AI Article Synopsis

  • - In a study on mussels, researchers exposed them to different treatments: no metal, mercury (Hg), cadmium (Cd), and a mixture of both (Hg + Cd) over 14 days, analyzing tissue metal concentrations and sub-lethal biological responses over time.
  • - While Hg and Cd levels in the mussels were mostly similar between single and combined treatments, the combination led to higher Cd uptake in the gills compared to Cd alone, indicating that Hg may enhance Cd absorption.
  • - Despite some signs of oxidative stress and similar tissue pathology, the overall impact on metal accumulation and mussel health remained comparable between single metal and mixed metal exposures, highlighting the complexities of chemical interactions in aquatic ecosystems.

Article Abstract

In the natural ecosystem, aquatic organisms are exposed to a cocktail of chemicals that may result in toxicological responses differing from those of individual chemicals. In the present study, mussels were exposed using a semi-static and triplicated design to either control (no added metal), 50 µg l (Hg alone), 50 µg l (Cd alone), or 50 µg l Hg plus 50 µg l Cd (Hg + Cd) mixture for 14 days. Tissues were collected on days 0, 2, 4, 8, and 14 for metal analysis and sub-lethal responses using a suite of assays. Tissue metal concentrations were not significantly different in the single metal (Hg or Cd) compared to the Hg plus Cd mixture treatment for all tissues, apart from the gill of the Cd alone treatment. At the end of the experiment, the gill Cd concentration was significantly increased in the Hg plus Cd mixture compared to the Cd alone treatment, suggesting the influence of Hg on Cd uptake. The percentage increases of the Hg plus Cd mixture compared to the arithmetic sum of the individual metals were ( %): 20.2, 9.3, 25.1, 23.8, 10.7, and 12.4 for adductor muscle, digestive gland, gill, gonad, remaining soft tissue, and haemolymph, respectively. There were no observed treatment effects on total haemocyte count, haemolymph protein, or glucose concentration in the cell-free haemolymph. Neither was there any treatment effect on osmotic pressure, ions in the tissues, or in the cell-free haemolymph. At the end of the experiment, Hg-mediated oxidative damage, as an increase of thiobarbituric reactive substances (TBARS) and apparent depletion of total glutathione. This was observed in the gill and digestive gland of the Hg alone and Hg plus Cd mixture. Histopathology examination showed similar pathology in the Hg alone and the Hg plus Cd treatment. In conclusion, despite some oxidative stress and pathology during metal exposure, the accumulation of metals and effects on mussel health were similar between single exposures and a mixture of Hg plus Cd. In terms of risk assessment, regulations for the individual metals should suffice to protect against the mixture of Hg plus Cd, at least for adult M. edulis in full-strength seawater.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquatox.2024.106987DOI Listing

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