentration-related decrease in spontaneous muscle contractions at 24 h post fertilization (hpf) and increase in heart rate at 48 hpf. Betamethasone showed a significant increase at 0.11 μg/L in heart rate. Corticosterone also accelerated hatching at 60 hpf at 0.085 μg/L. Transcription of up to 24 genes associated with different pathways showed alterations at 96 and 120 hpf for all glucocorticoids, although with low potency. Corticosterone caused transcriptional induction of interleukin-17, while betamethasone caused transcriptional down-regulation of the androgen receptor, aromatase and hsd11b2, indicating an effect on the sex hormone system. Furthermore, transcripts encoding proteins related to immune system regulation (irg1l, gilz) and fkbp5 were differentially expressed by corticosterone and betamethasone, while flumethasone caused only little effects, mainly alteration of the irg1l transcript. Our study shows that these glucocorticoids caused more potent physiological effects in early embryos than transcriptional alterations in hatched embryos, likely due to increased metabolism in later developmental stages. Thus, these glucocorticoids may be of concern for early stages of fish embryos in contaminated aquatic environments.
Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping