4.7 Article

Comparative transcriptome and antioxidant biomarker response reveal molecular mechanisms to cope with zinc ion exposure in the unicellular eukaryote Paramecium

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JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
卷 453, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.131364

关键词

Zinc; Molecular mechanisms; Paramecium; Transcriptome; Antioxidant enzymes

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The development of industry has led to excessive zinc exposure in the environment, causing health problems in various organisms. This study investigates how aquatic microorganisms respond to zinc stress. The ciliated protozoan Paramecium was used as a cellular model to explore the toxicity and detoxification mechanisms during zinc stress response. The results show that long-term zinc exposure inhibits population growth in ciliates, and the response mechanism to zinc exposure is dose-dependent and time-dependent. The excessive zinc ions cause adverse effects on cellular structure and function, leading to damage to DNA and proteins, disturbance of mitochondrial function, and oxidative stress.
The development of industry has resulted in excessive environmental zinc exposure which has caused various health problems in a wide range of organisms including humans. The mechanisms by which aquatic microorganisms respond to environmental zinc stress are still poorly understood. Paramecium, a well-known ciliated protozoan and a popular cell model in heavy metal stress response studies, was chosen as the test unicellular eukaryotic organism in the present research. In this work, Paramecium cf. multimicronucleatum cells were exposed in different levels of zinc ion (0.1 and 1.0 mg/L) for different periods of exposure (1 and 4 days), and then analyzed population growth, transcriptomic profiles and physiological changes in antioxidant enzymes to explore the toxicity and detoxification mechanisms during the zinc stress response. Results demonstrated that long-term zinc exposure could have restrained population growth in ciliates, however, the response mechanism to zinc exposure in ciliates is likely to show a dosage-dependent and time-dependent manner. The differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified the characters by high-throughput sequencing, which remarkably enriched in the phagosome, indicating that the phagosome pathway might mediate the uptake of zinc, while the pathways of ABC transporters and Na+/K+-transporting ATPase contributed to the efflux transport of excessive zinc ions and the maintenance of osmotic balance, respectively. The accumulation of zinc ions triggered a series of adverse effects, including damage to DNA and proteins, disturbance of mitochondrial function, and oxidative stress. In addition, we found that gene expression changed significantly for metal ion binding, energy meta-bolism, and oxidation-reduction processes. RT-qPCR of ten genes involved in important biological functions further validated the results of the transcriptome analysis. We also continuously monitored changes in activity of four antioxidant enzymes (SOD, CAT, POD and GSH-PX), all of which peaked on day 4 in cells subjected to zinc stress. Collectively, our results indicate that excessive environmental zinc exposure initially causes damage to cellular structure and function and then initiates detoxification mechanisms to maintain homeostasis in P. cf. multimicronucleatum cells.

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