Abstract

Since the 1960s, chemical control of larval sea lamprey has been achieved using the pesticides 3-trifluoromethyl-4-nitrophenol (TFM) and niclosamide (Bayluscide®). Much more potent, niclosamide is often used as an adjuvant for TFM, and on its own to treat lentic habitats, rivers with high discharge and currents, and for population surveys. Yet, little is known about its mode of action or physiological effects on sea lamprey. Like TFM, niclosamide is thought to impair mitochondrial ATP production by uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation. We therefore tested the hypothesis that niclosamide would result in metabolic perturbations and disturbances to acid-base balance in larval lamprey due to their need to balance ATP supply with ATP demands. When larval sea lamprey were exposed to the nominal 9-h niclosamide LC50 (0.11mg L-1) over 9h, it resulted in significant decreases in brain, phosphocreatine (35 %) and glycogen (50 %), accompanied by a 5-fold increase in lactate. In carcass, there were 25-30 % decreases in glycogen, corresponding increases in pyruvate and lactate, and a pronounced 0.5 unit decrease in intracellular pH. Calculation of the NAD+/NADH ratio in the carcass indicated that neither oxygen delivery nor the flux of reducing equivalents through the mitochondrial electron transport chain were impaired by niclosamide, supporting the hypothesis that niclosamide interferes with mitochondrial ATP production by uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation. Thus, greater reliance on glycogen, characterized by higher rates of glycolysis, temporarily mitigates the corresponding shortfall in ATP supply caused by niclosamide. Notably, all lamprey that survived niclosamide exposure readily restored ATP, phosphocreatine, glycogen and acid-base balance after recovery in niclosamide-free water. This resilience suggests that sea lamprey that survive or escape niclosamide treatment could compromise sea lamprey control efforts by subsequently completing their larval stage and developing into parasitic juvenile sea lamprey that could ultimately threaten Great Lake's fisheries populations.

Full Text
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