4.8 Article

Water temperature affects the biotransformation and accumulation of a psychoactive pharmaceutical and its metabolite in aquatic organisms

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 155, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2021.106705

Keywords

Aquatic invertebrate; Benzodiazepine; Drug; Fish; Dragonfly; Temazepam

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council Formas [2018-00828]
  2. Czech Science Foundation [2009951S]
  3. Kempe Foundations [SMK-1954]
  4. Marie-Claire Cronstedt Foundation
  5. National Science Foundation [HRD-1547798, 1831075]
  6. Office Of Internatl Science &Engineering
  7. Office Of The Director [1831075] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  8. Formas [2018-00828] Funding Source: Formas

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This study investigated the effects of temperature on the bioconcentration, biotransformation, and accumulation of anxiolytic drugs in aquatic organisms. The results showed that temperature significantly influenced the bioconcentration of temazepam in perch, as well as its biotransformation and accumulation of its metabolite oxazepam. In contrast, dragonfly larvae showed no temperature dependency for temazepam bioconcentration and no detectable biotransformation leading to oxazepam accumulation.
Pharmaceutically active compounds (PhACs) have been shown to accumulate in aquatic and riparian food-webs. Yet, our understanding of how temperature, a key environmental factor in nature, affects uptake, biotransformation, and the subsequent accumulation of PhACs in aquatic organisms is limited. In this study, we tested to what extent bioconcentration of an anxiolytic drugs (temazepam and oxazepam) is affected by two temperature regimes (10 and 20 degrees C) and how the temperature affects the temazepam biotransformation and subsequent accumulation of its metabolite (oxazepam) in aquatic organisms. We used European perch (Perca fluviatilis) and dragonfly larvae (Sympetrum sp.), which represent predator and prey species of high ecological relevance in food chains of boreal and temperate aquatic ecosystems. Experimental organisms were exposed to target pharmaceuticals at a range of concentrations (0.2-6 mu g L-1) to study concentration dependent differences in bioconcentration and biotransformation. We found that the bioconcentration of temazepam in perch was significantly reduced at higher temperatures. Also, temperature had a strong effect on temazepam biotransformation in the fish, with the production and subsequent accumulation of its metabolite (oxazepam) being two-fold higher at 20 degrees C compared to 10 degrees C. In contrast, we found no temperature dependency for temazepam bioconcentration in dragonfly larvae and no detectable biotransformation of the parent compound that would result in measurable concentrations of oxazepam in this organism. Our results highlight that while organisms may share the same aquatic ecosystem, their exposure to PhACs may change differently across temperature gradients in the environment.

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