Particle effects on fish gills: An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish

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Particle effects on fish gills : An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish. / Lu, Cao; Kania, Per W.; Buchmann, Kurt.

In: Aquaculture, Vol. 484, 02.2018, p. 98-104.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lu, C, Kania, PW & Buchmann, K 2018, 'Particle effects on fish gills: An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish', Aquaculture, vol. 484, pp. 98-104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2017.11.005

APA

Lu, C., Kania, P. W., & Buchmann, K. (2018). Particle effects on fish gills: An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish. Aquaculture, 484, 98-104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2017.11.005

Vancouver

Lu C, Kania PW, Buchmann K. Particle effects on fish gills: An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish. Aquaculture. 2018 Feb;484:98-104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2017.11.005

Author

Lu, Cao ; Kania, Per W. ; Buchmann, Kurt. / Particle effects on fish gills : An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish. In: Aquaculture. 2018 ; Vol. 484. pp. 98-104.

Bibtex

@article{e3ac1504768b47aeb765b05960e71e2b,
title = "Particle effects on fish gills: An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish",
abstract = "Particles composed of inorganic, organic and/or biological materials occur in both natural water bodies and aquaculture facilities. They are expected to affect fish health through a direct chemical, mechanical and biological interaction with gills during ventilation but the nature of the reactions and the relative importance of mechanical versus chemical and biological stimulation are unknown. The present work presents an immune gene expression method for evaluation of gill disturbance and sets a baseline for the mechanical influence on fish gills of chemically inert spherical particles. The method may be applied to investigate particle impact at different combinations of temperature, fish size, water quality and particle composition. Spherical polystyrene particles (diameters 0.2 μm, 1 μm, 20 μm, 40 μm and 90 μm) were adopted as the particle model and the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) fingerlings and wildtype zebrafish (Danio rerio) as fish models. After 2 h particle exposure (concentration 2 × 105 particles/L), particles present in different gill compartments were recorded and gill responses evaluated by quantitative realtime PCR focusing on innate and adaptive immune genes. Particles measuring 20 μm and 40 μm were more frequently located in rainbow trout gills compared to 90 μm beads. Fish gills colliding with inert spherical particles may not necessarily and generally initiate inflammatory reactions. The ifnγ gene showed upregulation in rainbow trout gills (exposed to 0.2 μm and 40 μm beads) and in zebrafish gills (exposed to 1 μm and 90 μm beads). The genes il1β and igm in zebrafish gills (exposed to 1 μm particles) and s100a (exposure to 0.2 μm beads) were also upregulated. In rainbow trout down-regulation was noted with regard to il1β (bead size 1 μm), s100a (bead size 40 μm) and saa (1, 40 and 90 μm). In zebrafish gills down-regulation was found for the il8gene (0.2 and 20 μm). The effect of particle exposure is discussed with regard to shape and chemical/biological composition of particles in water and to abiotic parameters including temperature.",
keywords = "Fish health, Immune genes, Microparticles, Rainbow trout, Zebrafish",
author = "Cao Lu and Kania, {Per W.} and Kurt Buchmann",
year = "2018",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1016/j.aquaculture.2017.11.005",
language = "English",
volume = "484",
pages = "98--104",
journal = "Aquaculture",
issn = "0044-8486",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Particle effects on fish gills

T2 - An immunogenetic approach for rainbow trout and zebrafish

AU - Lu, Cao

AU - Kania, Per W.

AU - Buchmann, Kurt

PY - 2018/2

Y1 - 2018/2

N2 - Particles composed of inorganic, organic and/or biological materials occur in both natural water bodies and aquaculture facilities. They are expected to affect fish health through a direct chemical, mechanical and biological interaction with gills during ventilation but the nature of the reactions and the relative importance of mechanical versus chemical and biological stimulation are unknown. The present work presents an immune gene expression method for evaluation of gill disturbance and sets a baseline for the mechanical influence on fish gills of chemically inert spherical particles. The method may be applied to investigate particle impact at different combinations of temperature, fish size, water quality and particle composition. Spherical polystyrene particles (diameters 0.2 μm, 1 μm, 20 μm, 40 μm and 90 μm) were adopted as the particle model and the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) fingerlings and wildtype zebrafish (Danio rerio) as fish models. After 2 h particle exposure (concentration 2 × 105 particles/L), particles present in different gill compartments were recorded and gill responses evaluated by quantitative realtime PCR focusing on innate and adaptive immune genes. Particles measuring 20 μm and 40 μm were more frequently located in rainbow trout gills compared to 90 μm beads. Fish gills colliding with inert spherical particles may not necessarily and generally initiate inflammatory reactions. The ifnγ gene showed upregulation in rainbow trout gills (exposed to 0.2 μm and 40 μm beads) and in zebrafish gills (exposed to 1 μm and 90 μm beads). The genes il1β and igm in zebrafish gills (exposed to 1 μm particles) and s100a (exposure to 0.2 μm beads) were also upregulated. In rainbow trout down-regulation was noted with regard to il1β (bead size 1 μm), s100a (bead size 40 μm) and saa (1, 40 and 90 μm). In zebrafish gills down-regulation was found for the il8gene (0.2 and 20 μm). The effect of particle exposure is discussed with regard to shape and chemical/biological composition of particles in water and to abiotic parameters including temperature.

AB - Particles composed of inorganic, organic and/or biological materials occur in both natural water bodies and aquaculture facilities. They are expected to affect fish health through a direct chemical, mechanical and biological interaction with gills during ventilation but the nature of the reactions and the relative importance of mechanical versus chemical and biological stimulation are unknown. The present work presents an immune gene expression method for evaluation of gill disturbance and sets a baseline for the mechanical influence on fish gills of chemically inert spherical particles. The method may be applied to investigate particle impact at different combinations of temperature, fish size, water quality and particle composition. Spherical polystyrene particles (diameters 0.2 μm, 1 μm, 20 μm, 40 μm and 90 μm) were adopted as the particle model and the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) fingerlings and wildtype zebrafish (Danio rerio) as fish models. After 2 h particle exposure (concentration 2 × 105 particles/L), particles present in different gill compartments were recorded and gill responses evaluated by quantitative realtime PCR focusing on innate and adaptive immune genes. Particles measuring 20 μm and 40 μm were more frequently located in rainbow trout gills compared to 90 μm beads. Fish gills colliding with inert spherical particles may not necessarily and generally initiate inflammatory reactions. The ifnγ gene showed upregulation in rainbow trout gills (exposed to 0.2 μm and 40 μm beads) and in zebrafish gills (exposed to 1 μm and 90 μm beads). The genes il1β and igm in zebrafish gills (exposed to 1 μm particles) and s100a (exposure to 0.2 μm beads) were also upregulated. In rainbow trout down-regulation was noted with regard to il1β (bead size 1 μm), s100a (bead size 40 μm) and saa (1, 40 and 90 μm). In zebrafish gills down-regulation was found for the il8gene (0.2 and 20 μm). The effect of particle exposure is discussed with regard to shape and chemical/biological composition of particles in water and to abiotic parameters including temperature.

KW - Fish health

KW - Immune genes

KW - Microparticles

KW - Rainbow trout

KW - Zebrafish

U2 - 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2017.11.005

DO - 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2017.11.005

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85032840080

VL - 484

SP - 98

EP - 104

JO - Aquaculture

JF - Aquaculture

SN - 0044-8486

ER -

ID: 188366832