Variations in thyroid hormone levels in endangered St. Lawrence Estuary belugas : potential linkage with stress and organohalogen contaminant exposure

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2024.108647

Language of the publication
English
Date
2024-04-09
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Jolicoeur, Valérie
  • Houde, Magali
  • Loseto, Lisa
  • Michaud, Robert
  • Verreault, Jonathan
Publisher
Elsevier

Abstract

The St. Lawrence Estuary (SLE) beluga (Delphinapterus leucas) population is highly exposed to an array of contaminants that were identified as one of the causes to the non-recovery of this endangered and declining population. In the last decade, an increasing number of parturition-associated complications and calf mortality has been reported in this population. It was suggested that elevated exposure to organohalogens (e.g., the halogenated flame retardants polybrominated diphenyl ethers [PBDEs]) and stress could play a role in this phenomenon by perturbing thyroid hormones. The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of concentrations of organohalogen contaminants and stress (cortisol levels) on thyroid hormone variations in adult male and female SLE belugas. Because plasma could not be collected in SLE belugas for ethical reasons, skin biopsy (n = 40) was used as a less-invasive alternative matrix to determine organohalogens (PBDEs and other halogenated flame retardants, polychlorinated biphenyls, and organochlorine pesticides), cortisol, and thyroid hormones (triiodothyronine [T3] and thyroxine [T4]), and their metabolites reverse T3 and 3,5-diiodothyronine [3,5-T2]). Cortisol and thyroid hormones were analyzed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography-multiple reactions monitoring mass spectrometry (UPLC-MRM/MS). This method was compared using skin and plasma samples obtained from Arctic belugas. Comparisons of linear models showed that cortisol was a weak predictor for T4, rT3 and 3,5-T2. Specifically, there was a weak significant negative association between T4 and cortisol levels. Moreover, in male SLE belugas, a weak significant positive association was found between T3 and Σ34PBDE concentrations in skin. Our findings suggest that stress (i.e., elevated skin cortisol levels) along with organohalogen exposure (mainly PBDEs) may be associated with thyroid hormone level perturbations in skin of cetaceans.

Subject

  • Biological diversity,
  • Nature and environment,
  • Science and technology

Rights

Pagination

32 pages

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1873-6750
0160-4120

Article

Journal title
Environment International
Article number
108647
Accepted date
2024-04-09
Submitted date
2023-12-20

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Collection(s)

Biodiversity

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