Abstract

Cobalt ions can enhance the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which may be the reason for cobalt toxicity. This study aimed to determine whether Co2+ toxicity in goldfish is related to induced oxidative stress in gills, heart and spleen, and to assess responses of antioxidant systems. Exposure of goldfish to 50, 100 and 150mgL−1 of Co2+ for 96h elevated total hemoglobin in blood by 23, 44 and 78%, respectively. In gills, cobalt exposure enhanced lipid peroxide levels and activities of primary antioxidant enzymes; superoxide dismutase (SOD) rose by 125% and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) increased by 53–296%. Glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activity also increased by 117–157% and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) enhanced by 46–96%. Heart showed limited effects of fish exposure to 50 or 100mgL−1 of Co2+, but the exposure to 150mgL−1 of Co2+ elevated concentrations of lipid peroxides by 123% and activities of GPx by 98% and SOD by 208%. The most substantial effects of goldfish exposure to Co2+ were observed in spleen: a decrease in total protein concentration by 44–60% and high molecular mass thiols by 59–82%, reduced activities of catalase by 24–58% and GR by 25–68%, whereas the level of low molecular mass thiols increased by 153–279% and activities of GPx, GST, G6PDH were enhanced by 114–120%, 192–769%, and 256–581%, respectively. The data show that fish exposure to 50–150mgL−1 of Co2+ elevates blood hemoglobin level, mimicking effects of hypoxia, and causes the activation of defense systems against ROS.

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