4.6 Article

Bifenthrin induces developmental immunotoxicity and vascular malformation during zebrafish embryogenesis

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpc.2019.108671

Keywords

Bifenthrin; Zebrafish; Embryotoxicity; Development; Angiogenesis

Funding

  1. Korea Health Technology R&D Project through the Korea Health Industry Development Institute - Ministry of Health and Welfare [HI17C0929]
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT) [2018R1C1 B6009048]

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Bifenthrin is a synthesized pyrethroid insecticide which is frequently used in the farmland to eradicate insects. Bifenthrin mainly disrupts sodium ion channel inducing neurotoxicity in the target insects. It also exerts toxic effects such as hormone dysregulation, hepatotoxicity and immunotoxicity in other vertebrates. However, there is no evidence of the acute-toxicity associated embryogenesis and organogenesis of bifenthrin in zebrafish. Here we first demonstrated that bifenthrin induced acute-toxicity accompanying inflammatory response and physiological degradations resulting in loss of embryogenesis and vascular development in zebrafish embryos. We found that bifenthrin increased intestinal ROS accumulation and the inflammatory genes including tnfa, il6, il8 and ptgs2b, thereby increasing embryo mortality. Moreover, bifenthrin disrupted angiogenesis by down-regulation of VEGF receptors in embryos. Not only in the zebrafish, bifenthrin also decreased cell viability and hampered vascular formation of HUVECs. Collectively, bifenthrin induced developmental toxicity, inflammatory cell death and anti-angiogenesis during embryogenesis.

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