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Exposure Effects of Environmentally Relevant Concentrations of the Tricyclic Antidepressant Amitriptyline in Early Life Stage Zebrafish

Environmental Science & Technology 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sophie L. Gould, Matthew J. Winter, Maciej Trznadel, Anke Lange, Charles M. Hamilton, Rebekah Boreham, Malcolm J. Hetheridge, Andrew M. J. Young, William Norton, Charles R. Tyler

Summary

Researchers exposed zebrafish to environmentally relevant concentrations of the antidepressant amitriptyline for 28 days and found that the drug accumulated in their tissues and affected behavior and development. Even at low concentrations found in waterways, the antidepressant altered swimming activity and gene expression related to the nervous system. The study highlights that pharmaceutical pollution in water can affect aquatic organisms at concentrations currently present in the environment.

Body Systems

Antidepressants are one of the most globally prescribed classes of pharmaceuticals, and drug target conservation across phyla means that nontarget organisms may be at risk from the effects of exposure. Here, we address the knowledge gap for the effects of chronic exposure (28 days) to the tricyclic antidepressant amitriptyline (AMI) on fish, including for concentrations with environmental relevance, using zebrafish (Danio rerio) as our experimental model. AMI was found to bioconcentrate in zebrafish, was readily transformed to its major active metabolite nortriptyline, and induced a pharmacological effect (downregulation of the gene encoding the serotonin transporter; slc6a4a) at environmentally relevant concentrations (0.03 μg/L and above). Exposures to AMI at higher concentrations accelerated the hatch rate and reduced locomotor activity, the latter of which was abolished after a 14 day period of depuration. The lack of any response on the features of physiology and behavior we measured at concentrations found in the environment would indicate that AMI poses a relatively low level of risk to fish populations. The pseudopersistence and likely presence of multiple drugs acting via the same mechanism of action, however, together with a global trend for increased prescription rates, mean that this risk may be underestimated using current ecotoxicological assessment paradigms.

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