4.7 Article

Exposure to bisphenol analogues interrupts growth, proliferation, and fatty acid compositions of protozoa Tetrahymena thermophila

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 395, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.122643

Keywords

Bisphenol analogues; Tetrahymena thermophile; Fatty acids; Population proliferation

Funding

  1. Guangdong (China) Innovative and Enterpreneurial Research Team Program [2016ZT06N258]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21777059]

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A number of bisphenol A (BPA) analogues are increasingly used as its industrial alternatives. However, their effects on aquatic organisms at both individual and population levels have not been well understood. In this study, effects of five bisphenol analogues (i.e., BPA, BPAF, BPB, BPE and BPS) were investigated by using the unicellular eukaryote Tetrahymena thermophila as a model organism. All of them inhibited individual growth and population proliferation at a concentration of 2.6 mu M or 13.0 mu M during the 60-h exposure period, with the population suppression capacity ranked as: BPB > BPA approximate to BPAF > BPE > BPS. These analogues also exhibited chemical-specific disruption of fatty acid profiles in single-cell eukaryotes and the transcriptional levels of enzymes involved in fatty acid metabolism/biosynthesis. For example, exposure to BPA and BPE significantly increased the ratio of saturated fatty acids to unsaturated fatty acids, contrary to the desaturation effects exhibited by BPAF and BPB. Overall, our results clearly indicated that these bisphenol analogues could pose chemical-specific effects on low-trophic level aquatic organisms, particularly disruption of endogenous metabolic balances. Selected analogues (i.e., BPB and BPAF) could result in effects similar to or even greater than that of BPA.

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