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Speaker : 王采玉

Tissue-specific accumulation of cadmium in subcellular compartments of eastern oysters Crassostrea virginica Gmelin (Bivalvia:Ostreidae) I.M. Sokolova a.* ,A.H. Ringwood a ,C.Johnson b. 美東牡蠣亞細胞之特定組織對鎘金屬之 蓄積研究. Speaker : 王采玉. Introduction.

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Speaker : 王采玉

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  1. Tissue-specific accumulation of cadmium in subcellular compartments of eastern oysters Crassostrea virginica Gmelin(Bivalvia:Ostreidae)I.M. Sokolovaa.*,A.H. Ringwooda,C.Johnsonb 美東牡蠣亞細胞之特定組織對鎘金屬之 蓄積研究 Speaker : 王采玉

  2. Introduction

  3. Cadmium in environment (estuarine and coastal habitats) 富含 鎘金屬的土壤 岩石淋溶作用 人類污染 河川逕流攜至河口及沿岸堆積沉澱 底棲水生生物 (甲殼類、貝類)

  4. Oyster in the water with cadmium 0.4 to 40 μg g-1 dryweight Nature Cadmium in water Acute up to 300-400 μg g-1 dry weight. Environmentally realistic concentrations are observed at low

  5. Target of metal toxicity Mitochondria Key of intracellular targets for metal toxicity, which are sensitive to metal exposures. Lysosomes Important organelle in which metals aresequestered in mollusks, especially in hepatopancreas tissues Cytoplasm Metallothioneins (MT),which are important detoxification mechanism that can serve to minimize the availability of metal ions to cytosolic components

  6. Cd2+ Cd2+ Cd2+ Cd2+ Cd2+ Cd2+ Cd2+ Cd2+ ATP Cd2+ Cd2+ Disturbance of tissue energy balance and cell death

  7. The aim of study Time-dependent accumulation of cadmium in different intracellular compartments. The pattern of this study will be observed with other metals or pollutants in other species.

  8. Materials and methods

  9. Eastern oysters Crassostrea virginica kingdom: Animaliaphylum : MolluscaClass:Bivalviaorder: Ostreoidafamily: Ostreidae Stump Sound, NC in April 2004. 18month old,9.5-12 cm length Water temperature : 18-20 ℃ Salinity : between 22 and 30 psu ASW with 25μgL−1 cadmium (Cd-exposed oysters).

  10. Subcellular fractionation 0 Fig. 1. Schematic diagram of subcellular fractionation of oyster tissues by differential centrifugation. Shaded boxes showdetails of centrifugation used to obtain the particular fraction. P, pellet and S, supernatant. Other details are in Section 2.

  11. Activity of marker enzymes How many mitochondrial and lysosomal content in organelle? Activity of marker enzymes acid phosphtase (AP) Citrate synthase (CS)

  12. Cadmium determination H I L P S fraction From Subcellular fractionation • Acidified • With 70% nirtric • digestion • At 65℃ of water for 4-6 h • Atomic analysis • Atomic Absorption spectrometer

  13. Result

  14. Fig. 2. Specific activities of mitochondrial and lysosomal marker enzymes in oyster tissues. CS, citrate synthase and AP, acid phosphatase. Asterisk denotes a statistically significant difference between the tissues (P < 0.05).

  15. Fig. 3. Specific activities of mitochondrial and lysosomal markers enzymes in subcellualr fractions of gills and hepatopancreas of C.virginica. CS, citrate synthase, and AP, acid phosphatase. Fractions:H, heavy; I, interphase; L, light; and P, particulate.

  16. Fig. 4. Accumulation of cadmium in gills and hepatopancreas of C.virginica exposed to 25 gL−1 cadmium over time. Cd levels per mg protein of the total tissue homogenate is given. Exposure time: 2, 7 and 21 day.

  17. Fig. 5. Accumulation of cadmium in subcellular fractions of gills and hepatopancreas of C. virginica exposed to 25 gL−1 cadmium over time. X-axis, fractions and Y-axis, cadmium concentrations (ng Cd mg−1 protein). Note differences in the scales of Y-axis for control and Cd-exposed animals. Fractions: H, heavy; I, interphase; L, light; P, particulate; and S, cytosol. Exposure time: 2, 7 and 21 day.

  18. Fig. 6. Distribution (%) of cadmium burden in different subcellular fractions of gills and hepatopancreas of C. virginica exposed for 21 day to 25 gL−1 cadmium. Fractions: H, heavy; I, interphase; L, light; P, particulate; and S, cytosol.

  19. Discussion

  20. Cadmium in hepatopancreas and gill 31.9 ±4.12 and 33.7 ± 4.87 μg g-1dry weight Close Polluted sites in the nature 20-40 μg g-1dry weight(Roesijadi, 1996; Frew et al., 1997) Exposure regime resulted inenvironmentallyrelevant tissue cadmium burdens. Particularly high levels of cadmiumaccumulated by gill mitochondria The gills are the primary site of dissolved ionuptake in (Kennedy et al., 1996) Extensive Cd2+ uptake mediated by Ca2+ voltage-gated channels in isolated mitochondria (Li et al.,2000, 2003)

  21. Cadmium levels in the mitochondria-enriched H fraction of hepatopancreas were significantly lower than in gills (60 ng mg−1 protein). Lower exposure of hepatopancreas mitochondria to cadmium and/or the mixed nature of this fraction. Impairment of gill mitochondria could have serious consequences for the whole-organism metabolism and survival of oysters Oxygen uptake and for various energy-requiring processes. (review in Kennedy et al.,1996).

  22. Lysosomal fractions in gills and hepatopancreas of oysters also accumulated significant levels of cadmium(90–94 ng mg−1 protein). Lysosomal cadmium uptakemay reflect sequestration and detoxification of thismetal (Sarasquete et al., 1992; Bolognesi et al., 1999; Ringwood et al.,1999a,b). Lysosomes from hepatopancreas are particularly sensitive to the Cd-induced damage Lysosomal destabilization in hepatopancreas may occur at low sublethal cadmium concentrations (Sarasquete et al., 1992; Bolognesi et al., 1999; Ringwood et al., 1999a,b)

  23. The cytoplasm is another major site of cadmium accumulation in oysters. Most of the cytosolic cadmium in bivalves is typically bound to metallothioneins. (Bracken et al., 1984; Roesijadi, 1996a; Bolognesi et al., 1999; Engel, 1999; Giguere et al.,2003). Current research also indicates that metallothionein-bound metals. They can transport metals into mitochondria and thus exert strong effects on mitochondrial function (Simpkins et al., 1994, 1998).

  24. Cytosolic cadmium accounted for 75–83% of the total tissue cadmium load. In other bivalves, where the highest percentage of total cadmium (70–98%) was found in cytosol. (Julshamn and Andersen, 1983; Evtushenko et al., 1986; Bebianno et al., 1993). Low percentage of cadmium associated with organelles (less than 10%)can still be accompanied by high organelle-specific cadmium concentrations Predominant accumulation cadmium in cytoplasm (Julshamn and Andersen, 1983; Evtushenko et al., 1986; Block et al., 1991; Bebianno et al., 1993;Blackmore and Wang, 2002).

  25. SUMMARY Low sublethal amounts of cadmium resulted in accumulation of high levels The development of biomarkers and understanding mechanisms of toxic effects of metals. Measures into environmental assessments and bioavailability models The primary target organelle for bioaccumulation

  26. The End Thank you for your attention

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