Abstract
Liver perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) pathophysiology and related morphofunction disturbances were studied in common carp at the cellular and subcellular level and with box-counting fractal analysis of ultrathin sections to assess the effect of PFOA exposure on hepatocyte structure complexity and heterogeneity. Three experimental groups were investigated: unexposed; low exposure (200 ng L−1 PFOA); high exposure (2 mg L−1 PFOA). PFOA-exposed cells showed differences from controls at both tested concentrations, manifested mainly as cloudy swelling and reversible vacuolar degeneration. Subcellular modifications primarily involved mitochondria and secondarily endoplasmic reticulum, with evidence of increased subcellular turnover. The alterations were consistent with oxidative stress related pathophysiology. Fractal analysis discriminated exposed from unexposed fish and low from high PFOA exposure based on lacunarity and fractal dimension, respectively. The absence of irreversible organelle alterations and apoptosis/necrosis, along with the increase of cellular complexity, led to the conclusion that the patterns observed represented an adaptive recovery response.
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