Abstract

In this paper we investigate the potential of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and aspartate and alanine aminotransferases (AST and ALT) as biomarkers of water pollution due to copper in the freshwater snails Helisoma duryi and Lymnaea natalensis. Snails were dosed with copper(II) ion concentrations of 0.01, 0.1 and 1 mg kg-1 breeding water for a period of 96 h, after which those surviving were shelled. The copper content in the breeding water, in whole snail tissue and in the snail shells was determined at the end of the period of exposure. For enzyme determinations, whole snail tissue was first homogenized and fractionated by centrifugation at 500 g to remove the nuclei. The resulting supernatant was then centrifuged at 10 000 g to give a pellet fraction representing the mitochondrial fraction and a supernatant representing the cytosolic fraction. Copper was very toxic to both snail species at concentrations above 0.2 mg l-1, with only 3% of the Helisoma and 12% of the Lymnaea surviving at concentrations of approximately 1 mg l-1. The copper content in the shells and tissues of snails rose with increasing copper concentration in the breeding water, and was 2.1- to 4.9-fold in snails exposed to copper ion at a dose of 1 mg kg-1 water compared with undosed snails. Similarly, the activities of GDH and AST rose by up to 4.7-fold in the homogenate and the mitochondrial and cytosolic fractions with increasing concentrations of copper. These activities, however, fell at copper concentrations of approximately 1 mg l-1, which coincided with massive death of snails. Mitochondrial ALT disappeared at copper ion concentrations of approximately 0.2 mg l-1 for Lymnaea and 1 mg l-1 for Helisoma, possibly indicating mitochondrial degeneration. These results show that GDH, AST and ALT have the potential to be biomarkers of suplethal copper pollution in these two snail species, since their activities were significantly altered by low copper concentrations.

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