0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Differential Cell Metabolic Pathways in Gills and Liver of Fish (White Seabream Diplodus sargus) Coping with Dietary Methylmercury Exposure

Toxics 2023 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Giuseppe De Marco, Giuseppe De Marco, Giuseppe De Marco, Giuseppe De Marco, Giuseppe De Marco, Tiziana Cappello Patrícia Pereira, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Mariachiara Galati, Mariachiara Galati, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Giuseppe De Marco, Barbara Billè, Giuseppe De Marco, Tiziana Cappello Giuseppe De Marco, Barbara Billè, Barbara Billè, Giuseppe De Marco, Fátima Brandão, Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Mariachiara Galati, Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Mariachiara Galati, Mariachiara Galati, Mariachiara Galati, Tiziana Cappello Giuseppe De Marco, Giuseppe De Marco, Giuseppe De Marco, Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Patrícia Pereira, Mariachiara Galati, Barbara Billè, Tiziana Cappello Giuseppe De Marco, Barbara Billè, Tiziana Cappello Giuseppe De Marco, Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Patrícia Pereira, Tiziana Cappello Mário Pacheco, Tiziana Cappello Mário Pacheco, Patrícia Pereira, Mariachiara Galati, Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello Tiziana Cappello

Summary

Researchers investigated differential metabolic responses in the gills and liver of white seabream exposed to dietary methylmercury, revealing tissue-specific detoxification pathways and cellular stress responses that help explain how fish cope with chronic mercury exposure.

Polymers
Body Systems

Mercury (Hg) is a dangerous and persistent trace element. Its organic and highly toxic form, methylmercury (MeHg), easily crosses biological membranes and accumulates in biota. Nevertheless, understanding the mechanisms of dietary MeHg toxicity in fish remains a challenge. A time-course experiment was conducted with juvenile white seabreams, <i>Diplodus sargus</i> (Linnaeus, 1758), exposed to realistic levels of MeHg in feed (8.7 μg g<sup>-1</sup>, dry weight), comprising exposure (E; 7 and 14 days) and post-exposure (PE; 28 days) periods. Total Hg levels increased with time in gills and liver during E and decreased significantly in PE (though levels of control fish were reached only for gills), with liver exhibiting higher levels (2.7 times) than gills. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-based metabolomics revealed multiple and often differential metabolic changes between fish organs. Gills exhibited protein catabolism, disturbances in cholinergic neurotransmission, and changes in osmoregulation and lipid and energy metabolism. However, dietary MeHg exposure provoked altered protein metabolism in the liver with decreased amino acids, likely for activation of defensive strategies. PE allowed for the partial recovery of both organs, even if with occurrence of oxidative stress and changes of energy metabolism. Overall, these findings support organ-specific responses according to their sensitivity to Hg exposure, pointing out that indications obtained in biomonitoring studies may depend also on the selected organ.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper