4.7 Article

Transepithelial potential remains indicative of major ion toxicity in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) after 4-day pre-exposure to major salts

Journal

AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY
Volume 246, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2022.106132

Keywords

Multi-Ion Toxicity (MIT) model; Salinization; 96 h exposure; Plasma ions; Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation; Michaelis-Menten analysis

Funding

  1. EPRI [10009699]
  2. NSERC (Canada) [RGPIN-2017-03843]
  3. NSERC

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The Multi-Ion Toxicity (MIT) Model predicts the transepithelial potential (TEP) as an index of major ion toxicity in freshwater animals. This study investigates the TEP responses and plasma ion levels in juvenile rainbow trout after pre-exposure to different concentrations of major salts. The results support the MIT model and provide insights into physiological responses after extended major ion exposure.
The Multi-Ion Toxicity (MIT) Model uses electrochemical theory to predict the transepithelial potential (TEP) across the gills as an index of major ion toxicity in freshwater animals. The goal is to determine environmental criteria that will be protective of aquatic organisms exposed to salt pollution. In recent studies, TEP disturbances above baseline (Delta TEP) during short-term exposures to major ions have been proven as indicative of their toxicity to fish, in accord with the MIT model. However, the acute 1-h exposures used in these previous studies might not be realistic relative to the 24 h or 96 h test periods used for toxicity assessment. To address this temporal inconsistency, the current study investigated both the TEP responses to serial concentrations of 10 major salts (NaCl, Na2SO4, NaHCO3, KCl, K2SO4, KHCO3, CaCl2, CaSO4, MgCl2, MgSO4) and plasma ion levels in juvenile rainbow trout after they had been pre-exposed to 50% of the 96h-LC50 levels of these same salts for 4 days. The pre-exposures caused no mortalities. In general, plasma ions (Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Cl-) were well-regulated; however, pre-exposure to sulfate salts resulted in the greatest number of alterations in plasma ion levels. TEP responses remained largely similar to those of naive trout (without salt pre-exposure). All salts caused hyperbolic concentration-dependent increases in TEP that were well-described by the Michaelis-Menten equation. In the pre-exposed trout, the variation of Delta TEP at the 96h-LC50 concentrations was only 2.2-fold, compared to nearly 28-fold variation among the molar concentrations of the various salts at the 96h-LC50s, identical to the conclusion for naive trout. Overall, the results remove the temporal inconsistency of previous tests and remain supportive of the MIT model. In addition, the recorded alterations in certain plasma ions, baseline TEP, and Michaelis-Menten constants improve our knowledge on specific physiological responses after extended major ion exposure.

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