4.7 Article

Parasitism reduces oxidative stress of fish host experimentally exposed to PAHs

Journal

ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY
Volume 219, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2021.112322

Keywords

Aquatic ecotoxicology; Acanthocephalan; Ecophysiology; Metabolites; Telomeres; Wildlife

Funding

  1. Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE)
  2. METIS (UMR)
  3. Sorbonne University Environmental Transition Institute
  4. CEPER ECONAT

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The study found that parasite infection can affect the oxidative stress status of fish in response to pollutant exposure, potentially increasing oxidative damage at low concentrations and reducing it at higher concentrations. Antioxidant capacity did not differ significantly in response to parasite infection or PAHs exposure. Additionally, increased PAH levels did not compromise telomere length, body condition, or survival in infected and uninfected fish. This study provides experimental evidence that the outcome of host-parasite interactions can shift from negative to positive as pollutant exposure increases.
Some parasites are known to bioaccumulate some environmental pollutants within their host. We hypothesized that these parasites may be beneficial for their hosts in polluted environments. We experimentally increased long-term (five weeks) exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs, three levels: 0.1X, 1X, 10X environmental exposure) in European chubs (Squalius cephalus) that were naturally infected or uninfected with acanthocephalan parasites. We monitored PAHs levels in fish tissues, as well as oxidative stress, telomere length and condition indices. Although parasite infection did not significantly reduce the levels of PAHs and PAH metabolites in host tissues, host oxidative status was explained by parasitism and pollution levels. Oxidative damage increased with parasitism in fish exposed to low PAH levels (0.1X) but decreased in infected fish at higher PAH exposure (10X), thus corroborating our hypothesis. Meanwhile, antioxidant capacity did not differ in response to parasite infection nor PAHs exposure. Despite this imbalance in oxidative status, experimental increase in PAH levels did not compromise telomere length, body condition, or survival in infected and uninfected fish. This study provides the first experimental evidence that the outcome of host-parasite interactions can shift from negative to positive as pollutant exposure increases.

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