GADOLINIUM TOXICITY ON SEA URCHIN EMBRYOS: COMPARISON AMONG PHYLOGENETICALLY DISTANT SPECIES AND FOCUS ON STRESS RESPONSE AND SKELETOGENESIS. C Martino*1,2, R Chiarelli1, C Costa2, D Koop3, R Scudiero4, M Byrne3, V Matranga2, and MC Roccheri1. 1Dept. of Biological, Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences and Technologies, University of Palermo, Italy; 2Institute of Biomedicine and Molecular Immunology "A. Monroy"", CNR, Palermo, Italy; 3Dept. of Anatomy and Histology, F13, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia; 4Dept. of Biology, University of Naples Federico II, Italy. chiara.martino@unipa.it Pharmaceuticals are a class of emerging environmental contaminants. Gadolinium (Gd) is a lanthanide metal whose chelates are employed as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging, and subsequently released into the aquatic environment. We investigated the effects of exposure to a wide range of sublethal Gd concentrations on the development of four phylogenetically and geographically distant sea urchin species: two Mediterranean, Paracentrotus lividus and Arbacia lixula, and two from Australia, Heliocidaris tuberculata and Centrostephanus rodgersii. Sensitivity to Gd greatly varied, with EC50 ranging from 56 nM to 132 Â?M across the four species. Measures of the Gd and Ca content inside embryos showed a time- and dose-dependent increase of Gd, in parallel with a reduction of Ca. In all the four species, we observed a general delay of embryo development at 24h post-fertilization, and a strong inhibition of skeleton growth at 48h. Further experiments were carried out on P. lividus embryos: RT-PCR gene expression analysis showed the misregulation of several genes implicated both in the skeletogenic and the left-right axis specification networks. Immunoblotting analysis showed an increase of the LC3 autophagic marker at 24 and 48h. Confocal microscopy studies confirmed the increased number of autophagosomes and autophagolysosomes and showed no apoptotic induction. The results show the hazard of Gd in the marine environment, indicating that Gd is able to affect three different levels in sea urchin embryos: morphogenesis, stress response such as autophagy, and gene expression. Results highlight that pollution assays based on only one species can be misleading with respect to hazard risk assessment.

GADOLINIUM TOXICITY ON SEA URCHIN EMBRYOS:COMPARISON AMONG PHYLOGENETICALLY DISTANT SPECIES AND FOCUS ON STRESS RESPONSE AND SKELETOGENESIS.

Caterina Costa;
2017

Abstract

GADOLINIUM TOXICITY ON SEA URCHIN EMBRYOS: COMPARISON AMONG PHYLOGENETICALLY DISTANT SPECIES AND FOCUS ON STRESS RESPONSE AND SKELETOGENESIS. C Martino*1,2, R Chiarelli1, C Costa2, D Koop3, R Scudiero4, M Byrne3, V Matranga2, and MC Roccheri1. 1Dept. of Biological, Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences and Technologies, University of Palermo, Italy; 2Institute of Biomedicine and Molecular Immunology "A. Monroy"", CNR, Palermo, Italy; 3Dept. of Anatomy and Histology, F13, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia; 4Dept. of Biology, University of Naples Federico II, Italy. chiara.martino@unipa.it Pharmaceuticals are a class of emerging environmental contaminants. Gadolinium (Gd) is a lanthanide metal whose chelates are employed as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging, and subsequently released into the aquatic environment. We investigated the effects of exposure to a wide range of sublethal Gd concentrations on the development of four phylogenetically and geographically distant sea urchin species: two Mediterranean, Paracentrotus lividus and Arbacia lixula, and two from Australia, Heliocidaris tuberculata and Centrostephanus rodgersii. Sensitivity to Gd greatly varied, with EC50 ranging from 56 nM to 132 Â?M across the four species. Measures of the Gd and Ca content inside embryos showed a time- and dose-dependent increase of Gd, in parallel with a reduction of Ca. In all the four species, we observed a general delay of embryo development at 24h post-fertilization, and a strong inhibition of skeleton growth at 48h. Further experiments were carried out on P. lividus embryos: RT-PCR gene expression analysis showed the misregulation of several genes implicated both in the skeletogenic and the left-right axis specification networks. Immunoblotting analysis showed an increase of the LC3 autophagic marker at 24 and 48h. Confocal microscopy studies confirmed the increased number of autophagosomes and autophagolysosomes and showed no apoptotic induction. The results show the hazard of Gd in the marine environment, indicating that Gd is able to affect three different levels in sea urchin embryos: morphogenesis, stress response such as autophagy, and gene expression. Results highlight that pollution assays based on only one species can be misleading with respect to hazard risk assessment.
2017
Istituto di biomedicina e di immunologia molecolare - IBIM - Sede Palermo
pharmaceuticals - Gadolinium - sea urchin embryos - stress - gene expression
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/339413
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