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Contaminated sediments from tributaries of the Great Lakes: Chemical characterization and carcinogenic effects in medaka (Oryzias latipes)
Authors:David L Fabacher  John M Besser  Christopher J Schmitt  John C Harshbarger  Paul H Peterman  Jon A Lebo
Institution:(1) National Fisheries Contaminant Research Center, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Route 2, 4200 New Haven Road, 65201 Columbia, Missouri, USA;(2) Registry of Tumors in Lower Animals, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, 20560 Washington, DC, USA
Abstract:Sediments from four inshore industrial sites and a reference site in the Great Lakes were extracted with organic solvents to produce a crude extract, which was separated on alumina into two fractions: predominantly polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; and predominantly nitrogencontaining polycyclic aromatic compounds. Crude extracts were redissolved in acetone and analyzed by gas chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The acetone-redissolved crude extracts from the four industrialized sites contained 5.6–313.3 mgrg total polycyclic aromatic compounds/g sediment and 3.0–36.4 mgrg other compounds/g sediment. In addition to the typical EPA priority pollutants, a substantial amount (228.7 mgrg/g sediment) of alkyl-polycyclic-aromatic compounds was detected in sediments from one of the industrialized sites. Extracts from the reference site contained 1.55 mgrg total polycyclic aromatic compounds/ g sediment. Medaka (Oryzias latipes) were exposed to multiple pulse doses of acetone-redissolved extracts and fractions. Medaka were also exposed to a known carcinogen, methylazoxymethanol acetate, to verify that chemicals produced tumors in the test fish. Acetone-redissolved extracts and fractions from contaminated sediments were toxic to medaka. Fin erosion and non-neoplastic liver abnormalities were more prevalent in medaka after exposure to acetoneredissolved extracts and fractions from contaminated sediments. Neoplasms previously associated with chemical exposure in wild fishes were induced in medaka exposed to acetone-redissolved extracts and fractions from two of the contaminated sites, but not from the reference site or controls. These findings further support the hypothesis that chemical contaminants in sediments are involved in epizootics of neoplasms in wild fishes at contaminated sites.
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