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Androgenic activation, impairment of the monoaminergic system and altered behavior in zebrafish larvae exposed to environmental concentrations of fenitrothion

  • Melissa Faria
  • , Eva Prats
  • , Jonathan Ricardo Rosas Ramírez
  • , Marina Bellot
  • , Juliette Bedrossiantz
  • , Maria Pagano
  • , Arnau Valls
  • , Cristian Gomez-Canela
  • , Josep M. Porta
  • , Jordi Mestres
  • , Natalia Garcia-Reyero
  • , Caterina Faggio
  • , Leobardo Manuel Gómez Oliván
  • , Demetrio Raldua*
  • *Autor/a de correspondencia de este trabajo

Producción científica: Artículo en revista indizadaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

66 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Fenitrothion is an organophosphorus insecticide usually found in aquatic ecosystems at concentrations in the range of low ng/L. In this manuscript we show that 24 h exposure to environmental concentrations of fenitrothion, from ng/L to low μg/L, altered basal locomotor activity, visual-motor response and acoustic/vibrational escape response of zebrafish larvae. Furthermore, fenitrothion and expression of gap43a, gfap, atp2b1a, and mbp exhibited a significant non-monotonic concentration-response relationship. Once determined that environmental concentrations of fenitrothion were neurotoxic for zebrafish larvae, a computational analysis identified potential protein targets of this compound. Some of the predictions, including interactions with acetylcholinesterase, monoamine-oxidases and androgen receptor (AR), were experimentally validated. Binding to AR was the most suitable candidate for molecular initiating event, as indicated by both the up-regulation of cyp19a1b and sult2st3 and the non-monotonic relationship found between fenitrothion and the observed responses. Finally, when the integrity of the monoaminergic system was evaluated, altered levels of L-DOPA, DOPAC, HVA and 5-HIAA were found, as well as a significant up-regulation of slc18a2 expression at the lowest concentrations of fenitrothion. These data strongly suggest that concentrations of fenitrothion commonly found in aquatic ecosystems present a significant environmental risk for fish communities.

Idioma originalInglés
Número de artículo145671
PublicaciónScience of the Total Environment
Volumen775
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 25 jun 2021

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