4.5 Article

Effects of Long-Term Lead Exposure on Antioxidant Enzyme Defense System in Organs of Brown Hare (Lepus europaeus Pallas) as a Bioindicator of Environmental Pollution in Croatia

Journal

BIOLOGICAL TRACE ELEMENT RESEARCH
Volume 200, Issue 12, Pages 5091-5103

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s12011-021-03090-6

Keywords

Biomonitoring; Hare; Lead; Minerals; Oxidative stress enzymes

Funding

  1. Croatian Ministry of Science [053-0532400-2362, 062-0621341-0061]
  2. Program of the European Community for Research and Technological Development [FOODCT-2006-016253]
  3. University of Rijeka, Croatia [Uniri-biomed-18-155-1304]

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In Croatia's Podravina region, the heavy exploitation of natural gas, thriving agricultural industry, and transportation hub have led to significant lead pollution. This study focused on the bioaccumulation of lead in various organs of hares, particularly the liver, kidney, muscle, and brain, and its impact on the organism's oxidative status. The research also explored a potential ionic mechanism for lead exchange in the brain. The findings showed that long-term lead exposure negatively affected the oxidative status of hares, with the brain and muscles experiencing the strongest toxicity.
In Croatia, Podravina is a well-known lead-polluted region due to the intensive exploitation of natural gas, a highly developed agricultural industry, and a traffic hub with several heavily traveled roads. It represents a natural environment with a great variety of wildlife, especially hares (Lepus europaeus Pallas), which may serve as an indicator for environmental quality assessment. This study was conducted to estimate the bioaccumulation of lead in hare liver, kidney, muscle, and brain during long-term exposure and its impact on the oxidative status of the organism and to investigate a possible lead exchange ionic mechanism in the brain. In the organs of two hare groups (experimental from polluted area and control from the island of Krk), Ca, Fe, Mg, Na, lead concentrations, and antioxidant enzyme defense system were analyzed. The accumulation of lead was highest in the brain (3.7-fold higher compared to the control group) and lowest in the liver (1.6-fold higher compared to the control group). Kendall-Tau and multiple regression analysis showed that the increased lead content caused a stronger exchange of Ca and Na ions in the brain. We proposed that lead either mobilizes intracellular cation stores or causes competitive displacement of Ca from the binding site in intoxicated cells. A linear predictive model for cell intoxication by lead was proposed, where GPx and SOD were predominantly influenced by long-term lead exposure. The presented results showed that long-term lead exposure in hares negatively affected their oxidative status and caused the strongest toxicity in the brain and muscles, making their survival and/or population vulnerable.

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