Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca

<p>Ecological risk assessment (ERA) is a framework for monitoring risks of exposure and adverse effects of environmental stressors to populations or communities of interest. One tool of ERA is the biomarker, which is a characteristic of an organism that reliably indicates exposure to or effect...

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Main Author: Gott, Ryan Christopher
Language:EN
Published: University of Maryland, College Park 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10128659
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-101286592016-06-30T16:00:27Z Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca Gott, Ryan Christopher Entomology|Natural resource management|Environmental science <p>Ecological risk assessment (ERA) is a framework for monitoring risks of exposure and adverse effects of environmental stressors to populations or communities of interest. One tool of ERA is the biomarker, which is a characteristic of an organism that reliably indicates exposure to or effects of a stressor like chemical pollution. Traditional biomarkers which rely on characteristics at the tissue level and higher often detect only acute exposures to stressors. Sensitive molecular biomarkers may detect lower stressor levels than traditional biomarkers, which helps inform risk mitigation and restoration efforts before populations and communities are irreversibly affected. In this study I developed gene expression-based molecular biomarkers of exposure to metals and insecticides in the model toxicological freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca. My goals were to not only create sensitive molecular biomarkers for these chemicals, but also to show the utility and versatility of H. azteca in molecular studies for toxicology and risk assessment. I sequenced and assembled the H. azteca transcriptome to identify reference and stress-response gene transcripts suitable for expression monitoring. I exposed H. azteca to sub-lethal concentrations of metals (cadmium and copper) and insecticides (DDT, permethrin, and imidacloprid). Reference genes used to create normalization factors were determined for each exposure using the programs BestKeeper, GeNorm, and NormFinder. Both metals increased expression of a nuclear transcription factor (Cnc), an ABC transporter (Mrp4), and a heat shock protein (Hsp90), giving evidence of general metal exposure signature. Cadmium uniquely increased expression of a DNA repair protein (Rad51) and increased Mrp4 expression more than copper (7-fold increase compared to 2-fold increase). Together these may be unique biomarkers distinguishing cadmium and copper exposures. DDT increased expression of Hsp90, Mrp4, and the immune response gene Lgbp. Permethrin increased expression of a cytochrome P450 (Cyp2j2) and decreased expression of the immune response gene Lectin-1. Imidacloprid did not affect gene expression. Unique biomarkers were seen for DDT and permethrin, but the genes studied were not sensitive enough to detect imidacloprid at the levels used here. I demonstrated that gene expression in H. azteca detects specific chemical exposures at sub-lethal concentrations, making expression monitoring using this amphipod a useful and sensitive biomarker for risk assessment of chemical exposure. University of Maryland, College Park 2016-06-29 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10128659 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Entomology|Natural resource management|Environmental science
spellingShingle Entomology|Natural resource management|Environmental science
Gott, Ryan Christopher
Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca
description <p>Ecological risk assessment (ERA) is a framework for monitoring risks of exposure and adverse effects of environmental stressors to populations or communities of interest. One tool of ERA is the biomarker, which is a characteristic of an organism that reliably indicates exposure to or effects of a stressor like chemical pollution. Traditional biomarkers which rely on characteristics at the tissue level and higher often detect only acute exposures to stressors. Sensitive molecular biomarkers may detect lower stressor levels than traditional biomarkers, which helps inform risk mitigation and restoration efforts before populations and communities are irreversibly affected. In this study I developed gene expression-based molecular biomarkers of exposure to metals and insecticides in the model toxicological freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca. My goals were to not only create sensitive molecular biomarkers for these chemicals, but also to show the utility and versatility of H. azteca in molecular studies for toxicology and risk assessment. I sequenced and assembled the H. azteca transcriptome to identify reference and stress-response gene transcripts suitable for expression monitoring. I exposed H. azteca to sub-lethal concentrations of metals (cadmium and copper) and insecticides (DDT, permethrin, and imidacloprid). Reference genes used to create normalization factors were determined for each exposure using the programs BestKeeper, GeNorm, and NormFinder. Both metals increased expression of a nuclear transcription factor (Cnc), an ABC transporter (Mrp4), and a heat shock protein (Hsp90), giving evidence of general metal exposure signature. Cadmium uniquely increased expression of a DNA repair protein (Rad51) and increased Mrp4 expression more than copper (7-fold increase compared to 2-fold increase). Together these may be unique biomarkers distinguishing cadmium and copper exposures. DDT increased expression of Hsp90, Mrp4, and the immune response gene Lgbp. Permethrin increased expression of a cytochrome P450 (Cyp2j2) and decreased expression of the immune response gene Lectin-1. Imidacloprid did not affect gene expression. Unique biomarkers were seen for DDT and permethrin, but the genes studied were not sensitive enough to detect imidacloprid at the levels used here. I demonstrated that gene expression in H. azteca detects specific chemical exposures at sub-lethal concentrations, making expression monitoring using this amphipod a useful and sensitive biomarker for risk assessment of chemical exposure.
author Gott, Ryan Christopher
author_facet Gott, Ryan Christopher
author_sort Gott, Ryan Christopher
title Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca
title_short Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca
title_full Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca
title_fullStr Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca
title_full_unstemmed Development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca
title_sort development of gene expression-based biomarkers of exposure to metals and pesticides in the freshwater amphipod hyalella azteca
publisher University of Maryland, College Park
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10128659
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