Title
Physiological differences in the crab Ucides cordatus from two populations inhabiting mangroves with different levels of cadmium contamination
Date Issued
01 February 2017
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
University of São Paulo
Publisher(s)
Wiley Blackwell
Abstract
Crustaceans found in metal-contaminated regions are able to survive, and the authors investigated the physiological mechanisms involved by comparing populations from contaminated and noncontaminated areas. The objective of the present study was to measure the cellular transport of a nonessential metal (cadmium [Cd]) in gills and hepatopancreas of Ucides cordatus, together with cell membrane fluidity, metallothionein levels, and lipid peroxidation. The 2 populations compared were from a polluted and a nonpolluted mangrove area of São Paulo State, Brazil. The authors found, for the first time, larger Cd transport in gills and hepatopancreatic cells from crabs living in polluted mangrove areas. The cells also had lower plasma membrane fluidity, increased lipid peroxidation and less metallothionein compared to those from nonpolluted regions. The authors also found larger amounts of Cd in intracellular organelles of gills, but not in the hepatopancreas, from crabs in polluted regions. Therefore, in polluted areas, these animals showed higher Cd transport and lower plasma membrane fluidity and storage of Cd intracellularly in gill cells, whereas hepatopancreatic cells used metallothionein as their main line of defense. The findings suggest that crabs from polluted areas can accumulate Cd more easily than crabs from nonpolluted areas, probably because of an impairment of the regulatory mechanisms of cell membrane transport. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:361–371. © 2016 SETAC.
Start page
361
End page
371
Volume
36
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología marina, Biología de agua dulce, Limnología
Subjects
DOI
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84989225732
PubMed ID
Source
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
ISSN of the container
07307268
Source funding
Universidade de Brasília
Sponsor(s)
We thank the laboratory technician V. Alberto from the University of São Paulo for lipid methodology support and M. Hermes-Lima from the University of Brasilia for the lipid peroxidation methodology. The present study was supported by Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (to P. Ortega) and a FAPESP grant (2009/15546-3, to F.P. Zanotto).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus