Combined effects of temperature changes and metal contamination at different levels of biological organization in yellow perch

•Yellow perch were exposed to a combination of heat and metal (Cd or Ni) stress.•Kidney metal accumulation was greatly enhanced at higher temperatures.•Elevated temperatures negatively affected several indicators of condition and metabolic capacities.•Exposure to Ni stimulated gonad development.•Met...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aquatic toxicology 2016-08, Vol.177, p.324-332
Hauptverfasser: Grasset, Julie, Ollivier, Élodie, Bougas, Bérénice, Yannic, Glenn, Campbell, Peter G.C., Bernatchez, Louis, Couture, Patrice
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container_end_page 332
container_issue
container_start_page 324
container_title Aquatic toxicology
container_volume 177
creator Grasset, Julie
Ollivier, Élodie
Bougas, Bérénice
Yannic, Glenn
Campbell, Peter G.C.
Bernatchez, Louis
Couture, Patrice
description •Yellow perch were exposed to a combination of heat and metal (Cd or Ni) stress.•Kidney metal accumulation was greatly enhanced at higher temperatures.•Elevated temperatures negatively affected several indicators of condition and metabolic capacities.•Exposure to Ni stimulated gonad development.•Metal stress modified the normal response of antioxidant capacities and apoptosis to heat stress. In this study, we measured the effects of temperature (9°C, 20°C, and 28°C), metal contamination (cadmium and nickel) and their interaction on yellow perch (Perca flavescens) using liver enzymatic and transcriptomic endpoints and biometric indices. Kidney metal concentrations increased with a rise of temperature. The biometric indices analysed (Fulton condition factor, pyloric cæca, hepatosomatic and gonadosomatic indices) generally decreased with an increase of temperature but not with metal contamination. At the enzymatic level, the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD), involved in antioxidant response, was affected by both temperature and metal contamination, whereas the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), involved in energy accumulation but also in antioxidant response, was only affected by metal exposure. The response of perch to the stressors at the transcriptional level differed from the metabolic response. In particular, the transcription level of the cco and g6pdh genes sharply decreased with increasing temperature, while the activities of the corresponding enzymes remained stable. The normal response of the transcription level of the apoptotic gene (diablo) to heat stress was also altered in metal-contaminated fish. The combination of metal and temperature stresses also modified the response of antioxidant metabolism induced by these stressors individually. This study contributes to a better understanding of the influences of natural stressors like temperature on biomarkers commonly used in ecotoxicological studies and will facilitate their interpretation in the context of multiple stressors characteristic of field situations.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.aquatox.2016.06.008
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subjects Animals
Antioxidants - metabolism
Biodiversity and Ecology
Biomarkers - metabolism
Biometric condition indicators
Cadmium
Cadmium - metabolism
Cadmium - toxicity
Environmental Sciences
Fish
Gene transcription level
Hot Temperature - adverse effects
Kidney - metabolism
Liver - drug effects
Liver - metabolism
Metabolic capacities
Metals
Nickel
Nickel - metabolism
Nickel - toxicity
Oxidative stress
Perca flavescens
Perches - physiology
Stress, Physiological - drug effects
Stress, Physiological - physiology
Temperature
Toxicity Tests
Transcriptome - drug effects
Water Pollutants, Chemical - metabolism
Water Pollutants, Chemical - toxicity
Yellow perch
title Combined effects of temperature changes and metal contamination at different levels of biological organization in yellow perch
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