4.8 Article

Subcellular Distribution of Dietary Methyl-Mercury in Gammarus fossarum and Its Impact on the Amphipod Proteome

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 15, Pages 10514-10523

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c02385

Keywords

bioaccumulation; cell walls; cytosol; proteogenomics; subcellular distribution

Funding

  1. Grand Reims

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The study found that invertebrates fed with methyl-Hg (MeHg) from cell walls of plants had higher concentrations of Hg, potentially triggering different threshold of proteomic response.
The transfer of methyl-Hg (MeHg) from food is central for its effects in aquatic animals, but we still lack knowledge concerning its impact on invertebrate primary consumers. In aquatic environments, cell walls of plants are particularly recalcitrant to degradation and as such remain available as a food source for long periods. Here, the impact at the proteomic level of dietary MeHg in Gammarus fossarum was established and linked to subcellular distribution of Hg. Individuals of G. fossarum were fed with MeHg in cell wall or intracellular compartments of Elodea nuttallii. Hg concentrations in subcellular fractions were 2 to 6 times higher in animals fed with cell wall than intracellular compartments. At the higher concentrations tested, the proportion of Hg in metal-sensitive fraction increased from 30.0 +/- 6.1 to 41.0 +/- 5.7% for individuals fed with intracellular compartment, while biologically detoxified metal fraction increased from 30.0 +/- 6.1 to 50.0 +/- 2.8% when fed with cell wall compartment. Data suggested that several thresholds of proteomic response are triggered by increased bioaccumulation in each subcellular fraction in correlation with Hg exclusively bound to the metal-sensitive fraction, while the increase of biologically detoxified metal likely had a cost for fitness. Proteomics analysis supported that the different binding sites and speciation in shoots subsequently resulted in different fate and cellular toxicity pathways to consumers. Our data confirmed that Hg bound in cell walls of plants can be assimilated by G. fossarum, which is consistent with its feeding strategy, hence pointing cell walls as a significant source for Hg transfers and toxicity in primary consumers. The high accumulation of Hg in macrophytes makes them a risk for food web transfer in shallow ecosystems. The present results allowed gaining new insights into the effects and uptake mechanisms of MeHg in aquatic primary consumers.

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