Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4420028 Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Yellow perch from metal contaminated lakes has olfactory-mediated behavioral deficits in native water.•Microarray analysis detected gene transcription changes in fish from metal contaminated lakes.•No link could be made between the behavioral and transcriptional levels.

The olfactory system of fish is sensitive to the toxic effects of low concentrations of contaminants. To investigate the effects of long-term metal exposure on olfaction in wild yellow perch (Perca flavescens), fish from one clean (Geneva Lake) and two metal-contaminated lakes (Ramsey and Hannah lakes) were collected in and around the metal-mining district of Sudbury, ON. Two different techniques were used to measure the effects of exposure to environmental contamination: (i) behavioral responses were recorded in response to conspecific skin extract and (ii) gene transcription differences in olfactory rosettes were characterized using a novel, 1000-candidate gene yellow perch microarray. Behavioral assays performed on fish from the clean lake demonstrated avoidance of a conspecific skin extract, while fish from metal contaminated lakes showed no avoidance response. A total of 109 out of the 1000 genes were differentially transcribed among the lakes. Most of the differentially transcribed genes were between the two metal contaminated lakes relative to either of the contaminated lakes and the reference lake. No genes were differentially expressed between Geneva Lake (clean) and Hannah Lake (metal contaminated). These results demonstrated that even though the different populations of fish from both Hannah and Ramey lakes were affected at the behavioral level, the impairment of olfaction was not measurable using gene transcriptional changes in olfactory rosettes.

graphical abstractFish from metal contaminated lakes have impaired olfactory mediated behaviors, however, no link could be made between the behavioral and transcriptional levels of biological organization.Figure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slide

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
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