Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8853726 | Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS) is considered a less-toxic replacement for perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS), with multiple applications in industrial and consumer products. Previous studies comparing their toxicity generally used similar exposure levels, without taking internal concentrations into account. The current study compared the reproductive toxicity of PFOS and PFBS, at similar internal concentrations, to Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans). PFBS was much less bioaccumulative than PFOS. The 48-h median lethal concentrations (LC50) for PFOS and PFBS were 1.4â¯Î¼M (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.1-1.6) and 794â¯Î¼M (95% CI: 624-1009), respectively. Egg production and brood number of C. elegans decreased markedly following exposure to 0.1â¯Î¼M PFOS or 1000 or 1500â¯Î¼M PFBS. Germ-cell apoptosis and production of reactive oxygen species increased significantly following exposure to 2â¯Î¼M PFOS or 500 or 1000â¯Î¼M PFBS. Expression of the antioxidant genes sod-3, ctl-2, and gst-4 and the pro-apoptotic genes egl-1 and ced-13 was altered significantly following PFOS and PFBS exposure. These findings indicate that both chemicals exert reproductive toxicity in C. elegans, probably owing to germ-cell apoptosis resulting from elevated levels of reactive oxygen species. The vastly different exposure concentrations of PFBS and PFOS used in this study produced similar internal concentrations, leading to the reproductive toxicities observed.
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Environmental Chemistry
Authors
Fengjie Chen, Cuiyun Wei, Qiuyu Chen, Jie Zhang, Ling Wang, Zhen Zhou, Minjie Chen, Yong Liang,