Cargando…

From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales

Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) cause physiological abnormalities and population decline in fishes. However, few studies have linked environmental EDC exposures with responses at multiple tiers of the biological hierarchy, including population-level effects. To this end, we undertook a four-ti...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Brander, Susanne M., Connon, Richard E., He, Guochun, Hobbs, James A., Smalling, Kelly L., Teh, Swee J., White, J. Wilson, Werner, Inge, Denison, Michael S., Cherr, Gary N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3783432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24086325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074251
_version_ 1782285663776800768
author Brander, Susanne M.
Connon, Richard E.
He, Guochun
Hobbs, James A.
Smalling, Kelly L.
Teh, Swee J.
White, J. Wilson
Werner, Inge
Denison, Michael S.
Cherr, Gary N.
author_facet Brander, Susanne M.
Connon, Richard E.
He, Guochun
Hobbs, James A.
Smalling, Kelly L.
Teh, Swee J.
White, J. Wilson
Werner, Inge
Denison, Michael S.
Cherr, Gary N.
author_sort Brander, Susanne M.
collection PubMed
description Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) cause physiological abnormalities and population decline in fishes. However, few studies have linked environmental EDC exposures with responses at multiple tiers of the biological hierarchy, including population-level effects. To this end, we undertook a four-tiered investigation in the impacted San Francisco Bay estuary with the Mississippi silverside (Menidia audens), a small pelagic fish. This approach demonstrated links between different EDC sources and fish responses at different levels of biological organization. First we determined that water from a study site primarily impacted by ranch run-off had only estrogenic activity in vitro, while water sampled from a site receiving a combination of urban, limited ranch run-off, and treated wastewater effluent had both estrogenic and androgenic activity. Secondly, at the molecular level we found that fish had higher mRNA levels for estrogen-responsive genes at the site where only estrogenic activity was detected but relatively lower expression levels where both estrogenic and androgenic EDCs were detected. Thirdly, at the organism level, males at the site exposed to both estrogens and androgens had significantly lower mean gonadal somatic indices, significantly higher incidence of severe testicular necrosis and altered somatic growth relative to the site where only estrogens were detected. Finally, at the population level, the sex ratio was significantly skewed towards males at the site with measured androgenic and estrogenic activity. Our results suggest that mixtures of androgenic and estrogenic EDCs have antagonistic and potentially additive effects depending on the biological scale being assessed, and that mixtures containing androgens and estrogens may produce unexpected effects. In summary, evaluating EDC response at multiple tiers is necessary to determine the source of disruption (lowest scale, i.e. cell line) and what the ecological impact will be (largest scale, i.e. sex ratio).
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3783432
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37834322013-10-01 From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales Brander, Susanne M. Connon, Richard E. He, Guochun Hobbs, James A. Smalling, Kelly L. Teh, Swee J. White, J. Wilson Werner, Inge Denison, Michael S. Cherr, Gary N. PLoS One Research Article Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) cause physiological abnormalities and population decline in fishes. However, few studies have linked environmental EDC exposures with responses at multiple tiers of the biological hierarchy, including population-level effects. To this end, we undertook a four-tiered investigation in the impacted San Francisco Bay estuary with the Mississippi silverside (Menidia audens), a small pelagic fish. This approach demonstrated links between different EDC sources and fish responses at different levels of biological organization. First we determined that water from a study site primarily impacted by ranch run-off had only estrogenic activity in vitro, while water sampled from a site receiving a combination of urban, limited ranch run-off, and treated wastewater effluent had both estrogenic and androgenic activity. Secondly, at the molecular level we found that fish had higher mRNA levels for estrogen-responsive genes at the site where only estrogenic activity was detected but relatively lower expression levels where both estrogenic and androgenic EDCs were detected. Thirdly, at the organism level, males at the site exposed to both estrogens and androgens had significantly lower mean gonadal somatic indices, significantly higher incidence of severe testicular necrosis and altered somatic growth relative to the site where only estrogens were detected. Finally, at the population level, the sex ratio was significantly skewed towards males at the site with measured androgenic and estrogenic activity. Our results suggest that mixtures of androgenic and estrogenic EDCs have antagonistic and potentially additive effects depending on the biological scale being assessed, and that mixtures containing androgens and estrogens may produce unexpected effects. In summary, evaluating EDC response at multiple tiers is necessary to determine the source of disruption (lowest scale, i.e. cell line) and what the ecological impact will be (largest scale, i.e. sex ratio). Public Library of Science 2013-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3783432/ /pubmed/24086325 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074251 Text en © 2013 Brander et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Brander, Susanne M.
Connon, Richard E.
He, Guochun
Hobbs, James A.
Smalling, Kelly L.
Teh, Swee J.
White, J. Wilson
Werner, Inge
Denison, Michael S.
Cherr, Gary N.
From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales
title From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales
title_full From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales
title_fullStr From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales
title_full_unstemmed From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales
title_short From ‘Omics to Otoliths: Responses of an Estuarine Fish to Endocrine Disrupting Compounds across Biological Scales
title_sort from ‘omics to otoliths: responses of an estuarine fish to endocrine disrupting compounds across biological scales
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3783432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24086325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074251
work_keys_str_mv AT brandersusannem fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT connonricharde fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT heguochun fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT hobbsjamesa fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT smallingkellyl fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT tehsweej fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT whitejwilson fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT werneringe fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT denisonmichaels fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales
AT cherrgaryn fromomicstootolithsresponsesofanestuarinefishtoendocrinedisruptingcompoundsacrossbiologicalscales