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Effect of acute exposure to settleable atmospheric particulate matter emitted by the steel industry on hematology and innate immunity of fat snook (Centropomus parallelus)

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Soares, Michelly Pereira ; Silva, Ludmila Mendes ; De Angelis, Carolina Fernandes ; Cardoso, Israel Luz ; Taylor, Edwin W. ; Souza, Iara da Costa ; Bendhack, Fabiano ; Vieira, Nathan de Souza ; Monferran, Magdalena V. ; Wunderlin, Daniel A. ; Fernandes, Marisa Narciso ; Leite, Cleo Alcantara Costa
Total Authors: 12
Document type: Journal article
Source: Marine Pollution Bulletin; v. 203, p. 13-pg., 2024-05-11.
Abstract

The steel industry is a significant worldwide source of atmospheric particulate matter (PM). Part of PM may settle (SePM) and deposit metal/metalloid and metallic nanoparticles in aquatic ecosystems. However, such an air -towater cross -contamination is not observed by most monitoring agencies. The region of Vitoria City is the main location of iron processing for exports in Brazil, and it has rivers, estuaries, and coastal areas affected by SePM. We have evaluated the effects of SePM on a local representative fish species, the fat snook, Centropomus parallelus . After acclimation, 48 fishes (61.67 +/- 27.83 g) were individually exposed for 96 h to diverse levels of SePM (0.0, 0.01, 0.1 and 1 g/L -1 ). The presence of metals in the blood and several blood biomarkers were analyzed to evaluate the impact of SePM on stress signaling, blood oxygen transport capacity, and innate immune activity. Metal bioaccumulation was measured from blood in two separately analyzed compartments: intracellular (erythrocytes plus white blood cells) and extracellular (plasma). The major metals present at all contamination levels in both compartments were Fe and Zn, followed by Al and Cu, plus traces of 'Emerging metals ': Ba, Ce, La, Rb, Se, Sr, and Ti. Emerging metals refer to those that have recently been identified in water as contaminants, encompassing rare earth elements and critical technology elements, as documented in previous studies (See REEs and TCEs in Cobelo-Garc & iacute;a et al., 2015; Batley et al., 2022). Multivariate analysis revealed that SePM had strong, dose -dependent correlations with all biomarker groups and indicated that blood oxygen -carrying capacity had the highest contamination responsiveness. Metal contamination also increased cortisol and blood glucose levels, attesting to increased stress signaling, and had a negative effect on innate immune activity. Knowledge of the risks related to SePM contamination remains rudimentary. However, the fact that there was metal bioaccumulation, causing impairment of fundamental physiological and cellular processes in this ecologically relevant fish species, consumed by the local human population, highlights the pressing need for further monitoring and eventual control of SePM contamination. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 19/08491-0 - Atmospheric particulate material and environmental contamination. Impact assessment in the aquatic biota in an integrated ecophysiotoxicological approach
Grantee:Marisa Narciso Fernandes
Support Opportunities: Research Projects - Thematic Grants
FAPESP's process: 23/09904-1 - Effect of temperature on acute sublethal contamination by atmospheric particulate matter
Grantee:Israel Luz Cardoso
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Support Program for Fixating Young Doctors