1.Developmental effects of TCIPP and TnBP on zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos.
Shu Yi ZHANG ; Shao Ping ZHANG ; Zi Jin SHAO ; Yuan Zheng FU ; Wen GU ; Hong ZHI ; Jian KONG ; Fu Chang DENG ; Wen Yan YAN ; Juan LIU ; Chao WANG ; Song TANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2023;57(5):693-700
Objective: To investigate the toxicity of tris (2-chloropropyl) phosphate (TCIPP) and tributyl phosphate (TnBP) on the growth and development of zebrafish embryos, as well as to explore the underlying mechanisms at the transcriptional level. Methods: With zebrafish as a model, two hpf zebrafish embryos were exposed to TCIPP and TnBP (0.1, 1, 10, 100, 500, and 1 000 μmol/L) using the semi-static method, and their rates of lethality and hatchability were determined. The transcriptome changes of 120 hpf juvenile zebrafish exposed to environmentally relevant concentrations of 0.1 and 1 μmol/L were measured. Results: The 50% lethal concentrations (LC50) of TCIPP and TnBP for zebrafish embryos were 155.30 and 27.62 μmol/L (96 hpf), 156.5 and 26.05 μmol/L (120 hpf), respectively. The 72 hpf hatching rates of TCIPP (100 μmol/L) and TnBP (10 μmol/L) were (23.33±7.72)% and (91.67±2.97)%, which were significantly decreased compared with the control group (P<0.05). Transcriptome analysis showed that TnBP had more differential genes (DEGs) than TCIPP, with a dose-response relationship. These DEGs were enriched in 32 pathways in total, including those involved in oxidative stress, energy metabolism, lipid metabolism, and nuclear receptor-related pathways, using the IPA pathway analysis. Among them, three enriched pathways overlapped between TCIPP and TnBP, including TR/RXR activation and CAR/RXR activation. Additionally, DEGs were also mapped onto pathways of LXR/RXR activation and oxidative stress for TnBP exposure only. Conclusion: Both TCIPP and TnBP have growth and developmental toxicities in zebrafish embryos, with distinct biomolecular mechanisms, and TnBP has a stronger effect than TCIPP.
Animals
;
Zebrafish/metabolism*
;
Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism*
;
Transcriptome
;
Oxidative Stress
;
Water Pollutants, Chemical/metabolism*
2.Adsorption of molybdenum by melanin.
Wei CHEN ; Kazunori HASHIMOTO ; Yasuhiro OMATA ; Nobutaka OHGAMI ; Akira TAZAKI ; Yuqi DENG ; Lisa KONDO-IDA ; Atsushi INTOH ; Masashi KATO
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2019;24(1):36-36
BACKGROUND:
Melanin is detectable in various sense organs including the skin in animals. It has been reported that melanin adsorbs toxic elements such as mercury, cadmium, and lead. In this study, we investigated the adsorption of molybdenum, which is widely recognized as a toxic element, by melanin.
METHODS:
Molybdenum level of the mouse skin was measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. The pigmentation level of murine skin was digitalized as the L* value by using a reflectance spectrophotometer. An in vitro adsorption assay was performed to confirm the interaction between molybdenum and melanin.
RESULTS:
Our analysis of hairless mice with different levels of skin pigmentation showed that the level of molybdenum increased with an increase in the level of skin pigmentation (L* value). Moreover, our analysis by Spearman's correlation coefficient test showed a strong correlation (r = - 0.9441, p < 0.0001) between L* value and molybdenum level. Our cell-free experiment using the Langmuir isotherm provided evidence for the adsorption of molybdenum by melanin. The maximum adsorption capacity of 1 mg of synthetic melanin for molybdenum was 131 μg in theory.
CONCLUSION
Our in vivo and in vitro results showed a new aspect of melanin as an adsorbent of molybdenum.
Adsorption
;
Animals
;
Melanins
;
chemistry
;
metabolism
;
Mice
;
Mice, Hairless
;
Mice, Transgenic
;
Molybdenum
;
chemistry
;
metabolism
;
pharmacology
;
Skin
;
chemistry
;
drug effects
;
Skin Pigmentation
;
drug effects
;
Water Pollutants, Chemical
;
chemistry
;
metabolism
;
pharmacology
3.Blood Pressure Associated with Arsenic Methylation and Arsenic Metabolism Caused by Chronic Exposure to Arsenic in Tube Well Water.
Bing Gan WEI ; Bi Xiong YE ; Jiang Ping YU ; Lin Sheng YANG ; Hai Rong LI ; Ya Juan XIA ; Ke Gong WU
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2017;30(5):334-342
OBJECTIVEThe effects of arsenic exposure from drinking water, arsenic metabolism, and arsenic methylation on blood pressure (BP) were observed in this study.
METHODSThe BP and arsenic species of 560 participants were determined. Logistic regression analysis was applied to estimate the odds ratios of BP associated with arsenic metabolites and arsenic methylation capability.
RESULTSBP was positively associated with cumulative arsenic exposure (CAE). Subjects with abnormal diastolic blood pressure (DBP), systolic blood pressure (SBP), and pulse pressure (PP) usually had higher urinary iAs (inorganic arsenic), MMA (monomethylated arsenic), DMA (dimethylated arsenic), and TAs (total arsenic) than subjects with normal DBP, SBP, and PP. The iAs%, MMA%, and DMA% differed slightly between subjects with abnormal BP and those with normal BP. The PMI and SMI were slightly higher in subjects with abnormal PP than in those with normal PP.
CONCLUSIONOur findings suggest that higher CAE may elevate BP. Males may have a higher risk of abnormal DBP, whereas females have a higher risk of abnormal SBP and PP. Higher urinary iAs may increase the risk of abnormal BP. Lower PMI may elevate the BP. However, higher SMI may increase the DBP and SBP, and lower SMI may elevate the PP.
Adult ; Arsenic ; analysis ; metabolism ; toxicity ; Blood Pressure ; drug effects ; China ; Drinking Water ; analysis ; chemistry ; Environmental Exposure ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Methylation ; drug effects ; Middle Aged ; Water Pollutants, Chemical ; analysis ; toxicity ; Young Adult
4.Hair Mercury Levels and Their Relationship with Seafood Consumption among Preschool Children in Shanghai.
Jin YAN ; Zhen Yan GAO ; Ju WANG ; Chong Huai YAN
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2017;30(3):220-223
Mercury is a global pollutant. Children are vulnerable to environmental toxicants. Seafood consumption is a major source of methylmercury exposure. In order to ascertain children's mercury exposure levels and study their relationship with seafood consumption, we conducted a cross-sectional study among preschool children in Shanghai. According to our data, the geometric mean of the mercury levels in children's hair was 191.9 (95% CI: 181.8, 202.4) μg/kg. These results indicate that high income may be a predictor of elevated mercury levels in children's hair. Intake of marine fish, especially tuna and pomfret, was documented in our study and found to increase the risk of high mercury levels. Frequency of fish consumption was positively related with hair mercury levels. Our study is the first to provide baseline data for hair mercury concentration among preschool children in Shanghai.
Child, Preschool
;
China
;
Food Contamination
;
Hair
;
chemistry
;
Humans
;
Mercury
;
chemistry
;
metabolism
;
Seafood
;
analysis
;
Socioeconomic Factors
;
Water Pollutants, Chemical
;
chemistry
5.Adsorption of Toxic Metals and Control of Mosquitos-borne Disease by Lysinibacillus sphaericus: Dual Benefits for Health and Environment.
Edo Vargas JAVIER ; Dussán JENNY
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2016;29(3):187-196
OBJECTIVEAssessment of the bacterium L. sphaericus as a dual-action candidate for biological control of mosquito-borne diseases and bioremediation of toxic metals.
METHODSLarvae of the mosquito, C. quinquefasciatus, were first evaluated for metal tolerance and then exposed to 5 ppm cadmium, chromium, arsenic, and lead in assays together with seven strains of L. sphaericus. A probit regression analysis was used to estimate the LC(50) of Cd, Cr, As, and Pb to C. quinquefasciatus. An analysis of covariance and multifactorial ANOVA examined the metal biosorption and larvicidal properties of the seven strains of L. sphaericus.
RESULTSWe found that L. sphaericus adsorbed the toxic metal ions and was toxic against mosquito larvae. The L. sphaericus strain III(3)7 resulted in a larvae mortality of over 80% for all the tested metals. This strain also exhibited the capacity to adsorb 76% of arsenic, 32% of lead, 25% of chromium, and 7% of cadmium.
CONCLUSIONThis study found combined metal adsorption and larval toxicity associated with three strains of L. sphaericus [III(3)7, OT4b.31, and CBAM5]. This suggests that a combination of these strains shows strong dual potential for biological control of mosquitos in heavy metal-contaminated areas and remediate the heavy metal contamination as well.
Animals ; Bacillaceae ; physiology ; Culicidae ; microbiology ; Host-Pathogen Interactions ; Insect Vectors ; Larva ; microbiology ; Metals, Heavy ; metabolism ; toxicity ; Water Pollutants, Chemical ; metabolism ; toxicity
6.Effects of selected metal oxide nanoparticles on multiple biomarkers in Carassius auratus.
Jun XIA ; Hai Zhou ZHAO ; Guang Hua LU
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2013;26(9):742-749
OBJECTIVETo study the biological effects of nanoscale copper oxide (nCuO), zinc oxide (nZnO), cerium dioxide (nCeO2) and their mixtures on Carassius auratus.
METHODSJuvenile fish (Carassius auratus) were exposed to aqueous suspensions of nCuO, nZnO, and nCeO2 (alone and in mixtures) at concentrations of 20, 40, 80, 160, and 320 mg/L. The biomarkers-acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in brain, sodium/potassium-activated ATPase (Na+/K+-ATPase) in gill, and superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) in liver-were determined after 4 days of exposure. Integrated biomarker response (IBR) was calculated by combining multiple biomarkers into a single value.
RESULTSAChE and SOD activities were significantly inhibited by all test metal oxide nanoparticles (NPs) at high concentrations (⋝160 mg/L) with the exception of nCeO2. Na+/K+-ATPase induction exhibited bell-shaped concentration-response curves. CAT activity was significantly inhibited at concentrations equal to or higher than 160 mg/L. The order of IBR values was nCeO2 ≈ nZnO/nCeO2 ≈ nCuO/nCeO2 < nCuO/nZnO/nCeO2 < nZnO < nCuO < nCuO/nZnO. The joint effect seemed to be synergistic for nCuO/nZnO mixtures, additive for the ternary mixture and less than additive or antagonistic for the binary mixtures containing nCeO2.
CONCLUSIONConcentration-dependent changes of enzymatic activities (AChE, Na+/K+-ATPase, SOD, and CAT) were observed in fish exposed to nanoscale metal oxides. IBR analysis allowed good discrimination between the different exposures and might be a useful tool for the quantification of integrated negative effects induced by NPs toward fish.
Acetylcholinesterase ; metabolism ; Animals ; Biomarkers ; metabolism ; Brain ; drug effects ; enzymology ; Cerium ; toxicity ; Copper ; toxicity ; Gills ; drug effects ; enzymology ; Goldfish ; metabolism ; Liver ; drug effects ; enzymology ; Metal Nanoparticles ; toxicity ; Random Allocation ; Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase ; metabolism ; Superoxide Dismutase ; metabolism ; Toxicity Tests ; Water Pollutants, Chemical ; toxicity ; Zinc Oxide ; toxicity
7.Influence of polluted SY River on child growth and sex hormones.
Chun Yu TANG ; An Qi LI ; Yong Bo GUAN ; Yan LI ; Xue Min CHENG ; Ping LI ; Shi Qun LI ; Yi Xin LUO ; Qi HUANG ; Hong Yang CHEN ; Liu Xin CUI
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2012;25(3):291-296
OBJECTIVETo investigate the influence of the polluted SY River on children's growth and sex hormones, and provide scientific data for assessment of the polluted status of the SY River.
METHODSThe study areas were selected randomly from the SY River Basin. Lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), arsenic (As), phthalates (DEP, DBP, DMP, DEHP), and bisphenol A (BPA) were measured both in the river water and in the drinking water. School children were selected by cluster sampling (n=154). Physical development indexes (height, weight, bust-circumference, and skinfold thickness) and sex hormones [testosterone (T) and estradiol (E2)] were measured for all the children.
RESULTSThe contents of Pb and Hg exceeded Class V standards of surface water quality in each section of the river and other indicators exceeded Class III. Compared to the control area, the concentrations of Pb, Hg, As, BPA, DEP, and DBP in the drinking water were significantly higher than in the polluted area (P<0.05). Children from the control area had significantly lower E2 and T than children from the polluted area (P<0.05). Among anthropometric results, only skinfold thickness had statistically significant difference between the two groups (P<0.05), while the other indexes showed no significant differences between the two groups (P>0.05).
CONCLUSIONThe drinking water has been polluted by the SY River and affected serum sex hormone levels of children living in the polluted area.
Adolescent ; Adolescent Development ; drug effects ; Child ; Child Development ; drug effects ; China ; Female ; Gonadal Steroid Hormones ; metabolism ; Humans ; Male ; Rivers ; chemistry ; Water ; chemistry ; Water Pollutants, Chemical ; toxicity ; Water Pollution, Chemical ; adverse effects ; Water Supply ; analysis
8.Fate and Transport of Mercury in Environmental Media and Human Exposure.
Moon Kyung KIM ; Kyung Duk ZOH
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2012;45(6):335-343
Mercury is emitted to the atmosphere from various natural and anthropogenic sources, and degrades with difficulty in the environment. Mercury exists as various species, mainly elemental (Hg0) and divalent (Hg2+) mercury depending on its oxidation states in air and water. Mercury emitted to the atmosphere can be deposited into aqueous environments by wet and dry depositions, and some can be re-emitted into the atmosphere. The deposited mercury species, mainly Hg2+, can react with various organic compounds in water and sediment by biotic reactions mediated by sulfur-reducing bacteria, and abiotic reactions mediated by sunlight photolysis, resulting in conversion into organic mercury such as methylmercury (MeHg). MeHg can be bioaccumulated through the food web in the ecosystem, finally exposing humans who consume fish. For a better understanding of how humans are exposed to mercury in the environment, this review paper summarizes the mechanisms of emission, fate and transport, speciation chemistry, bioaccumulation, levels of contamination in environmental media, and finally exposure assessment of humans.
Air Pollutants/chemistry/metabolism
;
*Environmental Exposure
;
Environmental Remediation
;
Food Chain
;
Humans
;
Mercury/chemistry/*metabolism
;
Methylmercury Compounds/chemistry/metabolism
;
Photolysis
;
Sulfur-Reducing Bacteria/metabolism
;
Water Pollutants, Chemical/metabolism
9.Mechanism of Cr(VI) biosorption by flocculating yeast.
Lijie CHEN ; Zhicun WANG ; Xumeng GE ; Fengwu BAI
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2011;27(1):52-59
The flocculating yeast strain SPSC01 is a fusant strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The use of SPSC01 to absorb Cr(VI) from Cr(VI) containing aqueous solution would greatly reduce the cost of post-adsorption separation, since the superior flocculating property of SPSC01 would allow easy separation of the Cr(VI)-biomass from the solution. In order to investigate the effects of flocculating proteins on Cr(VI) reduction and absorption by SPSC01, the absorption behaviors of SPSC01 and its parental strains were compared. The results showed that Cr(VI) removal rate of SPSC01 was almost the same as that of S. pombe, which also has flocculating ability, but was faster than that of S. cerevisiae, which has no flocculating ability. When the system reached equilibrium, the amount of total Cr adsorbed by S. pombe, SPSC01 and S. cerevisiae were 68.8%, 48.6% and 37.5%, respectively. This showed that flocculation was beneficial to Cr(VI) reduction and adsorption, and suggested that focculating proteins may play a role in enhancing the Cr(VI) adsorption capacity of SPSC01 and S. pombe. We investigated the mechanism of Cr(VI) adsorption by SPSC01 using chemical modification and FTIR. The results indicated that the major functional groups (amino, carboxyl and amide) of surface proteins may contribute to the absorption of Cr(VI).
Adsorption
;
Biodegradation, Environmental
;
Chromium
;
isolation & purification
;
Flocculation
;
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
;
metabolism
;
Schizosaccharomyces
;
metabolism
;
Surface Properties
;
Water Pollutants, Chemical
;
isolation & purification
10.Performances of anammox-EGSB bioreactors started up with three different seeding sludges.
Shuang DING ; Ping ZHENG ; Chongjian TANG ; Jiqiang ZHANG ; Anhui HU
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2011;27(4):629-636
In order to select better seeding sludge and promote start-up of Anammox reactors, we studied the start-up performances of three Anammox-EGSB bioreactors inoculated with anaerobic methanogenic sludge (AMS) (R1), Fresh Anammox sludge (FAS) (R2) and stored Anammox sludge (SAS) (R3), respectively. Results showed that these three seeding sludges could start up Anammox-EGSB bioreactors successfully, but the start-up progresses showed different characteristics. The start-up course of R1 could be divided into three phases including autolysis phase (15 d), lag phase (54 d) and activity elevation phase (40 d). However, the start-up courses of R2 and R3 only included lag phase (2 d and 12 d, respectively) and activity elevation phase (15 d and 57 d, respectively). Besides, the performance of R3 was better than that of R1, but worse than that of R2. Furthermore, bathing the Anammox sludge in the effluent of bioreactors was a convenient and effective way to keep the activity of the Anammox sludge. The ammonia removal efficiency, percentage of denitrification and the stoichiometric ratios of NH4(+)-Nr/NO2(-)-Nr and NO3(-)-Np/NH4(+)-Nr could serve as indicators to monitor the start-up of Anammox bioreactors.
Bacteria, Anaerobic
;
metabolism
;
Biodegradation, Environmental
;
Bioreactors
;
microbiology
;
Nitrogen
;
metabolism
;
Oxidation-Reduction
;
Quaternary Ammonium Compounds
;
metabolism
;
Sewage
;
chemistry
;
Water Pollutants, Chemical
;
metabolism

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