4.7 Article

Wild longnose dace downstream of wastewater treatment plants display an obese phenotype

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
卷 285, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117363

关键词

Municipal wastewater effluent; Transcriptomics; Cyprinidae; Metabolic programming; Lipid metabolism

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [463163-14, 217481-2013]
  2. Alberta Conservation Association through the ACA Grants in Biodiversity

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Wild fish living downstream of wastewater treatment plants tend to have higher body mass indices and increased nutrient storage, but show metabolic disruptions that impair their ability to mobilize metabolites post-stress, potentially compromising their ability to cope with environmental and/or anthropogenic stressors.
Wild fish living downstream of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) often have increased body condition factors or body mass indices compared to upstream fish. This observation has been largely attributed to increased nutrient loading and food availability around wastewater effluent outflows. While a higher condition factor in fish is generally considered a predictor of healthy ecosystems, the metabolic status and capacity of the animals downstream of WWTPs may be a better predictor of fitness and potential population level effects. To address this, we sampled wild longnose dace (Rhinichthys cataractae), a native species in North American waterways, from sites upstream and downstream of WWTPs. Downstream fish had higher body mass indices, which corresponded with higher nutrient (lipid, protein, and glycogen) storage in somatic tissues compared to upstream fish. Liver transcriptome analysis revealed metabolic reprogramming favoring lipid synthesis, including higher hepatic triglyceride levels and transcript abundance of targeted lipogenic genes. This suggests that effluent exposuremediated obesity in dace is a result of changes at the transcriptional level. To determine potential ecological consequences, we subjected these fish to an acute stressor in situ to determine their stress performance. Downstream fish failed to mobilize metabolites post-stress, and showed a reduction in liver aerobic and anaerobic metabolic capacity. Taken together, fish living downstream of WWTPs exhibit a greater lipid accumulation that results in metabolic disruption and may compromise the ability of these fish to cope with subsequent environmental and/or anthropogenic stressors.

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