4.7 Article

Mechanism of bisphenol S exposure on color sensitivity of zebrafish larvae

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 316, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.120670

Keywords

Bisphenol S; Cone cell; DNA damage; Neurodevelopment; Color vision

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In this study, transgenic zebrafish larvae were exposed to BPS during retinal development. The results showed that BPS induced DNA damage, structural damage, altered gene expression, abnormal development of key neurons, and inhibited light-electrical signal transduction, leading to color vision impairment.
Color vision, initiated from cone cells, is vitally essential for identifying environmental information in vertebrate. Although the retinotoxicity of bisphenol S (BPS) has been reported, data on the influence of BPS treatment on cone cells are scarce. In the present study, transgenic zebrafish (Danio rerio) labeling red and ultraviolet (UV) cones were exposed to BPS (0, 1, 10, and 100 mu g/L) during the early stages of retinal development, to elucidate the mechanism underlying its retinal cone toxicity of BPS. The results showed that 10 and 100 mu g/L BPS induced oxidative DNA damage, structural damage (decreased number of ribbon synapses), mosaic patterning disorder, and altered expression of genes involved in the phototransduction pathway in red and UV cones. Furthermore, BPS exposure also caused abnormal development of key neurons (retinal ganglion cells, optic nerve, and hy-pothalamus), responsible for transmitting the light-electrical signal to brain, and thereby resulted in inhibition of light-electrical signal transduction, finally diminishing the spectral sensitivity of zebrafish larvae to long-and short-type light signal at 5 day post fertilization. This study highlights the cone-toxicity of environmental rele-vant concentrations of BPS, and clarifies the mechanism of color vision impairment induced by BPS at the cellular level, updating the understanding of visual behavior driven by environmental factors.

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