Artigo Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Enzymatic GST levels and overall health of mullets from contaminated Brazilian Lagoons

2012; Elsevier BV; Volume: 126; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.aquatox.2012.08.020

ISSN

1879-1514

Autores

Frederico Freire Bastos, Rachel Ann Hauser‐Davis, Santiago Alonso Tobar Leitão, Reinaldo Campos‐Vargas, Roberta Lourênço Ziolli, V. L. F. Cunha Bastos, Jayme Cunha Bastos,

Tópico(s)

Environmental Toxicology and Ecotoxicology

Resumo

Glutathione S-transferase (GST) assays in non-mammalian organisms are usually conducted inappropriately, since no previous standardization of the optimal concentrations of proteins and substrates and adequate pH is conducted. Standardization is a key task to adjust enzyme assays at their kinetically correct maximal initial velocities, if one wants these velocities to indicate the amount of enzyme in a sample. In this paper GST assays were standardized in liver cytosol to compare seasonal GST levels in liver of mullet from two contaminated lagoons in the Rio de Janeiro to those from a reference bay. GST potential as a biomarker of sublethal intoxication in this species was also evaluated. Mullet liver GST levels assayed with substrates that corresponded to three different GST isoenzymes varied throughout the year. The differences indicated that mullets are suffering from sublethal intoxication from contaminants in these lagoons. Seasonal variations of activity were relevant, since these could indicate differences in xenobiotic input into the areas. An analysis of overall mullet health condition using a morphological index (the Fulton Condition Factor) and macroscopic abnormalities corroborated the differences in GST levels, with fish from one of the sites in worse overall health condition showing lower and significantly different FCF when compared to the reference site. Therefore, GST standardized activity levels are useful biomarkers of environmental contamination for mullet.

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