In vivo assessment of pathogens toxicity on Daphnia magna using fluorescent dye staining
Daphnia has been widely used as an indicator species in aquatic biomonitoring for decades. Traditional toxicity assays based on lethality take a long time to assess, and the effect mode of contaminants is not clear. Because of the translucency of the Daphnia body and the application of fluorescent p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecotoxicology (London) 2020-09, Vol.29 (7), p.892-899 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Daphnia
has been widely used as an indicator species in aquatic biomonitoring for decades. Traditional toxicity assays based on lethality take a long time to assess, and the effect mode of contaminants is not clear. Because of the translucency of the
Daphnia
body and the application of fluorescent probes in cell staining, different intoxicated parts can be visualized. In this study, a double-staining method using two fluorescent dyes, Calcein AM (cell-permeant dye) and Propidium Iodide (cell-impermeant dye), was carried out on
Daphnia magna
exposed to six pathogens:
Salmonella spp
. (four strains) and
Shigella spp
. (two strains). The results showed that those bacteria caused different infections on
daphnia
depending on the age of this organism and bacterial concentrations. In detail,
S. dublin
and
S. sonnei
are the most harmful to
Daphnia
when they cause damage at smaller concentrations at the younger stage (3 weeks old). Interestingly, older
Daphnia
can give responses to nearly 10 CFU/ml to less than 100 CFU/ml of some bacteria strains. In another experiment,
S. sonnei
disturbed
Daphnia
after just 10 min of exposure, and
Daphnia
adapted to
S. choleraesuis
,
S. typhi
, and
S. flexneri
at the early stage (3 weeks old) after 1 h of exposure. Moreover, the damaged areas of the
daphnia
body were directly observed via a microscope, contributing to the understanding and the prediction of toxicity mechanisms. |
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ISSN: | 0963-9292 1573-3017 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10646-020-02257-6 |