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Impact of environmentally relevant concentrations of fluoxetine on zebrafish larvae: From gene to behavior

Chemosphere 2023 15 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.
Daniela Correia, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Demetrio Raldúa Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Marina Bellot, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Melissa Faria, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Eva Prats, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Eva Prats, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Marina Bellot, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Cristian Gómez‐Canela, Miguel Oliveira, Cristian Gómez‐Canela, Hugo Moro, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Demetrio Raldúa Demetrio Raldúa Demetrio Raldúa Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Inês Domingues, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Miguel Oliveira, Melissa Faria, Miguel Oliveira, Demetrio Raldúa

Summary

Researchers exposed zebrafish larvae to environmentally relevant concentrations of fluoxetine, a widely prescribed antidepressant, and observed effects on development, behavior, and brain chemistry. Even at very low concentrations found in waterways, the drug accelerated hatching, increased heart rate, and altered locomotor behavior. The study suggests that pharmaceutical residues in the environment may affect aquatic organisms at concentrations commonly detected in surface waters.

Fluoxetine is widely prescribed for the treatment of depressive states, acting at the level of the central nervous system, consequently affecting non-target organisms. This study aimed to investigate the influence of environmentally relevant fluoxetine concentrations (1–1000 ng/L) on Danio rerio development, assessing both embryotoxicity and behavior, antioxidant defense, gene expression and neurotransmitter levels at larval stage. Exposure to fluoxetine during early development was found to be able to accelerate embryo hatching in embryos exposed to 1, 10 and 100 ng/L, reduce larval size in 1000 ng/L, and increase heart rate in 10, 100 and 1000 ng/L exposed larvae. Behavioral impairments (decreased startle response and increased larvae locomotor activity) were associated with effects on monoaminergic systems, detected through the downregulation of key genes (vmat2, mao, tph1a and th2). In addition, altered levels of neurochemicals belonging to the serotonergic and dopaminergic systems (increased levels of tryptophan and norepinephrine) highlighted the sensitivity of early life stages of zebrafish to low concentrations of fluoxetine, inducing effects that may compromise larval survival. The obtained data support the necessity to test low concentrations of SSRIs in environmental risk assessment and the use of biomarkers at different levels of biological organization for a better understanding of modes of action.

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