Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6382236 | Aquatic Toxicology | 2015 | 55 Pages |
Abstract
We investigated the interactive effect of ammonia toxicity, salinity challenge and nutritional status on the ecophysiological performance of European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax). Fish were progressively acclimated to normal seawater (32Â ppt), to brackish water (20Â ppt and 10Â ppt) and to hyposaline water (2.5Â ppt). Following acclimation to different salinities for two weeks, fish were exposed to high environmental ammonia (HEA, 20Â mg/L â¼1.18Â mM representing 50% of 96Â h LC50 value for ammonia) for 12Â h, 48Â h, 84Â h and 180Â h, and were either fed (2% body weight) or fasted (unfed for 7 days prior to HEA exposure). Biochemical responses such as ammonia (Jamm) and urea excretion rate, plasma ammonia, urea and lactate, plasma ions (Na+, Clâ and K+) and osmolality, muscle water content (MWC) and liver and muscle energy budget (glycogen, lipid and protein), as well as branchial Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) and H+-ATPase activity, and branchial mRNA expression of NKA and Na+/K+/2Clâ co-transporter (NKCC1) were investigated in order to understand metabolic and ion- osmoregulatory consequences of the experimental conditions. During HEA, Jamm was inhibited in fasted fish at 10Â ppt, while fed fish were still able to excrete efficiently. At 2.5Â ppt, both feeding groups subjected to HEA experienced severe reductions and eventually a reversion in Jamm. Overall, the build-up of plasma ammonia in HEA exposed fed fish was much lower than fasted ones. Unlike fasted fish, fed fish acclimated to lower salinities (10Â ppt-2.5Â ppt) could maintain plasma osmolality, [Na+], [Clâ] and MWC during HEA exposure. Thus fed fish were able to sustain ion-osmotic homeostasis which was associated with a more pronounced up-regulation in NKA expression and activity. At 2.5Â ppt both feeding groups activated H+-ATPase. The expression of NKCC1 was down-regulated at lower salinities in both fed and fasted fish, but was upregulated within each salinity after a few days of HEA exposure. Though an increment in plasma lactate content and a decline in energy stores were noted for both feeding regimes, the effect was more severe in feed deprived fish. Overall, several different physiological processes were disturbed in fasted sea bass during HEA exposure while feeding alleviated adverse effects of high ammonia and salinity challenge. This suggests that low food availability can render fish more vulnerable to external ammonia, especially at reduced seawater salinities.
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Authors
Amit Kumar Sinha, Rindra Rasoloniriana, Antony Franklin Dasan, Nitin Pipralia, Ronny Blust, Gudrun De Boeck,