Abstract

The antibiotic sulfamethoxazole (SMX) is a pollutant that is widely distributed in the global water environment.This substance has toxic effects on various aquatic organisms. Previous studies on SMX have focused on its acute toxicity towards algae and the changes induced at biological and cellular levels, rather than its biotoxicity and mechanisms at the molecular level. In this study, we investigated the effects of SMX on Scenedesmus obliquus as the model organism by performing transmission electron microscopy and transcriptome sequencing analyses. Exposure to SMX promoted gene expression, resulting in changes to algal cell ultrastructure. The cell walls became blurred, the chloroplast structure was seriously damaged, and the number and volume of mitochondria per cell increased. These changes were related to the inhibition of cell growth, decrease in chlorophyll content, increase in cell membrane permeability, and increased production of reactive oxygen species, which led to increased amounts of the lipid peroxidation product malondialdehyde, and higher activities of antioxidant enzymes. Our results suggest that SMX affects gene expression by influencing non-coding RNA metabolic processes, leading to changes in nuclear structures. Abnormally expressed long non-coding RNAs extensively regulate downstream gene expression through various mechanisms, such as chromatin recombination, thereby promoting tumor occurrence, invasion, and metastasis. This abnormal expression may be an important mechanism underlying the carcinogenic effects of SMX.

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