EFFECTS OF HG2-CELLS EVALUATED BY CONFOCAL MICROSCOPY AND SPECTROFLUOROMETRY( AND CU2+ ON THE CYTOSOLIC CA2+ LEVEL IN MOLLUSCAN BLOOD)

Citation
A. Viarengo et al., EFFECTS OF HG2-CELLS EVALUATED BY CONFOCAL MICROSCOPY AND SPECTROFLUOROMETRY( AND CU2+ ON THE CYTOSOLIC CA2+ LEVEL IN MOLLUSCAN BLOOD), Marine Biology, 119(4), 1994, pp. 557-564
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00253162
Volume
119
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
557 - 564
Database
ISI
SICI code
0025-3162(1994)119:4<557:EOHEBC>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
In the present work the effects of Hg2+ and CU2+ on the level of cytos olic Ca2+ in mussel (Mytilus edulis L.) haemolymph cells were investig ated by confocal microscopy and spectrofluorimetry utilizing the fluor escent dye Fluo3. In the blood cells of marine molluscs, exposure to C U2+ and Hg2+ in the nanomolar and micromolar range causes a time- and concentration-dependent increase in the cytosolic Ca2+ level. Both the presence of a low-calcium containing medium and pretreatment of the c ells with the channel blocker Verapamil greatly reduced the effects of higher (50 mu M) Hg2+ concentrations, this indicating that Hg2+ enhan ces the influx of extracellular Ca2+ partly through activation of volt age-dependent Ca2+ channels. Low concentrations of Hg2+ (1 mu M) and a lso of CU2+ (0.5 mu M), an ''essential'' element, were able to induce a sustained increase in cytosolic Ca2+, which was not affected either by Verapamil pretreatment or by lowering the extracellular calcium con centration. These data indicate that in mussel haemocytes heavy metal cations impair Ca2+ homeostasis not only by affecting Ca2+ channels, b ut also by interfering with other mechanisms of calcium transport acro ss cellular membranes, such as the Ca2+-ATPases. The resulting increas e in cytosolic Ca2+ could activate Ca-dependent processes which may be involved in many of the biochemical and physiological alterations obs erved in the cells of metal-exposed mussels. Specimens used in these e xperiments were collected from the river Linker near Plymouth, U.K. in June 1991.