Li Xiang, Sun Ming-Zhu, Li Xu, Zhang Shu-Hui, Dai Liang-Ti, Liu Xing-Yu, Zhao Xin, Chen Dong-Yan, Feng Xi-Zeng
State Key Laboratory of Medicinal Chemical Biology, Key Laboratory of Bioactive Materials, Ministry of Education, College of Life Science, Nankai University, Tianjin, 300071, China; Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology of Natural Products, Ministry of Education, School of Pharmacy, Shandong University, Jinan, Shandong 250012, China.
The Institute of Robotics and Automatic Information Systems, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Intelligent Robotics, Nankai University, Tianjin, 300071, China.
Chemosphere. 2017 Nov;186:295-304. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.07.164. Epub 2017 Aug 1.
The extensive usage of xenobiotic endocrine disrupting chemicals (XEDCs), such as Bisphenol A (BPA), has created obvious threat to aquatic ecosystems worldwide. Although a comprehensive understanding of the adverse effect of BPA on behaviors and physiology have been proven, the potential impact of low-dose BPA on altering the basic ability of aquatic organism in adapting to the surrounded complex environment still remains elusive. In this research, we report that treatment of adult male zebrafish with chronic (7 weeks) low-dose (0.22 nM-2.2 nM) BPA, altered the ability in adapting the complex environment by disturbing the natural color preference patterns. In addition, chronic 50 ng/L (0.22 nM) BPA exposure alleviated the anxiety behavior of male zebrafish confronted with the novel environment by enhancing the preference towards light in the light/dark preference test. This phenotype was associated with less expression of serotonin (5-TH) in the hypothalamus and the down-regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in brain tissues. As such, our results show that low-dose BPA remnant in surface waters altered zebrafish behavior that are known to have ecological and evolutionary consequences.
Here we reported that the impact of chronic low-dose BPA exposure on the basic capability of zebrafish to adapt to the environmental complexity. Specifically, BPA at low concentration, under the environmental safety level and 3000-fold lower than the accepted human daily exposure, interfered with the ability to discriminate color and alleviate anxiety induced by the novel environment, which finally altered the capability of male zebrafish to adapt to the environmental complexity. These findings revealed the ecological effect of low-dose BPA and regular BPA concentration standard are not necessarily safe. The result also provided the consideration of retuning the hazard concentration level of BPA.
诸如双酚A(BPA)等外源性内分泌干扰化学物质(XEDCs)的广泛使用,已对全球水生生态系统造成明显威胁。尽管已证实对BPA对行为和生理的不利影响有全面了解,但低剂量BPA对改变水生生物适应周围复杂环境的基本能力的潜在影响仍不清楚。在本研究中,我们报告称,用慢性(7周)低剂量(0.22 nM - 2.2 nM)BPA处理成年雄性斑马鱼,会通过扰乱自然颜色偏好模式来改变其适应复杂环境的能力。此外,在明暗偏好试验中,长期暴露于50 ng/L(0.22 nM)BPA可通过增强对光的偏好来减轻雄性斑马鱼面对新环境时的焦虑行为。这种表型与下丘脑中血清素(5-TH)表达减少以及脑组织中酪氨酸羟化酶(TH)下调有关。因此,我们的结果表明,地表水中残留的低剂量BPA改变了斑马鱼的行为,而这些行为已知具有生态和进化后果。
在此我们报告了慢性低剂量BPA暴露对斑马鱼适应环境复杂性基本能力的影响。具体而言,低浓度的BPA在环境安全水平以下,且比公认的人类每日暴露量低3000倍,它干扰了辨别颜色的能力,并减轻了新环境引起的焦虑,最终改变了雄性斑马鱼适应环境复杂性的能力。这些发现揭示了低剂量BPA的生态效应,常规的BPA浓度标准不一定安全。该结果还为重新调整BPA的危害浓度水平提供了思考。