4.5 Article

Arsenic-contaminated freshwater: assessing arsenate and arsenite toxicity and low-dose genotoxicity in Gammarus elvirae (Crustacea; Amphipoda)

Journal

ECOTOXICOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 581-588

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10646-017-1791-6

Keywords

Gammarus; Comet assay; Arsenate; Arsenite; Hemocytes; LC(50)

Funding

  1. Sapienza University of Rome (Rome, Italy)

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Arsenic (As) contamination of freshwater is largely due to geogenic processes, but As is also released into the environment because of improper anthropic activities. The European regulatory limits in drinking water are of 10 mu g L-1 As. However, knowledge of the genotoxic effects induced by low doses of As in freshwater environments is still scanty. This study was designed to investigate arsenate (As(V)) and arsenite (As(III)) toxicity and low-dose genotoxicity in Gammarus elvirae, which has proved to be a useful organism for genotoxicity assays in freshwater. As(V) and As(III) toxicity was assessed on the basis of the median lethal concentration, LC(50), while estimates of DNA damage were based on the Comet assay. The G. elvirae LC (50-240 h) value we calculated was 1.55 mg L-1 for As(V) and 1.72 mg L-1 for As(III). Arsenic exposure (240 h) at 5, 10, and 50 A mu g L-1 of As in assays with either arsenate or arsenite-induced DNA damage in hemocytes of G. elvirae in a concentration-dependent manner. Our study provides a basis for future genotoxic research on exposure to freshwater that contains low levels of arsenic.

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