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Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model

SIMPLE SUMMARY: This investigation was executed to establish the threshold level of inorganic and organic mercury incorporated in the diet of juvenile olive flounder in relation to the broken-line regression model for the percentage of weight gain of fish. Organic mercury incorporated diet resulted...

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Autores principales: Raihan, Said Majdood, Moniruzzaman, Mohammad, Park, Youngjin, Lee, Seunghan, Bai, Sungchul C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7142919/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32121390
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10030405
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author Raihan, Said Majdood
Moniruzzaman, Mohammad
Park, Youngjin
Lee, Seunghan
Bai, Sungchul C.
author_facet Raihan, Said Majdood
Moniruzzaman, Mohammad
Park, Youngjin
Lee, Seunghan
Bai, Sungchul C.
author_sort Raihan, Said Majdood
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: This investigation was executed to establish the threshold level of inorganic and organic mercury incorporated in the diet of juvenile olive flounder in relation to the broken-line regression model for the percentage of weight gain of fish. Organic mercury incorporated diet resulted in more toxic behavior than its counterpart inorganic mercury in olive flounder. Mercury was found to be more biomagnified in kidney tissue than liver and gill tissues of fish. The study has importance in terms of knowledge on mercury toxicity in marine fish. ABSTRACT: Mercury as one of the most toxic elements can be present in organic or inorganic form in marine fishes, which may cause a potential threat to public health. In this study, we investigated to determine the dietary organic (O-Hg) and inorganic (I-Hg) mercury threshold levels on induced mercury toxicity in juvenile olive flounder, Paralichthys olivaceus as a marine fish model. Twenty-eight fish averaging 3.1 ± 0.05 g (mean ± SD) were arbitrarily assigned to each of 27 tanks. Each tank was arbitrarily restricted to triplicates of nine experimental diets for eight weeks. The experimental diets were manufactured to contain 0 (Control), 10 (I-Hg10, O-Hg10), 20 (I-Hg20, O-Hg20), 40 (I-Hg40, O-Hg40) and 160 (I-Hg160, O-Hg160) mg/kg diet in organic form as methylmercury (MeHg) or in inorganic form as mercuric chloride (HgCl(2)). At the termination of the experimental trial, weight gains (WGs) of fish fed the control and 10 (I-Hg10, O-Hg10) diets were remarkably higher than those of fish fed the 20 (I-Hg20, O-Hg20), 40 (I-Hg40, O-Hg40) and 160 (I-Hg160, O-Hg160) (p < 0.05). Specific growth rate and feed efficiency of fish fed control and 10 (I-Hg10, O-Hg10) diets were significantly higher than those of fish fed 40 (I-Hg40, O-Hg40) and 160 (I-Hg160, O-Hg160) diets. In comparison to the dietary inorganic mercury, dietary MeHg bioaccumulation rates were significantly higher in the tissue levels according to the dietary inclusion levels. MeHg accumulated mostly in kidney, followed by liver and gill tissues. HgCl(2) accumulated in tissues, in decreasing order, liver > kidney > gills. A broken-line regression model for percentage of WG indicated that the threshold toxicity level for an Hg-incorporated diet of juvenile olive flounder could be 13.5 mg Hg/kg in the form of HgCl(2) and 8.7 mg Hg/kg in the form of MeHg.
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spelling pubmed-71429192020-04-14 Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model Raihan, Said Majdood Moniruzzaman, Mohammad Park, Youngjin Lee, Seunghan Bai, Sungchul C. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: This investigation was executed to establish the threshold level of inorganic and organic mercury incorporated in the diet of juvenile olive flounder in relation to the broken-line regression model for the percentage of weight gain of fish. Organic mercury incorporated diet resulted in more toxic behavior than its counterpart inorganic mercury in olive flounder. Mercury was found to be more biomagnified in kidney tissue than liver and gill tissues of fish. The study has importance in terms of knowledge on mercury toxicity in marine fish. ABSTRACT: Mercury as one of the most toxic elements can be present in organic or inorganic form in marine fishes, which may cause a potential threat to public health. In this study, we investigated to determine the dietary organic (O-Hg) and inorganic (I-Hg) mercury threshold levels on induced mercury toxicity in juvenile olive flounder, Paralichthys olivaceus as a marine fish model. Twenty-eight fish averaging 3.1 ± 0.05 g (mean ± SD) were arbitrarily assigned to each of 27 tanks. Each tank was arbitrarily restricted to triplicates of nine experimental diets for eight weeks. The experimental diets were manufactured to contain 0 (Control), 10 (I-Hg10, O-Hg10), 20 (I-Hg20, O-Hg20), 40 (I-Hg40, O-Hg40) and 160 (I-Hg160, O-Hg160) mg/kg diet in organic form as methylmercury (MeHg) or in inorganic form as mercuric chloride (HgCl(2)). At the termination of the experimental trial, weight gains (WGs) of fish fed the control and 10 (I-Hg10, O-Hg10) diets were remarkably higher than those of fish fed the 20 (I-Hg20, O-Hg20), 40 (I-Hg40, O-Hg40) and 160 (I-Hg160, O-Hg160) (p < 0.05). Specific growth rate and feed efficiency of fish fed control and 10 (I-Hg10, O-Hg10) diets were significantly higher than those of fish fed 40 (I-Hg40, O-Hg40) and 160 (I-Hg160, O-Hg160) diets. In comparison to the dietary inorganic mercury, dietary MeHg bioaccumulation rates were significantly higher in the tissue levels according to the dietary inclusion levels. MeHg accumulated mostly in kidney, followed by liver and gill tissues. HgCl(2) accumulated in tissues, in decreasing order, liver > kidney > gills. A broken-line regression model for percentage of WG indicated that the threshold toxicity level for an Hg-incorporated diet of juvenile olive flounder could be 13.5 mg Hg/kg in the form of HgCl(2) and 8.7 mg Hg/kg in the form of MeHg. MDPI 2020-02-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7142919/ /pubmed/32121390 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10030405 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Raihan, Said Majdood
Moniruzzaman, Mohammad
Park, Youngjin
Lee, Seunghan
Bai, Sungchul C.
Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model
title Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model
title_full Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model
title_fullStr Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model
title_short Evaluation of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Mercury Threshold Levels on Induced Mercury Toxicity in a Marine Fish Model
title_sort evaluation of dietary organic and inorganic mercury threshold levels on induced mercury toxicity in a marine fish model
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7142919/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32121390
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10030405
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