D. Schlenk et al., EXPRESSION OF HEPATIC METALLOTHIONEIN MESSENGER-RNA IN FERAL AND CAGED FISH SPECIES CORRELATES WITH MUSCLE MERCURY LEVELS, Ecotoxicology and environmental safety, 31(3), 1995, pp. 282-286
Metallothioneins (MTs) are low-molecular-weight cytosolic proteins tha
t are induced by cellular stress as well as exposure to various heavy
metals including mercury. Excessive residues of mercury have recently
been identified in various fish species of the lower Quachita River sy
stem in Arkansas. Fillets of mature largemouth bass (Micropterus salmo
ides) collected from Woodard Lake, an ox-bow lake of the Ouachita Rive
r, possessed muscle residues of mercury ranging from 0.3 to 1.0 ppm (m
u g/g). To assess the usefulness of using MT expression as a biomarker
of mercury exposure, livers and filets were obtained from feral bass
of Woodard Lake. Ouachita served as a control site having mercury resi
dues below detection. Analyses using a ribonuclease protection assay w
ith winter flounder MT cDNA revealed that bass had significantly eleva
ted levels of MT mRNA which correlated (r(2) = 0.756) with the levels
of mercury in muscle fillets. To further explore the water quality of
Woodard Lake, 10 juvenile channel catfish were housed in cages and pla
ced where feral collections were made in both sites for 2 weeks. Mercu
ry was not detected in muscle or liver and no significant difference i
n hepatic MT mRNA was observed. These data demonstrate that MT mRNA ex
pression can be used as a tool to assess exposure to heavy metals and
suggest that the elevated levels of mercury in large predatory fish ma
y be due to trophic magnification rather than a single point-source ex
posure. (C) 1995 Academic Press, Inc.