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Activation of a stress‐induced gene by insecticides in the midge, Chironomus yoshimatsui
Author(s) -
Yoshimi Tatsuya,
Minowa Kozue,
KarounaRenier Natalie K.,
Watanabe Chiharu,
Sugaya Yoshio,
Miura Takashi
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
journal of biochemical and molecular toxicology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.526
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1099-0461
pISSN - 1095-6670
DOI - 10.1002/jbt.10018
Subject(s) - midge , hsp70 , biology , strain (injury) , larva , pyrethroid , pesticide , gene expression , cypermethrin , microbiology and biotechnology , northern blot , pesticide resistance , heat shock protein , gene , toxicology , ecology , genetics , anatomy
Stress proteins (heat shock proteins, HSPs) have been proposed as general biomarkers for environmental monitoring. In the present study, we evaluated the environmental stress‐burden on the aquatic midge Chironomus yoshimatsui using hsp70 expression. Larvae collected from streams receiving polluted runoff (field strain) were resistant to the organophosphorus insecticide, fenitrothion (F), and the synthetic pyrethroid, ethofenprox (E), whereas a strain originally collected from an unpolluted area (susceptible strain) showed low resistance to insecticide exposure. To examine the expression of an HSP70 gene in C. yoshimatsui , an hsp70 cDNA probe was prepared using RNA obtained from the field strain larvae and used for Northern blot analyses. The expression of this HSP70 gene in larvae collected from two field sites in May about 1 week after insecticide spraying in the fields was 2.3 ( p = 0.018) to 3.3 fold higher than that in the susceptible strain and was also 4.6 and 1.4 ( p = 0.033) fold higher than those collected in November 3 months after the cessation of insecticide spraying. In order to identify potential inducers of the HSP70 gene of the field strain, larvae of the susceptible strain were exposed to F or E for 24 h and hsp70 mRNA levels determined. Exposures to F at 0.4 μg/L and E at 1.1 μg/L increased hsp70 mRNA levels 2.7 ( p = 0.049) and 4.4 ( p = 0.043) fold over controls, respectively. These results suggest that larvae collected from polluted areas are burdened by environmental stressors and the tested insecticides are potential inducers of HSP70. The results also support the suggestion that HSP70 gene expression is a sensitive indicator of low level (nonlethal) exposures to certain insecticides. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biochem Mol Toxicol 16:10–17, 2002; DOI 10.1002/jbt.10018

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