Department of Biology, Lund University, SE-223 62, Lund, Sweden.
Department of Biology, Lund University, SE-223 62, Lund, Sweden.
Environ Pollut. 2024 Oct 1;358:124461. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.124461. Epub 2024 Jul 2.
Identifying key molecular pathways and genes involved in the response to urban pollutants is an important step in furthering our understanding of the impact of urbanisation on wildlife. The expansion of urban habitats and the associated human-introduced environmental changes are considered a global threat to the health and persistence of humans and wildlife. The present study experimentally investigates how short-term exposure to three urban-related pollutants -soot, artificial light at night (ALAN) and traffic noise-affects transcriptome-wide gene expression in livers from captive female zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). Compared to unexposed controls, 17, 52, and 28 genes were differentially expressed in soot, ALAN and noise-exposed birds, respectively. In soot-exposed birds, the enriched gene ontology (GO) terms were associated with a suppressed immune system such as interferon regulating genes (IRGs) and responses to external stimuli. For ALAN-exposed birds, enriched GO terms were instead based on downregulated genes associated with detoxification, redox, hormonal-, and metabolic processes. Noise exposure resulted in downregulation of genes associated with the GO terms: cellular responses to substances, catabolic and cytokine responses. Among the individually differentially expressed genes (DEGs), soot led to an increased expression of genes related to tumour progression. Likewise, ALAN revealed an upregulation of multiple genes linked to different cancer types. Both sensory pollutants (ALAN and noise) led to increased expression of genes linked to neuronal function. Interestingly, noise caused upregulation of genes associated with serotonin regulation and function (SLC6A4 and HTR7), which previous studies have shown to be under selection in urban birds. These outcomes indicate that short-term exposure to the three urban pollutants perturbate the liver transcriptome, but most often in different ways, which highlights future studies of multiple-stress exposure and their interactive effects, along with their long-term impacts for urban-dwelling wildlife.
确定参与城市污染物反应的关键分子途径和基因是进一步了解城市化对野生动物影响的重要步骤。城市栖息地的扩张以及与之相关的人为环境变化被认为是对人类和野生动物健康和生存的全球性威胁。本研究通过实验研究了短期暴露于三种与城市相关的污染物(烟尘、夜间人工光(ALAN)和交通噪声)如何影响圈养雌性斑马雀(Taeniopygia guttata)肝脏的转录组基因表达。与未暴露的对照组相比,烟尘、ALAN 和噪声暴露组的鸟分别有 17、52 和 28 个基因表达差异。在烟尘暴露的鸟类中,富集的基因本体论(GO)术语与免疫系统受抑制有关,如干扰素调节基因(IRGs)和对外界刺激的反应。对于 ALAN 暴露的鸟类,富集的 GO 术语则基于下调的基因,与解毒、氧化还原、激素和代谢过程有关。噪声暴露导致与 GO 术语“细胞对物质的反应”、“分解代谢和细胞因子反应”相关的基因下调。在个体差异表达基因(DEGs)中,烟尘导致与肿瘤进展相关的基因表达增加。同样,ALAN 显示出多个与不同癌症类型相关的基因上调。两种感觉污染物(ALAN 和噪声)导致与神经元功能相关的基因表达增加。有趣的是,噪声导致与 5-羟色胺调节和功能相关的基因(SLC6A4 和 HTR7)上调,先前的研究表明,这些基因在城市鸟类中受到选择。这些结果表明,短期暴露于三种城市污染物会扰乱肝脏转录组,但通常以不同的方式扰乱,这突显了对多种应激暴露及其相互作用以及对城市野生动物的长期影响的未来研究。