Studies of fish responses to the antifoulant medetomidine
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Date
2010-03-31T11:02:12Z
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Abstract
ABSTRACT
Growth of marine organisms, fouling, on man-made constructions submerged
in the water is regarded as a major problem. For vessels, fouling increases drag and
thereby fuel consumption, wherefore antifouling paints are used. Traditionally,
they contain toxic compounds, and several of these have unwanted effects in
the environment. Today the search for environmentally acceptable and efficient
alternatives is intense.
Medetomidine, originally used as a veterinary sedative, inhibits barnacle
settling at nanomolar concentrations. It is presently under evaluation for use as
an antifouling agent. The studies within this thesis were performed to investigate
medetomidine responses in fish. The focus was to identify early effects, occurring
from low concentrations. Studies have been performed in the species rainbow trout,
Atlantic cod, turbot, Atlantic salmon and three spined stickleback. Exposure time
vary from 1 up to 54 days, and a set of parameters have been investigated including
biochemical biomarkers, growth and related parameters, behaviour and large scale
gene expression.
Paleness is the most obvious effect of medetomidine in fish and appears from
0.5 to 50 nM, depending on species. Colour was observed and quantified, and the
function of melanophores (pigment cells) after long term exposure to medetomidine
was investigated. It is suggested that melanophores are functional after treatment, and
thus the colour change may be reversible. Although not lethal per-see, paleness may
have consequences for fish predator-prey interactions (camouflage), social signalling
and UV protection.
Medetomidine also showed to affect the activity of the hepatic enzyme
Cytochrome P4501A (CYP1A), measured as EROD activity. A minor increase
in activity was observed in vivo in several of the investigated species. In vitro,
medetomidine showed instead to be a potent inhibitor of EROD activity with median
inhibition values (IC50) in the nanomolar range. An inhibited CYP1A activity may
interfere with fish detoxification of toxicants abundant in the aquatic environment.
No significant effects were found on growth rate, but the results indicate lowered
blood glucose levels and decreased liver size after medetomidine treatment and thus
a shift in carbohydrate metabolism. The large scale gene expression study revealed
no significant differences among treatments. We found no effects on glutathione
or glutathione dependent enzymes in any of the studies. In the behavioural studies,
fish were less active and had less appetite in medetomidine treatments compared
to control. Medetomidine had no effects on investigated antioxidant enzymes and
showed no cytotoxicity.
Among the responses studied within this thesis, paleness and inhibition of
EROD activity are perhaps the most important. These effects appear early and are
clear and consistent among several species.
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Keywords
antifouling, fish, medetomidine, ecotoxicology, biomarker