1. Hsp60-induced tolerance in the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis exposed to multiple environmental contaminants.
- Author
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Wheelock CE, Wolfe MF, Olsen H, Tjeerdema RS, and Sowby ML
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Assay methods, Blotting, Western, Chaperonin 60 drug effects, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Combinations, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Rotifera metabolism, San Francisco, Seawater, Chaperonin 60 biosynthesis, Copper toxicity, Environmental Monitoring methods, Environmental Pollution adverse effects, Petroleum toxicity, Rotifera drug effects, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
Hsp60 induction was selected as a sublethal endpoint of toxicity for Brachionus plicatilis exposed to a water accommodated fraction (WAF) of Prudhoe Bay crude oil (PBCO), a PBCO/dispersant (Corexit 9527(R)) fraction and Corexit 9527(R) alone. To examine the effect of multiple stressors, exposures modeled San Francisco Bay, where copper levels are approximately 5 microgram/L, salinity is 22 per thousand, significant oil transport and refining occurs, and petroleum releases have occurred historically. Rotifers were exposed to copper at 5 microgram/L for 24 h, followed by one of the oil/dispersant preparations for 24 h. Batch-cultured rotifers were used in this study to model wild populations instead of cysts. SDS-PAGE with Western Blotting using hsp60-specific antibodies and chemiluminescent detection were used to isolate, identify, and measure induced hsp60 as a percentage of control values. Both PBCO/dispersant and dispersant alone preparations induced significant levels of hsp60. However, hsp60 expression was reduced to that of controls at high WAF concentrations, suggesting interference with protein synthesis. Rotifers that had been preexposed to copper maintained elevated levels of hsp60 upon treatment with WAF at all concentrations. Results suggest that induction of hsp60 by chronic low-level exposure may serve as a protective mechanism against subsequent or multiple stressors and that hsp60 levels are not additive for the toxicants tested in this study, giving no dose-response relationship. The methods employed in this study could be useful for quantifying hsp60 levels in wild rotifer populations.
- Published
- 1999
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