Title of article :
Responses of Hexaplex (Murex) trunculus to selected pollutants
Author/Authors :
M. Rome´o a، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , S. Gharbi-Bouraoui b، نويسنده , , M. Gnassia-Barelli، نويسنده , , M. Dellali b، نويسنده , , P. A?¨ssa b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Cadmium, copper and zinc concentrations (in whole soft body and in tissues) were measured in Hexaplex trunculus collected
from the Bizerta lagoon in Tunisia. An evaluation of the biological effects of the most toxic metals (cadmium and copper) and of
two organics (carbofuran and lindane), present in the sediments of the Bizerta lagoon, was attempted by measuring biomarkers
(acetylcholinesterase: AChE, catalase: CAT and glutathione S-transferase: GST activities) in animals experimentally exposed for 48
or 72 h. The concentration ranges as follows: ZnNCuNCd. Copper concentrations are highly variable (8.0 to 235 Ag g 1 d.w.)
whereas cadmium (range 1.35–4.86 Ag g 1) and zinc (range 360–1320 Ag g 1) concentrations are less variable. The digestive
gland and the gill take up more metal than the muscle. AChE activity in H. trunculus is decreased by exposure to carbofuran or the
mixture carbofuran and cadmium, in the digestive gland and muscle and by copper and by lindane in the digestive gland. AChE is
generally inhibited by carbamates but some other compounds may also decrease this activity as observed in this paper. An increase
in CAT activity associated with a decrease in GST activity is noted in the muscle of H. trunculus exposed to cadmium, to
carbofuran and to the mixture of cadmium and carbofuran, and in the digestive gland of animals exposed to lindane. These
pollutants may act upon glutathione and decrease the GST activity that cannot detoxify them and CAT activity has a protective
effect. On the contrary, copper increases CAT and GST activities in the digestive gland of exposed gastropods; these enzymes seem
to cooperate and play together their roˆ le of anti-oxidant enzymes. If H. trunculus is not a bioindicator species for metal
concentrations, due to a high variability in metal concentrations, nevertheless the biochemical responses to pollutants (cadmium,
copper, carbofuran and lindane) represented by AChE, CAT and GST activities may act as biomarkers of exposure in this species.
Keywords :
Cadmium , copper , biomarker , Carbofuran , lindane , Hexaplex trunculus
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment