Abstract
The aim of the present study was to identify whether the responses of oxidative stress in zebrafish liver are similar to those in mammalians upon low doses of Cd2+ exposure in short durations. Fish were exposed to 1.78 μM Cd2+ (treatment) and 0.0 μM Cd2+ (control) for 0, 1, 3, and 6 h. The reactive oxygen species (ROS) and lipid peroxidation (LPO) of hepatic tissues significantly increased after 3 and 6 h of Cd2+ exposure, respectively. Antioxidants glutathione peroxidase (gpx1a), superoxide dismutase (sod), and catalase (cat) were up regulated after 1–3 h, and metallothionein isoforms (smtB and mt2) increased after 3–6 h of Cd2+ exposure. The caspase-3 and p53 mRNA expressions significantly increased threefolds after 1 h of Cd2+ exposure. Results confirmed that oxidative stress in the hepatic tissue was induced by Cd2+ within 3 h. However, anti-oxidative functions immediately up regulated, causing cell apoptosis levels to decrease after 6 h of Cd2+ exposure.
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Cadmium (Cd) is a non-essential and toxic metal but it contaminates water and sediments in aquatic environments commonly through industrial effluents and wastes, agricultural pesticide runoff, domestic garbage dumps, and mining activities. The Cd accumulation correlated with the duration of exposure and with the ambient Cd concentration in fish. For example, zebrafish larvae were exposed to various concentrations of Cd2+ (0.2, 1.0, 5.0, 25, 125 μM) for 3 h. Cadmium contents in larvae appeared dose responses (Matza et al. 2007). The toxicants of Cd2+ might have damaged cells, and are generally associated with the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Company et al. 2004), while the ROS will be degraded by a specific and non-specific system. In a normal functioning cell, the process of generation and degradation of ROS are stable, which is why the steady-state ROS concentration is very low (<10−8 M). However, once the balance between ROS generation and degradation is disturbed, it can lead to an increase of ROS called oxidative stress. There are well-characterized mechanisms of cellular tolerance to oxidative stress; both enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidants up-regulates to protect itself from the toxicity of the environment (Lushchak 2011). The genes related to enzymatic antioxidants include sod, cat, and gpx. Like many other vertebrates, fish use both types as antioxidant defense mechanisms to reduce damage from oxidative stress. In addition, we have reported that the smtB and mt2 genes seem to have anti-oxidative stress functions in zebrafish, and both belong to non-enzymes antioxidants (Wu et al. 2015). When the tissues have oxidative stress, it can cause lipid oxidation, DNA damage, and cell apoptosis. Apoptosis related gene expressions such as p53 and caspase-3 are both activated after cellular stress or DNA damage (Pyati and Look 2011). Therefore, the present study detects ROS and LPO (lipid oxidation) levels, the protective effects of anti-oxidative enzyme or non-enzyme transcripts, proapoptotic transcription factors (p53 and caspase3 mRNA expressions), and apoptosis levels on the hepatic tissue of zebrafish after Cd2+ exposure.
A cascade of antioxidant responses will be reacted with oxidative stress. The SOD is the enzyme which deals with oxygen toxicity. It can catalyze O2 − and H+ into less reactive species, O2 and H2O2 (Ruas et al. 2008). The CAT enzyme can reduce H2O2 into water and oxygen to prevent oxidative stress and maintain cell homeostasis. In addition, GPx activity is believed to play an important role in cellular antioxidant defense by using glutathione (GSH) as a reducing agent to reduce H2O2 and various hydro-peroxides. Several studies have also examined the role of metallothioneins (MTs), which are non-enzyme antioxidants. From our previous study, it has shown that isoforms of MTs (smtB and mt2) have a function to defend oxidative stress in the brain, liver, and gills after cold shock (Wu et al. 2015).
The zebrafish (Danio rerio) is an excellent model for toxicology, and the liver has been addressed as a target organ for Cd2+ intoxication. There is much literature dealing with fish exposure to waterborne Cd2+ that shows a variety of accumulation of metal patterns. However, many studies have reported that the liver is the major accumulation organ (Hollis et al. 2001). In addition, the liver also plays an important role in Cd2+ metabolism, but it is the most critical organ for detoxification in acute exposures. On the other hand, Cd2+ could indirectly generate oxidative stress and free radicals (Cuypers et al. 2010). Thus, much available evidence has suggested that the DNA damage by Cd2+ was linked to ROS and inhibition of DNA repair mechanism (Chen et al. 2014). Generally, apoptotic pathways are triggered in zebrafish liver upon Cd exposure. p53 activation initially triggers the mitochondrial pathway, with the consequent up-regulation of caspase-9, and then up-regulation of caspase-3, -6 and -7, to result in DNA damage. Therefore, it is suggested that the p53 and caspase-3 mRNA expressions play an important role in the activation and induction of apoptosis. Our previous study also found that oxidative stress was generated by ROS and it induced cell apoptosis on gills and brain tissues of zebrafish after Cd2+ exposure (Wu et al. 2016). However, Zhu and Chan (2012) reported that ROS did not seem to be a key factor in Cd2+ cytotoxicity in the zebrafish liver cell line. Their data suggested that there is a diversity of effects to impute the use of different cell types, Cd2+ doses, and exposure time. Indeed, zebrafish is an excellent model used in various toxicological studies with immense genetic information. However, a few studies have confirmed that the anti-oxidative mechanisms are induced in hepatic tissue upon a low dose of Cd2+ exposure within hours. The present study investigates how the antioxidants are induced, and what is the pathological response on hepatic tissue within 6 h in low doses of Cd2+ exposure.
Materials and Methods
Sexually mature zebrafish of both sexes were obtained from the Taiwan Zebrafish Core Facility (TZCF, Miaoli, Taiwan). The fish were kept in an aquarium supplied with circulating, dechlorinated, aerated local tap water at 28°C with a 14 h:10 h light and dark photoperiod (Table 1).
According to the preliminary study, and the concentration of 1.78 μM Cd2+ is a suitable exposure medium. It was diluted with aerated local tap water from 10 mg/L Cd2+ stock solution. Media were analyzed by an atomic absorption spectrophotometer (Z-8000, Hitachi, Japan), using air/acetylene flame for Cd2+ analysis. The Cd2+ standard solution (Merck, Germany) was used to create a standard curve for the measurements. The addition of certain amounts of the standard solution to the test samples was used for background correction to estimate the matrix effect following the user instructions for the Hitachi spectrophotometer. The detection limit of Cd2+ was 10 μg/L. Each experiment used four test tanks, with five male zebrafish in each tank. In experiment 1, four tanks of control groups were used, containing 0 μM Cd2+ water, while another four tanks of treatment groups contained 1.78 μM Cd2+ water. The fish were immediately anesthetized with 50 mg/L MS222 (Ethyl 3-aminobenzoate methanesulfonate salt; Sigma) after various Cd2+ exposure durations, after which the hepatic tissues were excised from the body to determine anti-oxidative factors. In experiment 2, another four test tanks were utilized: one tank contained 0.0 μM Cd2+ water (control group), and three tanks contained 1.78 μM Cd2+ water (treatment group). TUNEL assay and flow cytometry was then used on each fish to detect key parameters of apoptosis, in addition to measuring apoptosis related genes expressions. All experiments were repeated three times. The MasterPure™ RNA Purification Kit (Epicentre, WI, USA) was used for total RNA extraction. Finally, the mRNA pellets were precipitated with 0.1 mg glycogen, 1/10 the volume of 3 mM NaOAc, and 95% ethanol, and stored at −20°C for cDNA synthesis. A first-strand cDNA library for both tissues was then constructed according to the protocol of the SMART™ cDNA Library Construction Kit (Clontech, USA) for RT-PCR analysis. Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) was carried out using a SYBR Green dye-based assay (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) with an ABI Prism 7500 Sequence Detection System (Perkin-Elmer, Applied Biosystems, Wellesley, MA, USA). We followed Choi et al. (2007) in selecting primers targeting sod, cat, and gpx1a, and in selecting primers targeting smtB and mt2 (Wu et al. 2015). The internal control gene β-actin was designed using the Primer Express 2.0 software (Applied Biosystems). All qPCR procedures followed our previous study (Wu et al. 2015). The standard curve of each gene was confirmed to be in a linear range with β-actin as an internal control. In addition, the β-actin Ct levels were also evaluated to ensure that there were not variably expressed housekeeping genes in liver tissue after 0–6 h of Cd2+ exposure in the preliminary study. Within qPCR reactions, triplicate reactions were performed for each sample, including β-actin (internal control) and target genes. To ensure data precision, qPCR data were accepted only when the variation Ct values were <1 in triplicate reactions of each gene within the whole set of experiments. Dissociation curves analysis was used to ensure that there was only one product. A negative control without template was transcribed for each primer pair. The hepatic tissues (5 mg) were excised from the body, and individually homogenized in a homogenization buffer either with 500 μL of Extract R-Saturated methanol solution for the LPO assay (Holliwell 1996), or with 200 μL of L-012 (8-Amino-5-chloror-7-phenylpyrido(3,4-d)pyridazine-1,4-(2H,3H)dione sodium salt) (Wako, Japan) for the ROS assay (Imada et al. 1999). Briefly, L-012 was dissolved into ddH2O to a final concentration at 20 mM, and then diluted with an appropriate buffer [50 mM Tris–HCl (pH 7.5)] to be an assay that has a concentration of 4 μM for O2 − radical measurements. The homogenates were incubated with 4 μM of L-012 reaction medium for 10 min under a dark space, and then centrifuged at 12,000×g for 3 min, after which 100 μL of supernatants was used to measure the relative light units (RLU) with a luminescence instrument (Berthold, Lumat LB9507, Germany). Cell death was detected using TUNEL assays to label DNA strand breaks. The TUNEL assay was performed on 5 μM sections and reacted with an ApopTag® Peroxidase In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit S7100 (Millipore, USA). The positive control sample was treated with DNase solution (1 U/μL) for 5 min at room temperature, while negative control staining was performed without active TdT but was incubated with proteinase K digestion to control the nonspecific incorporation of nucleotides or the nonspecific binding of enzyme conjugates. In addition, Cd2+ induced apoptosis in zebrafish hepatocytes was determined by flow cytometry (FACScan, Becton Dickinson, CA, USA). Results were aanalyzed by two-way ANOVA with tukey’s multiple comparison. Data were given as mean ± S.D. Significance difference was set at p < 0.05.
Results and Discussions
Data showed that the ROS level has a significant difference after 3 h of Cd2+ exposure, and LPO levels were significantly higher than the control after 6 h of Cd2+ exposure (Fig. 1). Some enzymatic anti-oxidative factors increased following Cd2+ exposure. sod mRNA levels significantly increased after 3 h, gpx1a and cat mRNA levels increased by 9.5- and 4.5-folds at 1 h after exposure to Cd2+, respectively. The cat mRNA levels rose again after 6 h of Cd2+ exposure (Fig. 2). The non-enzymatic antioxidants such as smtB and mt2 mRNA levels also evidently increased during 3–6 h of Cd2+ exposure. We suggested that the Cd2+ contents might be higher than the control group upon 3 h of Cd2+ exposure. Furthermore, the mt2 mRNA levels were 26–31-fold, and the smtB mRNA levels increased 61-fold at 3 h, but only raised 4.6-folds at 6 h after Cd2+ exposure (Fig. 3). The p53 and caspase-3 mRNA relative expressed significantly increased after 1 h of Cd2+ exposure. Furthermore, the p53 mRNA expression increased again after 6 h (Fig. 4). Results from both the TUNEL assay and the flow cytometry exhibited a similar pattern. The cell apoptosis levels both were showed the highest apoptosis levels at 3 h after Cd2+ exposure, respectively. However, it gradually recovered after 6 h of Cd2+ exposure (Figs. 5, 6). The concentration of 1.78 µM Cd2+ was used in the present study, which was just only 5% the level of LC50 for adult zebrafish. It was a sub-lethal concentration Cd2+ exposure. The past study also reported that oxidative stress was induced by sub-lethal concentrations of Cd2+ exposure for 6–36 h in goldfish. It focused on the antioxidant functions of GPx and MT (Choi et al. 2007). In addition, Liu et al. (2011) reported that the cellular oxidative stress was induced by Cd2+ exposure, and there were some responses that could determine antioxidant capacity, LPO stimulation, and tissue damage on zebrafish. Although the biochemical and toxicological properties of Cd2+ have been widely studied on sub-lethal concentration of Cd2+ exposure, the effects of low concentration (5% of 96 h/LC50 Cd2+) and in short durations (within 6 h) of Cd2+ exposure on relevant antioxidant parameters of in vivo studies on hepatic tissues were lacking. The present study included two oxidative stress levels (ROS and LPO), responses of enzymatic- and non-enzymatic antioxidants expressions, cell apoptosis, and apoptosis related genes (caspase-3 and p53). The results could identify the primary oxidative responses of fish once the environment is already contaminated with Cd2+.
Antioxidant enzymes such as sod, cat, gpx1a, and antioxidant materials with low molecular weight such as smtB and mt2 have been found rich in the brain and liver of zebrafish (Wu et al. 2015). ROS is produced naturally during oxygen metabolism and it includes superoxide (O2 −), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), hydroxyl radicals (HO−), and singlet oxygen (1O2). The ROS level, sod, and mt2 mRNA expressions are also found to be higher at 1 h of transfer than the initial point in control group. That may be specifically the “oxygen and ROS metabolism” and responses to oxidative stress since the handling stress increased oxygen metabolism, and caused the ROS level increased. In addition, it shows that the ROS levels significantly increased 3 h after exposure to Cd2+, but it was capable of returning to its initial state after 6 h. According to Lushchak (2011) oxidative stress has three types. The results evidently show the fish under an acute oxidative stress, and it might be induced by sub-lethal concentrations of Cd2+ exposure. It occurs when ROS, especially HO−, attack polyunsaturated fatty acids leading to a chain reaction, and severe injury of plasma membranes cause abnormal functions and loss of membrane integrity. LPO, malonedialdehyde and 4-hydroxy-2-Nonenal, are all indicators of oxidative stress levels. The LPO levels significantly increased following ROS at 6 h of Cd2+ exposure (Fig. 1). In addition, we found that the LPO level significantly decreased at 3 h after Cd2+ exposure, which also had a similar response profile in gills (Wu et al. 2016). Generally, there is a cascade of antioxidant responses: SOD can catalyze O2 · and H+ into less reactive species, O2 and H2O2 (Ruas et al. 2008); CAT can reduce H2O2 into water and oxygen to prevent oxidative stress; and GPx is playing a role in detoxification and removing hydrogen peroxide from cells by GSH oxidation. The present results indicated that the cat and gpx1a mRNA expressions had higher activity levels than in the control at 1 h after Cd2+ exposure, but the sod mRNA levels significantly increased at 3 h after Cd2+ exposure. The results equitably explain that the fish might have demonstrated a compensative physiological function since the fish increased oxygen metabolism upon Cd2+ exposure. In addition, the cat mRNA expression significantly increased following the increase of the sod mRNA expression 3 h after exposure to Cd2+, which might have increased in order to reduce H2O2 into water and oxygen (Fig. 2). Our previous studies have found that mt2 mRNA can be significantly induced upon Cd2+ exposure in embryo, juvenile, and adult zebrafish. However, smtB mRNA was only evidently raised in adult zebrafish after Cd2+ exposure. In addition, black goby, goldfish, shark, and rainbow trout, all treated with Cd2+, had higher levels of MT mRNA than the control (Choi et al. 2007). It is evident that exposure to Cd2+ significantly increases MT expressions in various species and tissues with some differences depending on dosage and exposure time. The past studies compared their tissue-specific gene expressions, and found that the mt1 and mt2 were different tissue specific expressions after various doses of Cd2+ exposure. Thus, the present study was to inspect mt2 and smtB expressions. Results showed that the smtB mRNA levels significantly increased over 61-fold than the control after 3 h of Cd2+ exposure. However, it just appeared 4.6-fold higher than the control after 6 h of Cd2+ exposure. The mt2 mRNA expression was 31.4- and 26.1-fold higher than the control after 3 and 6 h of Cd2+ exposure, respectively (Fig. 3). From these results, Cd2+ toxicity, at least in part, induces ROS formation, activation of p53 and caspase-3, and causes cell apoptosis. In fact, the early increases in the p53 mRNA expression observed in the present study is suggestive of its involvement in apoptosis activation, since TUNEL-positive cells became more evident soon after 2–3 h of Cd2+ exposure (Figs. 5, 6). They appear to have a time and dose dependent response, which p53 and caspase-3 mRNA levels increased 2.8- and 3.2-fold at 1 h of Cd2+ exposure, respectively. The apoptosis percentage was 2.99% at 1 h, but it was 13.79% and 7.67% at 3 and 6 h, respectively. Conclusion, antioxidants including sod, cat, gpx1a, mt2 and smtB interacted to defend against oxidative stress within several hours. Therefore, even though there was an up-regulation of p53 and capase-3 levels after 1 h of Cd2+ exposure, they recovered to its normal state afterwards. Zebrafish liver seems had a powerful anti-oxidative system, and it was created promptly after Cd2+ exposure, which resulted in reduced levels of cell apoptosis.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by grants (NSC101-2311-B-415-001-MY3) from the National Science Council, and in part supported by National Chiayi University, Taiwan.
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Wu, S.M., Shu, LH., Liu, JH. et al. Anti-oxidative Responses on Hepatic Tissue of Zebrafish (Danio rerio) in a Short Duration of Sub-lethal Concentrations of Cadmium Exposure. Bull Environ Contam Toxicol 98, 612–618 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00128-017-2063-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00128-017-2063-0