Salmonid smolt caudal fin and liver transcriptome responses to low sulfur marine diesel and high sulfur fuel oil water accommodated fractions for assessing oil spill effects in marine environments

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2024.116463

Language of the publication
English
Date
2024-05-15
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Imbery, Jacob J.
  • Buday, Craig
  • Miliano, Rachel C.
  • Shang, Dayue
  • Kwok, Honoria
  • Helbing, Caren C.
Publisher
Elsevier

Alternative title

Réponses du transcriptome de la nageoire caudale et du foie de smolts aux fractions adaptées à l’eau de combustibles de soute à faible teneur en soufre et de mazout à haute teneur en soufre aux fins d’évaluation des effets des déversements d’hydrocarbures dans les milieux marins

Abstract

The environmental impact of oil spills is a critical concern, particularly pertaining to low sulfur marine diesel (LSMD) and high sulfur fuel oil (HSFO) that are commonly involved in coastal spills. Although transcriptomic biomonitoring of sentinel animals can be a powerful tool for assessing biological effects, conventional methods utilize lethal sampling to examine the liver. As a non-lethal alternative, we have previously shown salmonid caudal fin cyp1a1 is significantly responsive to LSMD-derived toxicants. The present study further investigated the transcriptomic biomonitoring potential of coho salmon smolt caudal fin in comparison to liver tissue in the context of LSMD and HSFO seawater accommodated fraction (seaWAF) exposure in cold-water marine environments. Assessing the toxicity of these seaWAFs involved quantifying polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (tPAH50) concentrations and generating gene expression profiles. Initial qPCR analyses revealed significant cyp1a1 response in both liver and caudal fin tissues of both genetic sexes to all seaWAF exposures. RNA-Seq analysis, focusing on the highest LSMD and HSFO seaWAF concentrations (28.4±1.8 and 645.08±146.3 µg/L tPAH50, respectively), revealed distinct tissue-specific and genetic sex-independent transcriptomic responses with an overall enrichment of oxidative stress, cell adhesion, and morphogenesis-related pathways. Remarkably, the caudal fin tissue exhibited transcriptomic response patterns comparable to liver tissue, particularly consistent differential expression of 33 gene transcripts in the liver (independent of sex and oil type) and 44 in the caudal fin. The present work underscores the viability of using the caudal fin as a non-lethal alternative to liver sampling for assessing and tracking oil spill exposure in marine environments.

Plain language summary

Exposure to oil product seawater accommodated fractions (seaWAF) can be deleterious. There is a need for effectively tracking seaWAF exposure effects in salmon. Coho salmon smolt were exposed to marine diesel and high sulfur fuel oil seaWAF. RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) indicated caudal fin and liver candidate transcript profiles. Caudal fin, a nonlethal liver-alternative, is highly responsive to seaWAF exposure.

Subject

  • Oil spills,
  • Salt water fish,
  • Petroleum

Rights

Pagination

10 pages

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1090-2414
0147-6513

Article

Journal title
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
Journal volume
279
Article number
116463
Accepted date
2024-05-12
Submitted date
2024-01-21

URI

Collection(s)

Water

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