6533b861fe1ef96bd12c5a53

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Toxicity of biomining effluents to Daphnia magna: Acute toxicity and transcriptomic biomarkers

Eeva-riikka VehniäinenAnna K. KarjalainenJussi V. K. KukkonenLeena Sivula

subject

0301 basic medicinelähetti-RNAHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesis010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesNickelmetallitmixture toxicityCadmiumbioliuotusbiologyvesien saastuminenChemistryGeneral MedicineContaminationPollutiontranskriptio (biologia)Environmental chemistryToxicitykaivosvesiCadmiumkaivoksetmining effluentEnvironmental EngineeringmRNAta1172Daphnia magnametalschemistry.chemical_elementBiominingmyrkyllisyysMining03 medical and health sciencesToxicity Tests AcuteAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistryEffluent0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationAcute toxicitysub-lethal030104 developmental biologyDaphniaGene Expression RegulationmarkkeritvesikirputbioleachingEcotoxicityTranscriptomeBiomarkers

description

Increasing metal consumption is driving the introduction of new techniques such as biomining to exploit low grade ores. The biomining impacts notably aquatic ecosystems, yet, the applicability of ecotoxicological tests to study the complex mixture effects of mining waters is insufficiently understood. The aim of the present work was to test if transcriptomic biomarkers are suitable and sensitive for the ecotoxicity assessment of biomining affected waters. The study site had been affected by a multimetal biomine, and the studied water samples formed a concentration gradient of contamination downstream from the biomining site. Cadmium and nickel were used as positive controls in the toxicity tests. Selected transcriptomic biomarkers, previously shown to be differentially regulated by metals, were used to evaluate the ecotoxicity of the water samples. Parallel samples were used to compare the transcriptomic biomarkers with the conventional acute D. magna toxicity test. In the acute test, one sample was acutely toxic to D. magna, when pH was adjusted according to the standard, whereas, in the native pH, three samples caused total immobility. Monooxygenase was up-regulated by the highest concentration of Cd in control samples and three of the water samples. Vtg-SOD was up-regulated by one of the water samples, and catalase by the second highest concentration of Cd. The results show that transcriptomic biomarkers in D. magna can be used as sensitive bioindicators for metal mixture toxicity assessment in complex environmental water samples.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.07.030