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Research Article

Comparison of dietary and waterborne exposure to benzo a pyrene: bioavailability,tissue disposition and CYP1A1 induction in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss

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Pages 399-410 | Published online: 29 Sep 2008
 

Abstract

Absorption and tissue distribution of benzo\ [a] pyrene (BaP)-derived radioactivity were studied in juvenile rainbow trout following dietary or waterborne exposure. In order to compare the bioavailability of BaP, the fish were exposed to 1.5 mCi 3H-BaP kg-1 fish, either in the diet or in the water as a 2 days static exposure. Furthermore, tissue levels of BaP-derived radioactivity bound to macromolecules in different tissues were studied in non-induced fish, and in fish induced by additional treatment with unlabelled BaP (corresponding to 5 mg kg-1 fish) in the water. Absorption and tissue distribution of 3H BaP were studied by liquid scintillation counting and whole-body autoradiography. BaPderived radioactivity bound to macromolecules in different tissues was studied by autoradiography of solvent-extracted whole-body sections. The hepatic CYP1A induction was measured as EROD activity. Exposure to unlabelled BaP resulted in a marked induction of hepatic EROD activity in rainbow trout 2 days after the start of the exposure. Significant higher concentrations of radiolabelled compound were observed in waterborne-exposed fish, in contrast to dietary-exposed fish. High concentrations of radiolabelling were observed in the gills, liver, bile, intestines, olfactory organ, kidney and the skin of the waterborne-exposed fish. In the dietary-exposed fish, high levels of radioactivity were observed in the intestines and the bile, whereas lower concentrations were present in the liver. Only traces of radioactive compound were observed in the gills. In contrast to waterborne-exposed fish, no radioactivity was detected in the olfactory organ or skin. In autoradiograms of sections extracted with a series of polar and non-polar solvents, a large fraction of radioactivity was still present in the gills, olfactory organ, liver, kidney, skin and intestinal mucosa of the waterborne-exposed fish, indicating that reactive BaP intermediates formed by CYP1A-mediated metabolism were bound to macromolecules in these tissues.

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