PUBLICATION

Environmentally relevant concentration of chromium induces nuclear deformities in erythrocytes and alters the expression of stress-responsive and apoptotic genes in brain of adult zebrafish

Authors
Shaw, P., Mondal, P., Bandyopadhyay, A., Chattopadhyay, A.
ID
ZDB-PUB-191127-5
Date
2019
Source
The Science of the total environment   703: 135622 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Keywords
Apoptosis, Chromium, Micronucleus, Neurotoxicity, Reverse transcription, qRT-PCR
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Antioxidants/metabolism
  • Brain/drug effects*
  • Catalase/metabolism
  • Chromium/toxicity*
  • Erythrocytes/drug effects*
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity*
  • Zebrafish/metabolism
PubMed
31767327 Full text @ Sci. Total Environ.
Abstract
Heavy metal contamination of water body has become a serious threat to aquatic life forms specially to fish. Hexavalent chromium (Cr [VI]) is one of the most potent heavy metal toxicant. It is present in aquatic environment at concentrations beyond permissible limit. Considering the fact that toxic effects are function of the exposure concentration, studies involving toxicological risk assessment should be done at environmentally relevant concentration. Therefore we studied the toxic effects of Cr [VI] to zebrafish at an environmentally relevant concentration (2 mg L-1). We monitored the genotoxic potential of Cr [VI] in erythrocytes through a simple reliable microscopic assay and found an increase in frequency of micronucleated erythrocytes along with erythrocytes with blebbed, lobed and notched nuclei. In addition, Cr [VI] induced neurotoxicity, being a least reported event was also investigated. Histological alterations in brain, elevated GSH and MDA content and increased catalase activity indicated oxidative stress-mediated damage. This was further confirmed through expressional alteration of Ucp2. Upregulation of Nrf2, Nqo1 and Ho1 clearly indicated the involvement of Nrf2-ARE system in stress response against Cr [VI] induced neurotoxicity. The transcriptional induction of apoptotic genes such as Bax, Caspase 9 and Caspase 3 along with downregulation of Bcl2 indicated that the cytoprotective system failed to counter the induced stress. Interestingly, there was upregulation of AChE gene, which could be correlated with the upregulated apoptotic genes. This study provides an insight on the neurotoxic stress of Cr [VI] on the zebrafish yet at an environmentally relevant concentration. Moreover the induction of nuclear anomalies in the erythrocytes can serve as extremely sensitive endpoints of toxicological stress indicators of aquatic contaminants like Cr [VI].
Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping