Université de Rennes 1, UMR CNRS 6553 EcoBio, 263 Avenue du Gal Leclerc, CS 74205, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France; Institut Universitaire de France, 1 rue Descartes, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France.
Department of Entomology, Faculty of Science, Cairo University, Giza - PO Box 12613, Egypt.
Environ Pollut. 2018 Oct;241:821-833. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2018.06.011. Epub 2018 Jun 7.
Antibiotics have been increasingly used over the past decades for human medicine, food-animal agriculture, aquaculture, and plant production. A significant part of the active molecules of antibiotics can be released into the environment, in turn affecting ecosystem functioning and biogeochemical processes. At lower organizational scales, these substances affect bacterial symbionts of insects, with negative consequences on growth and development of juveniles, and population dynamics. Yet, the multiple alterations of cellular physiology and metabolic processes have remained insufficiently explored in insects. We evaluated the effects of five antibiotics with different mode of action, i.e. ampicillin, cefradine, chloramphenicol, cycloheximide, and tetracycline, on the survival and ultrastructural organization of the flight muscles of newly emerged blow flies Chrysomya albiceps. Then, we examined the effects of different concentrations of antibiotics on mitochondrial protein content, efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation, and activity of transaminases (Glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and glutamate pyruvate transaminase) and described the cellular metabolic perturbations of flies treated with antibiotics. All antibiotics affected the survival of the insects and decreased the total mitochondrial protein content in a dose-dependent manner. Ultrastructural organization of flight muscles in treated flies differs dramatically compared to the control groups and severe pathological damages/structures disorganization of mitochondria appeared. The activities of mitochondrial transaminases significantly increased with increased antibiotic concentrations. The oxidation rate of pyruvate + proline from isolated mitochondria of the flight muscles of 1-day-old flies was significantly reduced at high doses of antibiotics. In parallel, the level of several metabolites, including TCA cycle intermediates, was reduced in antibiotics-treated flies. Overall, antibiotics provoked a system-wide alteration of the structure and physiology of flight muscles of the blow fly Ch. albiceps, and may have fitness consequences at the organism level. Environmental antibiotic pollution is likely to have unwanted cascading ecological effects of insect population dynamics and community structure.
在过去几十年中,抗生素被越来越多地用于人类医学、食品动物农业、水产养殖和植物生产。抗生素的大量活性分子可以释放到环境中,从而影响生态系统功能和生物地球化学过程。在较低的组织尺度上,这些物质会影响昆虫的细菌共生体,对幼虫的生长和发育以及种群动态产生负面影响。然而,昆虫细胞生理和代谢过程的多种改变仍未得到充分探索。我们评估了五种不同作用模式的抗生素(氨苄青霉素、头孢拉定、氯霉素、环己酰亚胺和四环素)对新出现的黄粉虫 Chrysomya albiceps 飞行肌的生存和超微结构组织的影响。然后,我们研究了不同浓度的抗生素对线粒体蛋白含量、氧化磷酸化效率以及转氨酶(谷氨酸草酰乙酸转氨酶和谷氨酸丙酮酸转氨酶)活性的影响,并描述了抗生素处理后苍蝇的细胞代谢紊乱。所有抗生素都影响昆虫的生存,并以剂量依赖的方式降低总线粒体蛋白含量。与对照组相比,处理组的飞行肌超微结构组织差异显著,线粒体出现严重的病理损伤/结构紊乱。线粒体转氨酶的活性随着抗生素浓度的增加而显著增加。来自 1 日龄苍蝇飞行肌分离线粒体的丙酮酸+脯氨酸的氧化率在高剂量抗生素时显著降低。同时,抗生素处理苍蝇中的几种代谢物(包括 TCA 循环中间产物)的水平降低。总的来说,抗生素引起了黄粉虫 Ch. albiceps 飞行肌结构和生理的全身性改变,并可能对机体水平的适应性产生影响。环境抗生素污染很可能对昆虫种群动态和群落结构产生意想不到的级联生态影响。