AI Article Synopsis

  • Studies show that legacy PFAS (PFOS and PFOA) were tested for ocular toxicity in zebrafish larvae, revealing significant effects on visual behaviors compared to alternative PFAS (PFBS and PFBA).
  • Exposure to PFOS decreased phototactic responses in a concentration-dependent manner and affected optomotor responses, while PFOA's effects were limited to a higher concentration (100 mg/L).
  • Gene expression analyses confirmed that PFOS downregulated critical visual function genes, indicating that it poses the highest risk for visual toxicity among the substances tested, with alternatives showing no toxic effects.

Article Abstract

Studies comparing the ocular toxicity potential between legacy and alternative PFAS are lacking. To address this research gap, zebrafish larvae were exposed to both legacy PFAS (i.e., perfluorooctanesulfonic acid [PFOS] and perfluorooctanoic acid [PFOA]) and their corresponding alternatives (i.e., perfluorobutanesulfonic acid [PFBS] and perfluorobutanoic acid [PFBA]). Alterations in their visual behaviors, such as phototactic and optomotor responses (OMR), were assessed at sublethal concentrations. Gene expression variations in visual function-associated pathways were also measured. Visual behavioral assessment revealed that PFOS exposure resulted in concentration-dependent reductions in phototactic responses at 10-1000 μg/L, with PFOA exerting reduction effects only at 100 mg/L. However, their two alternatives had no effect at all tested concentrations. Following an improved contrast-OMR (C-OMR) assessment, PFOS decreased the OMR to a water flow stimulus at 10, 100, and 1000 μg/L. The gene expression analysis revealed that PFOS exposure markedly downregulated most genes involved in the opsins in the photoreceptor and phototransduction cascade, which explains the observed visual behavior changes well. Our findings indicate that PFOS is the most likely PFAS to cause visual toxicity, with PFOA present but less likely, and their substitutes, PFBS and PFBA, cannot be classified as visually toxic to zebrafish.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10747198PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxics11121021DOI Listing

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