Abstract

The pharmaceutical and personal care products (PPCPs) became the most typical pollutants of the surface waters. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of the combine exposure to the common compounds of the municipal effluents, constituent of plastics bisphenol A (BPA) and popular medicine nifedipine (Nfd), on the model organism, a mussel Unio tumidus. Male U. tumidus were exposed for 14 days to the combination of Nfd (10 μM) and BPA (0.88 nM). The indices of oxidative stress, metabolic, immune and endocrine activity, metal balance, as well as the manifestations of toxicity were detected. The exposure caused the features known for the effect of Nfd: the activation of the oxidative stress response, particularly Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (by 6.0 times), glutathione and oxyradical levels, metabolic shift to the anaerobiosis due to the elevated level of lactate in the digestive gland. The manifestation of endocrine disruption typical for the BPA effect - the increased level of alkali-labile phosphates (vitellogenin-like proteins) in gonads was detected. The caspase-3 related apoptotic activity was suppressed; whereas the cathepsin D mediated proteolysis and immune response of phenoloxidase were up-regulated significantly. The signs of geno-, neuro- and cytotoxicity were detected. These results detect that the approximation of the experimental conditions to the environmentally realistic situation could assist the comprehensive forecasting of the effects of utilized PPCPs for the aquatic animals. Keywords: bisphenol A, nifedipine, combine exposure, endocrine disruption, oxidative stress, bivalve mollusk.

Highlights

  • Contemporary environmental challenges are characterized by the combine effects of the different origin, the results of that could not be additive [2, 12, 16]

  • We studied the effect of typical pharmaceutical and personal care products (PPCPs), calcium influx inhibitor nifedipine (Nfd), which is widely used as a cheap antianginal and antihypertensive medicine and is a common pollutant in the surface waters [13], and common product eluted from the polycarbonate plastics, Bisphenol A (BPA), recognized endocrine disruptor [4, 20], on the non-target organism, bivalve mollusk [6, 9]

  • One group was exposed to the tap water only and was considered control, another group was exposed to bisphenol A (BPA) (0.88 nM) and nifedipine (Nfd, 10 μM),) during 14 days with the replacing of water medium each two days

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Summary

Introduction

Contemporary environmental challenges are characterized by the combine effects of the different origin, the results of that could not be additive [2, 12, 16].

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