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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Assessing toxicity of contaminated estuarine
sediments poses a challenge to ecotoxicologists due to the
complex geochemical nature of sediments and to the
combination of multiple classes of toxicants. Juvenile
Senegalese soles were exposed for 14 days in the laboratory and in situ (field) to sediments from three sites (a
reference plus two contaminated) of a Portuguese estuary.
Sediment characterization confirmed the combination of
metals, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and organochlorines in the two contaminated sediments. Changes in liver
cytosolic protein regulation patterns were determined by a
combination of two-dimensional electrophoresis with de
novo sequencing by tandem mass spectrometry. From the
forty-one cytosolic proteins found to be deregulated, nineteen were able to be identified, taking part in multiple
cellular processes such as anti-oxidative defence, energy
production, proteolysis and contaminant catabolism (especially oxidoreductase enzymes). Besides a clear distinction
between animals exposed to the reference and contaminated sediments, differences were also observed between
laboratory- and in situ-tested fish. Soles exposed in the
laboratory to the contaminated sediments failed to induce,
or even markedly down-regulated, many proteins, with the
exception of a peroxiredoxin (an anti-oxidant enzyme) and
a few others, when compared to reference fish. In situ
exposure to the contaminated sediments revealed significant up-regulation of basal metabolism-related enzymes,
comparatively to the reference condition. Down-regulation
of basal metabolism enzymes, related to energy production
and gene transcription, in fish exposed in the laboratory to
the contaminated sediments, may be linked to sedimentbound contaminants and likely compromised the organisms’ ability to deploy adequate responses against insult.
Description
Keywords
Proteomics Flatfish Bioassays Sediment contamination Sado Estuary