Abstract
Members of the fish family Sparidae are abundant in various continental shelf habitats along the Mediterranean, including relatively clean and polluted areas. The levels of metallothionein (MT)-mRNA in their liver is suggested here as a bioindicator parameter for the detection of heavy metals in Mediterranean marine habitats. A complete MT-cDNA was cloned from the liver of metal-induced Sparus aurata and used to evaluate the MT-mRNA levels in the livers of the abundant coastal sparid species, Lithognathus mormyrus, both after laboratory induction by cadmium and in fish sampled along a pollution gradient at Haifa Bay, the Mediterranean coast of Israel. It is concluded that the MT-mRNA in L. mormyrus liver is a good bioindicator of heavy metal pollution in the marine environment, because of the following: it is heavy metal-inducible; its level is turned off rather rapidly after the elimination of the inducing agents; and it is shown to be correlated to a heavy metal pollution gradient in a natural marine habitat.
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