Abstract
CO2 emissions from human activities are increasing, resulting in greater rates of change in the oceans, exceeding any other event in geological and historical records over the past 300 million years. Oceans are warming and pH levels are decreasing. Marine organisms will need to respond to multiple stressors and the potential consequences of global change-related effects in fish needs to be investigated. Fish are affected by many biotic and abiotic environmental variables, including temperature and CO2 fluctuations, and it is therefore critical to investigate how these variables may affect physiological and biochemical processes. We investigated the effects of elevated CO2 levels (pH of 8.0, which served as a control, or 7.6, which is predicted for the year 2100) combined with exposure to different temperatures (5, 10, 12, 14, 16, and 18 °C) in the Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus) during a three month experiment. Since regulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is crucial for physiological processes the focus was on the antioxidant defense system and we assessed the effects on catalytic activities of antioxidant enzymes (SOD, CAT, GR, GST, GPx). In addition we also analyzed effects on cholinesterase enzymes (AChE and BChE), and CYP1A enzyme activities (EROD). The treatments resulted in oxidative stress, and damage was evident in the form of protein carbonyls which were consistently higher in the elevated CO2-treated fish at all temperatures. Analyses of antioxidant enzymes did not show the same results, suggesting that the exposure to elevated CO2 increased ROS formation but not defences. The antioxidant defense system was insufficient, and the resulting oxidative damage could impact physiological function of the halibut on a cellular level.
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More From: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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