Oxidative Damage in Fish Used as Biomarkers in Field and Laboratory Studies
Abstract
Many toxic xenobiotics entering into the aquatic environment exert their effects through redox cycling. Oxidative stress, incorporating both antioxidant defences as well as oxidative damage, is a common effect in organisms exposed to xenobiotics in their environment. The studies included in this dissertation evaluate the effects of different types of environmental pollution on oxidative stress biomarkers in teleost fishes. Effects of aging, alone or in combination with oxidative stress, on protein carbonylation were also addressed.
Antioxidant enzyme activities were measured in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
caged in a river polluted by sewage treatment plant (STP) effluent as well as highly
contaminated sediment, and in corkwing wrasse (Symphodus melops) collected at heavy
metal contaminated and PAH contaminated sites. Antioxidant enzymes showed very few
changes in these fish. Glutathione levels were affected by STP effluent exposure in rainbow
trout and by PAH exposure in corkwing wrasse.
Protein carbonylation was elevated in plasma of the corkwing wrasse captured at the
heavy metal site and in plasma of rainbow trout caged near the STP effluent. Lipid
peroxidation was elevated in the livers of these rainbow trout. Oxidative damage
biomarkers were also measured in eelpout (Zoarces viviparus) captured in a polluted
harbor, before, during and after a dredging campaign, as well as following an oil spill.
Protein carbonyl levels in livers of eelpout were affected by exposure to pollution in the
harbor, though this was measured both as increases and as decreases, indicating a
complicated relationship between prooxidant exposure and protein carbonyl accumulation.
Lipid peroxidation in eelpout was unaffected by pollutant exposure. Western blot analyses
of protein carbonylation in corkwing wrasse exposed to heavy metals and in rainbow trout
exposed to paraquat (PQ) suggest that albumin may be the plasma protein most likely to
undergo carbonylation in these fish.
Brown trout (Salmo trutta) were used in a laboratory study to investigate the effects of
aging on oxidative stress parameters, i.e. protein carbonylation, 20S proteosome activity
and glutathione levels. All parameters were affected by aging, as was the response to PQ
exposure, where 1 year old fish were more sensitive than 0+ fish.
To conclude, the results presented here indicate that antioxidant enzymes may not
provide a good biomarker of exposure to xenobiotics in the field. However, oxidative
damage products, i.e. protein carbonyls and lipid peroxidation, seem to be useful as
biomarkers. Care should be taken to consider age of the exposed individuals. Oxidative
stress is a complex phenomenon to measure in the field. Antioxidant enzyme activities may
be altered after an acute exposure and then return to normal levels but damage products can
persist even after the initial stress has stabilized.
Parts of work
I. Carney Almroth, B., Sturve, J., Berglund, Å., Förlin, L. (2005). Oxidative damage in eelpout (Zoarces viviparus), measured as protein carbonyls and TBARS, as biomarkers. Aquatic Toxicology, 73. 171-180.
::doi::10.1016/j.aquatox.2005.03.007 II. Carney Almroth, B., Sturve J., Stephensen, E., II. Holth, T.F., Förlin, L. (2008). Protein carbonyls and antioxidant defences in corkwing wrasse (Symphodus melops) from a heavy metal polluted and a PAH polluted site. (Accepted, Marine Environmental Research). III. Carney Almroth, B., Albertsson, E., Sturve, J., Förlin, L. (2008). Oxidative stress, evident in antioxidant defences and damage products, in rainbow trout caged outside a sewage treatment plant. Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, ::doi::10.1016/j.ecoenv.2008.01.023 IV. Carney Almroth, B., Johansson, A., Förlin, L., Sturve, J. (2008). Aging and oxidative stress in brown trout, Salmo trutta. (manuscript).
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborg University. Faculty of Science
Institution
Department of Marine Ecology ; Institutionen för marin ekologi
Date of defence
2008-05-09
bethanie.carney@zool.gu.se
View/ Open
Date
2008Author
Carney Almroth, Bethanie
Keywords
fish
oxidative stress
antioxidant enzymes
glutathione
protein carbonyls
lipid peroxidation
biomarkers
pollution
aging
Publication type
Doctoral Theses
ISBN
978-91-628-7420-9
Language
eng