Hydrogen Sulfide Induces Oxidative Damage to RNA and DNA in a Sulfide‐Tolerant Marine Invertebrate

Hydrogen sulfide acts as an environmental toxin across a range of concentrations and as a cellular signaling molecule at very low concentrations. Despite its toxicity, many animals, including the mudflat polychaeteGlycera dibranchiata, are periodically or continuously exposed to sulfide in their env...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physiological and biochemical zoology 2010-03, Vol.83 (2), p.356-365
Hauptverfasser: Joyner‐Matos, Joanna, Predmore, Benjamin L., Stein, Jenny R., Leeuwenburgh, Christiaan, Julian, David
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 356
container_title Physiological and biochemical zoology
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creator Joyner‐Matos, Joanna
Predmore, Benjamin L.
Stein, Jenny R.
Leeuwenburgh, Christiaan
Julian, David
description Hydrogen sulfide acts as an environmental toxin across a range of concentrations and as a cellular signaling molecule at very low concentrations. Despite its toxicity, many animals, including the mudflat polychaeteGlycera dibranchiata, are periodically or continuously exposed to sulfide in their environment. We tested the hypothesis that a broad range of ecologically relevant sulfide concentrations induces oxidative stress and oxidative damage to RNA and DNA inG. dibranchiata. Coelomocytes exposed in vitro to sulfide (0–3 mmol L−1for 1 h) showed dose‐dependent increases in oxidative stress (as 2′,7′‐dichlorofluorescein fluorescence) and superoxide production (as dihydroethidine fluorescence). Coelomocytes exposed in vitro to sulfide (up to 0.73 mmol L−1for 2 h) also acquired increased oxidative damage to RNA (detected as 8‐oxo‐7,8‐dihydroguanosine) and DNA (detected as 8‐oxo‐7,8‐dihydro‐2′‐deoxyguanosine). Worms exposed in vivo to sulfide (0–10 mmol L−1for 24 h) acquired elevated oxidative damage to RNA and DNA in both coelomocytes and body wall tissue. While the consequences of RNA and DNA oxidative damage are poorly understood, oxidatively damaged deoxyguanosine bases preferentially bind thymine, causing G‐T transversions and potentially causing heritable point mutations. This suggests that sulfide can be an environmental mutagen in sulfide‐tolerant invertebrates.
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subjects Animals
DNA
DNA - drug effects
DNA damage
DNA Damage - drug effects
Fluorescence
Hydrogen Sulfide - pharmacology
Integument
Nucleosides
Oxidation
Oxidative stress
Oxidative Stress - drug effects
Oxidative Stress - physiology
Point Mutation - drug effects
Polychaeta - metabolism
Polychaeta - physiology
Reactive Oxygen Species - metabolism
RNA
RNA - drug effects
Sulfides
Worms
title Hydrogen Sulfide Induces Oxidative Damage to RNA and DNA in a Sulfide‐Tolerant Marine Invertebrate
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