4.7 Article

Multi-omic responses of fish exposed to complex chemical mixtures in the Shenandoah River watershed

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 902, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165975

Keywords

Endocrine disruption; Environmental mixtures; Landscape ecotoxicology; Ecotoxicogenomics; Transcriptomics; Metabolomics

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In order to evaluate the relationships between anthropogenic impacts, contaminant occurrence, and fish health, fish exposures were conducted across different land use sites in the Shenandoah River watershed. The study found adverse reproductive outcomes and increased mortality in fish exposed to wastewater treatment plant effluent and agricultural impacts. Molecular biomarkers and hepatic metabolomic and transcriptomic profiles indicated variations in land use and contaminant profiles. This study demonstrated the linkages between human impacts, contaminant occurrence, and exposure effects, highlighting the increased risk of adverse outcomes in fish exposed to complex mixtures.
To evaluate relationships between different anthropogenic impacts, contaminant occurrence, and fish health, we conducted in situ fish exposures across the Shenandoah River watershed at five sites with different land use. Exposure water was analyzed for over 500 chemical constituents, and organismal, metabolomic, and transcriptomic endpoints were measured in fathead minnows. Adverse reproductive outcomes were observed in fish exposed in the upper watershed at both wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluent-and agriculture-impacted sites, including decreased gonadosomatic index and altered secondary sex characteristics. This was accompanied with increased mortality at the site most impacted by agricultural activities. Molecular biomarkers of estrogen exposure were unchanged and consistent with low or non-detectable concentrations of common estrogens, indicating that alternative mechanisms were involved in organismal adverse outcomes. Hepatic metabolomic and transcriptomic profiles were altered in a site-specific manner, consistent with variation in land use and contaminant profiles. Integrated biomarker response data were useful for evaluating mechanistic linkages between contaminants and adverse outcomes, suggesting that reproductive endocrine disruption, altered lipid processes, and immunosuppression may have been involved in these organismal impacts. This study demonstrated linkages between human-impact, contaminant occurrence, and exposure effects in the Shenandoah River watershed and showed increased risk of adverse outcomes in fathead minnows exposed to complex mixtures at sites impacted by municipal wastewater discharges and agricultural practices.

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