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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The transcription of contaminant responserelated genes was investigated in juvenile Senegalese soles
exposed to sediments from three distinct sites (a reference
plus two contaminated) of a Portuguese estuary (the Sado,
W Portugal) through simultaneous 28-day laboratory and in
situ bioassays. Transcription of cytochrome P450 1A
(CYP1A), metallothionein 1 (MT1), glutathione peroxidase
(GPx), catalase (CAT), caspase 3 (CASP3) and 90 kDa
heat-shock protein alpha (HSP90AA) was surveyed in the
liver by real-time PCR. CASP3 transcription analysis was
complemented by surveying apoptosis through the TUNEL
reaction. After 14 days of exposure, relative transcription
was either reduced or decreased in fish exposed to the contaminated sediments, revealing a disturbance stress
phase during which animals failed to respond to insult.
After 28 days of exposure all genes’ transcription responded to contamination but laboratory and in situ assays
depicted distinct patterns of regulation. Although sediments revealed a combination of organic and inorganic
toxicants, transcription of the CYP1A gene was consistently correlated to organic contaminants. Metallothionein
regulation was found correlated to metallic and organic
xenobiotic contamination in the laboratory and in situ,
respectively. The transcription of oxidative stress-related
genes can be a good indicator of general stress but caution
is mandatory when interpreting the results since regulation
may be influenced by multiple factors. As for MT1, HSP90
up-regulation has potential to be a good indicator for total
contamination, as well as the CASP3 gene, even though
hepatocyte apoptosis depicted values inconsistent with
sediment contamination, showing that programmed cell
death did not directly depend on caspase transcription
alone.
Description
Keywords
Toxicogenomics Transcriptomics Solea senegalensis Quantitative real-time RT-PCR Apoptosis Ecological risk assessment