Levin E D, Schmechel D E, Burkholder J B, Deamer-Melia N J, Moser V C, Harry G J
Department of Psychiatry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710 USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 1997 Dec;105(12):1320-5. doi: 10.1289/ehp.971051320.
Pfiesteria piscicida and other toxic Pfiesteria-like dinoflagellates have been implicated as a cause of fish kills in North Carolina estuaries and elsewhere. Accidental laboratory exposure of humans to P. piscicida has been reported to cause a complex syndrome including cognitive impairment. The current project was conducted to experimentally assess the possibility of cognitive effects of P. piscicida exposure in rats. Samples of water from aquaria in which P. piscicida zoospores were killing fish were frozen, a procedure that has been found to induce encystment. Thawed samples were injected into albino Sprague-Dawley rats. A significant learning impairment was documented in rats administered samples of P. piscicida that were recently frozen. Prolonged storage of Pfiesteria samples diminished the effect. No effect was seen in the recall of a previously learned task, but when the rats were called upon to learn a new task, the Pfiesteria-treated animals showed a significant learning deficit. This effect persisted up to at least 10 weeks after a single injection of Pfiesteria. The Pfiesteria-induced learning deficit did not seem to be associated with any obvious debilitation or health impairment of the exposed rats. Deficits in habituation of arousal and rearing behavior were detected using a functional observational battery. No Pfiesteria-induced effects on blood count and white cell differential or in a standard pathological screening of brain, liver, lung, kidney, and spleen tissue were seen at 2 months after exposure. These studies document a persistent learning impairment in rats after exposure to the dinoflagellate P.piscicida in otherwise physically well-appearing rats. This effect may partially model the symptoms of cognitive impairments that humans have shown after Pfiesteria exposure.
杀鱼费氏藻及其他类似的有毒费氏藻属鞭毛藻被认为是北卡罗来纳州河口及其他地区鱼类死亡的原因之一。据报道,人类在实验室意外接触杀鱼费氏藻会引发一种包括认知障碍在内的复杂综合征。当前项目旨在通过实验评估大鼠接触杀鱼费氏藻后产生认知影响的可能性。将装有杀鱼费氏藻游动孢子且正在导致鱼类死亡的水族箱中的水样冷冻,这一过程已被发现可诱导形成孢囊。解冻后的样本被注射到白化斯普拉格 - 道利大鼠体内。给注射了近期冷冻的杀鱼费氏藻样本的大鼠记录到了显著的学习障碍。费氏藻样本的长时间储存会减弱这种影响。在对先前所学任务的记忆方面未观察到影响,但当要求大鼠学习一项新任务时,经费氏藻处理的动物表现出显著的学习缺陷。单次注射费氏藻后,这种影响至少持续了10周。费氏藻诱导的学习缺陷似乎与暴露大鼠的任何明显衰弱或健康损害无关。使用功能性观察组合检测到觉醒和竖毛行为习惯化方面的缺陷。暴露2个月后,未观察到费氏藻对血细胞计数、白细胞分类或脑、肝、肺、肾和脾组织的标准病理筛查有影响。这些研究证明,在身体外观正常的大鼠接触鞭毛藻杀鱼费氏藻后会出现持续的学习障碍。这种影响可能部分模拟了人类接触费氏藻后出现的认知障碍症状。