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Metals and oxidative stress in aquatic decapod crustaceans: A review with special reference to shrimp and crabs

Journal

AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY
Volume 242, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2021.106024

Keywords

Oxidative stress; Superoxide dismutase; Catalase; Antioxidant enzyme; Metals

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Aquatic decapod crustaceans exhibit varied antioxidant defense strategies in response to metal-induced oxidative stress. Antioxidant enzymes may be induced or inhibited by metals depending on species, concentration, and exposure time. Superoxide dismutase, for example, shows increased activity at low metal levels and exposure durations, but is inhibited at higher concentrations and longer exposure times.
The objective of this review is to synthetize knowledge of the relationship between metals and oxidative stress in aquatic crustaceans (mainly shrimp and crabs) to analyze antioxidant responses when organisms are exposed to metals because the direct metal binding to the active site of enzymes inactivates most of the antioxidant systems. This study reviewed over 150 works, which evidenced that: (i) antioxidant defense strategies used by aquatic decapod crustaceans vary among species; (ii) antioxidant enzymes could be induced or inhibited by metals depending on species, concentration, and exposure time; and (iii) some antioxidant enzymes, as superoxide dismutase increase their activity in low metal levels and time exposures, but their activities are inhibited with higher metal concentrations and exposure time.

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