4.7 Article

Cytogenotoxicity evaluation of a heavy metal mixture, detected in a polluted urban wetland: Micronucleus and comet induction in the Indian green frog (Euphlyctis hexadactylus) erythrocytes and the Allium cepa bioassay

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 277, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130278

Keywords

Polluted wetland; Heavy metals; Cytogenotoxicity; Micronucleus and comet assays; Allium cepa bioassay

Funding

  1. Ministry of Higher Education, Sri Lanka [HETC/CMB/QIGW3/SCI/OS/2012/02]
  2. University of Colombo [AP/3/2/2012/RG/SC/04]

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This study evaluated the cytogenotoxicity of heavy metal contamination in a polluted urban wetland using a battery of cytogenotoxic assays. Different exposure conditions led to varying genotoxic effects of the heavy metal mixture on frog erythrocytes, with the Allium cepa bioassay showing lower sensitivity to heavy metals.
Heavy metal contamination in wetland ecosystems is a serious environmental and health concern. This study evaluated the cytogenotoxicity of a previously evidenced heavy metal contamination (Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb and Zn similar to 5 ppm each) in a polluted urban wetland, the Bellanwila-Attidiya sanctuary (BAS) in Sri Lanka, using a battery of cytogenotoxic assays. Micronucleus and comet assays evaluated the genotoxicity in erythrocytes of a common amphibian, the Indian green frog (Euphlyctis hexadactylus), under natural metal exposure in the wetland, and in vitro exposure, respectively. The Allium cepa bioassay assessed the cytogenotoxicity of the heavy metal mixture and of the individual metals, under laboratory exposure. Although in vivo natural exposure showed no significant induction of micronuclei in frog erythrocytes (P > 0.1), a significant and dose dependent elevation of comets was evident with in vitro exposure to the metal mixture (P < 0.001). Field controls did not show significant impacts in the A. cepa bioassay, whereas individual exposure to heavy metals reported lower effects than their combined exposure under laboratory conditions; Pb2+ was the most toxic metal, with the highest mitotic inhibition (Pb2+>Cd2+>Zn2+>Cr-6>Cu2+), mutagenic potential as evaluated in the percentage incidence of chromosomal aberrations (Pb2+>Zn2+>Cu2+>Cr6+>Cd2+) and cytotoxicity evaluated by the incidence of cell apoptosis and necrosis (Pb2+>Cr6+>Cu2+>Cd2+>Zn2+). Thus, the test battery of micronucleus, comet and A. cepa assays that reveal differential aspects of cytogenotoxicity may serve as a valuable tool in environmental monitoring, primarily to screen for complex environmental mixtures of heavy metals that may impact ecological health. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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