4.7 Article

Vanadium Toxicity Monitored by Fertilization Outcomes and Metal Related Proteolytic Activities in Paracentrotus lividus Embryos

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TOXICS
卷 10, 期 2, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics10020083

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sodium orthovanadate; sea urchin embryos; gelatinases; metalloproteinases

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Metal pharmaceutical residues are emerging toxic pollutants in aquatic environments. Vanadium derivatives have potential therapeutic effects in diseases but their impact on aquatic environments is not well-known. This study found that vanadium affected fertilization and caused morphological abnormalities in sea urchin embryos, and it also influenced the proteolytic activity of gelatinases.
Metal pharmaceutical residues often represent emerging toxic pollutants of the aquatic environment, as wastewater treatment plants do not sufficiently remove these compounds. Recently, vanadium (V) derivatives have been considered as potential therapeutic factors in several diseases, however, only limited information is available about their impact on aquatic environments. This study used sea urchin embryos (Paracentrotus lividus) to test V toxicity, as it is known they are sensitive to V doses from environmentally relevant to very cytotoxic levels (50 nM; 100 nM; 500 nM; 1 mu M; 50 mu M; 100 mu M; 500 mu M; and 1 mM). We used two approaches: The fertilization test (FT) and a protease detection assay after 36 h of exposure. V affected the fertilization percentage and increased morphological abnormalities of both egg and fertilization envelope, in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, a total of nine gelatinases (with apparent molecular masses ranging from 309 to 22 kDa) were detected, and their proteolytic activity depended on the V concentration. Biochemical characterization shows that some of them could be aspartate proteases, whereas substrate specificity and the Ca2+/Zn2+ requirement suggest that others are similar to mammalian matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs).

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