Department of Biology, Gettysburg College, 300N. Washington St., Gettysburg, PA 17325, USA.
Institute of Marine Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Ferry Road, Portsmouth PO4 9LY, UK.
Aquat Toxicol. 2014 Jun;151:4-13. doi: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2013.12.003. Epub 2013 Dec 11.
Antidepressants are among the most commonly detected human pharmaceuticals in the aquatic environment. Since their mode of action is by modulating the neurotransmitters serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine, aquatic invertebrates who possess transporters and receptors sensitive to activation by these pharmaceuticals are potentially affected by them. We review the various types of antidepressants, their occurrence and concentrations in aquatic environments, and the actions of neurohormones modulated by antidepressants in molluscs and crustaceans. Recent studies on the effects of antidepressants on these two important groups show that molluscan reproductive and locomotory systems are affected by antidepressants at environmentally relevant concentrations. In particular, antidepressants affect spawning and larval release in bivalves and disrupt locomotion and reduce fecundity in snails. In crustaceans, antidepressants affect freshwater amphipod activity patterns, marine amphipod photo- and geotactic behavior, crayfish aggression, and daphnid reproduction and development. We note with interest the occurrence of non-monotonic dose responses curves in many studies on effects of antidepressants on aquatic animals, often with effects at low concentrations, but not at higher concentrations, and we suggest future experiments consider testing a broader range of concentrations. Furthermore, we consider invertebrate immune responses, genomic and transcriptomic sequencing of invertebrate genes, and the ever-present and overwhelming question of how contaminant mixtures could affect the action of neurohormones as topics for future study. In addressing the question, if antidepressants affect aquatic invertebrates at concentrations currently found in the environment, there is strong evidence to suggest the answer is yes. Furthermore, the examples highlighted in this review provide compelling evidence that the effects could be quite multifaceted across a variety of biological systems.
抗抑郁药是在水环境中最常被检测到的人类药物之一。由于它们的作用模式是通过调节神经递质血清素、多巴胺和去甲肾上腺素,因此拥有对这些药物敏感的转运体和受体的水生无脊椎动物可能会受到它们的影响。我们回顾了各种类型的抗抑郁药、它们在水生环境中的出现和浓度,以及抗抑郁药在软体动物和甲壳类动物中调节神经激素的作用。最近关于抗抑郁药对这两个重要群体影响的研究表明,抗抑郁药会影响贝类的生殖和运动系统,在环境相关浓度下,抗抑郁药会影响贝类的产卵和幼虫释放,并会扰乱蜗牛的运动和降低其繁殖力。在甲壳类动物中,抗抑郁药会影响淡水端足目动物的活动模式、海洋端足目动物的趋光和趋地行为、淡水小龙虾的攻击性以及水蚤的繁殖和发育。我们注意到,许多关于抗抑郁药对水生动物影响的研究中都出现了非单调剂量反应曲线,这些研究通常在低浓度下有效果,但在高浓度下没有效果,我们建议未来的实验考虑测试更广泛的浓度范围。此外,我们还考虑了无脊椎动物的免疫反应、无脊椎动物基因的基因组和转录组测序,以及污染物混合物如何影响神经激素作用这一始终存在且压倒性的问题,将这些作为未来研究的课题。在回答抗抑郁药是否会在目前环境中发现的浓度下影响水生无脊椎动物这一问题时,有强有力的证据表明答案是肯定的。此外,本综述中强调的例子提供了令人信服的证据,表明这些影响在各种生物系统中可能是多方面的。