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Mechanisms of Gills Response to Cadmium Exposure in Greenfin Horse-Faced Filefish (Thamnaconus septentrionalis): Oxidative Stress, Immune Response, and Energy Metabolism

Animals 2024 15 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xuanxuan Zhang, Xuanxuan Zhang, Xuanxuan Zhang, Wenquan Zhang, Xuanxuan Zhang, Shenghao Liu, Linlin Zhao Zheng Li, Bingshu Wang, Chengbing Song, Chengbing Song, Shenghao Liu, Linlin Zhao

Summary

This study examined how cadmium, a toxic heavy metal from industrial pollution, damages the gills of a marine fish species by triggering oxidative stress, immune responses, and energy imbalances. While not directly about microplastics, the findings are relevant because microplastics can absorb and transport heavy metals like cadmium into aquatic food chains. Understanding how fish respond to cadmium exposure helps assess the combined risks when heavy metals hitchhike on microplastic particles.

Body Systems

Cadmium (Cd) pollution has become a global issue due to industrial and agricultural developments. However, the molecular mechanism of Cd-induced detrimental effects and relevant signal transduction/metabolic networks are largely unknown in marine fishes. Here, greenfin horse-faced filefish (<i>Thamnaconus septentrionalis</i>) were exposed to 5.0 mg/L Cd up to 7 days. We applied both biochemical methods and multi-omics techniques to investigate how the gills respond to Cd exposure. Our findings revealed that Cd exposure caused the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which in turn activated the MAPK and apoptotic pathways to alleviate oxidative stress and cell damage. Glycolysis, protein degradation, as well as fatty acid metabolism might assist to meet the requirements of nutrition and energy under Cd stress. We also found that long-term (7 days, "long-term" means compared to 12 and 48 h) Cd exposure caused the accumulation of succinate, which would in turn trigger an inflammatory response and start an immunological process. Moreover, ferroptosis might induce inflammation. Overall, Cd exposure caused oxidative stress, energy metabolism disturbance, and immune response in greenfin horse-faced filefish. Our conclusions can be used as references for safety risk assessment of Cd to marine economic fishes.

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