Abstract

The use of artificial sweeteners (ASWs) has increased and become more widespread, and consequently ASWs have appeared in aquatic environments around the world. However, their safety to the health of humans and wildlife remains inconclusive. In this study, using medaka embryos (Oryzias latipes), we investigated developmental toxicity of aspartame (ASP) and saccharin (SAC). Since ASWs are often consumed with caffeine (CAF) and CAF with sucrose (SUC), we tested biological activities of these four substances and the mixtures of CAF with each sweetener. The embryos were exposed to ASP at 0.2 and 1.0 mM, SAC at 0.005 and 0.050 mM, CAF at 0.05 and 0.5 mM, or SUC at 29 and 146 mM, starting from less than 5 h post fertilization until hatch. Control embryos were treated with embryo solution only. Several endpoints were used to evaluate embryonic development. Some of the hatchlings were also tested for anxiety-like behavior with the white preference test. The results showed that all four substances and the mixtures of CAF with the sweeteners affected development. The most sensitive endpoints were the heart rate, eye density, and hatchling body length. The hatchlings of several treatment groups also exhibited anxiety-like behavior. We then used the Integrated Biological Response (IBR) as an index to evaluate the overall developmental toxicity of the substances. We found that the ranking of developmental toxicity was SAC > CAF > ASP > SUC, and there was a cumulative effect when CAF was combined with the sweeteners.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40064-015-1284-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Artificial sweeteners (ASWs) have been in use for decades, but they are increasingly added to all kinds of foods, drinks, and pharmaceutical products

  • Cumulative effects of CAF and sweeteners From the integrated biomarker response (IBR), we found a cumulative effect in developmental toxicity when CAF is combined with the sweeteners

  • Several endpoints for development were selected for evaluation, including the heart rate, eye density, time to hatch, and anxiety-like behavior

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Summary

Introduction

Artificial sweeteners (ASWs) have been in use for decades, but they are increasingly added to all kinds of foods, drinks, and pharmaceutical products. ASWs are excreted from our bodies and discharged with sewage treatment effluents to the aquatic environment. They have emerged as a class of environmental contaminants. Saccharin (SAC) is largely unmetabolized in human body, allowing it to pass unchanged to the environment, mainly through the urine. It is usually degraded by more than 90 % during wastewater treatment (Lange et al 2012). Wastewater is not always properly treated, and SAC concentrations may be too high to

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