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Toxicity of aqueous fullerene in adult and larval Fundulus heteroclitus
Author(s) -
Blickley Twyla Michelle,
McClellanGreen Patricia
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
environmental toxicology and chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1552-8618
pISSN - 0730-7268
DOI - 10.1897/07-632.1
Subject(s) - fundulus , glutathione , toxicity , hatching , lipid peroxidation , oxidative stress , chemistry , embryo , antioxidant , environmental chemistry , larva , toxicology , zoology , biology , biochemistry , ecology , fishery , organic chemistry , fish <actinopterygii> , enzyme
Abstract Aqueous suspensions of fullerene aggregates (aqua‐nC 60 ) were used to investigate the movement of carbon‐based nanomaterials in a marine water column and to determine their effects on different life stages of a marine teleost. Fullerene aggregates formed precipitates as a result of mixing in natural seawater, and levels of aqua‐nC 60 were significantly increased in bottom waters after 24 h. Exposure of Fundulus heteroclitus embryos, larvae, and adults to increasing concentrations of aqua‐nC 60 resulted in very little mortality, and no median lethal concentrations could be calculated at ≤ 10 mg/L. Aggregates of aqua‐nC 60 did adhere to the chorion but did not affect development of the embryos or their hatching success. Movements of aqua‐nC 60 through the chorion and into the embryo tended to increase with higher exposure levels; however, the concentrations were extremely low and did not differ significantly. Larvae exposed to increasing concentrations of aqua‐nC 60 exhibited a significant dose‐dependent increase in total glutathione (GSH). This was accompanied by a decreasing trend in lipid peroxidation (LPO), but LPO was not statistically different between treatments. Adult F. heteroclitus exposed to increasing concentrations of aqua‐nC 60 exhibited an increase in total GSH in liver tissue but not in the gill. No significant effects on LPO were observed in either tissue. Thus, we conclude that aqua‐nC 60 affects the oxidative stress response of F. heteroclitus and that increased antioxidant defenses provide some physiological tolerance for these materials. Environmental factors influencing uptake, metabolism, and physiological response following exposure, however, need further investigation.

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