AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how metals like cadmium (Cd) and zinc (Zn) accumulate in different organs of the aquatic organism Gammarus fossarum, using a dynamic approach to assess metal toxicity.
  • The gammarids were exposed to radiolabeled water for 7 days, with experiments showing distinct accumulation patterns for Cd (higher in gills) and Zn (higher in intestines) at various organ sites.
  • Results further revealed that Cd was eliminated more slowly than Zn across all organs, emphasizing the intestines' significant role in the uptake of these metals from water.

Article Abstract

One of the best approaches for improving the assessment of metal toxicity in aquatic organisms is to study their organotropism (i.e., the distribution of metals among organs) through a dynamical approach (i.e., via kinetic experiments of metal bioaccumulation), to identify the tissues/organs that play a key role in metal regulation (e.g., storage or excretion). This study aims at comparing the organ-specific metal accumulation of a non-essential (Cd) and an essential metal (Zn), at their environmentally relevant exposure concentrations, in the gammarid Gammarus fossarum. Gammarids were exposed for 7 days to Cd- or Zn-radiolabeled water at a concentration of 52.1 and 416 ng.L (stable equivalent), respectively, and then placed in clean water for 21 days. At different time intervals, the target organs (i.e., caeca, cephalons, intestines, gills, and remaining tissues) were collected and Cd or Zn contents were quantified by gamma-spectrometry. A one-compartment toxicokinetic (TK) model was fitted by Bayesian inference to each organ/metal dataset in order to establish TK parameters. Our results indicate: i) a contrasting distribution pattern of concentrations at the end of the accumulation phase (7 day): gills > caeca ≈ intestines > cephalons > remaining tissues for Cd and intestines > caeca > gills > cephalons > remaining tissues for Zn; ii) a slower elimination of Cd than of Zn by all organs, especially in the gills in which the Cd concentration remained constant during the 21-day depuration phase, whereas Zn concentrations decreased sharply in all organs after 24 h in the depuration phase; iii) a major role of intestines in the uptake of waterborne Cd and Zn at environmentally relevant concentrations.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119625DOI Listing

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