The influence of salinity on the toxicity of chemical UV-filters to sperms of the free-spawning mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis (Lamark, 1819)

•A greater sperms’ sensitivity was found at the highest and lowest salinity per se.•Salinity shifts enhance impacts of both UV-filters on M. galloprovincialis sperms.•Combined stressors caused major spemiotoxic effects in worst salinity conditions.•4-MBC affected sperm membrane integrity, motility a...

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Published inAquatic toxicology Vol. 250; p. 106263
Main Authors Cuccaro, Alessia, De Marchi, Lucia, Oliva, Matteo, Monni, Gianfranca, Miragliotta, Vincenzo, Fumagalli, Giorgia, Freitas, Rosa, Pretti, Carlo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.09.2022
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Summary:•A greater sperms’ sensitivity was found at the highest and lowest salinity per se.•Salinity shifts enhance impacts of both UV-filters on M. galloprovincialis sperms.•Combined stressors caused major spemiotoxic effects in worst salinity conditions.•4-MBC affected sperm membrane integrity, motility and motion characteristics.•BP-3 induced sperm DNA damage, mitochondrial activity alteration and hyperactivation. Marine-coastal systems have been increasingly exposed to multiple stressors, including anthropogenic pollution and variations of Climate Change (CC) related factors, whose coexistence could create associated environmental and ecotoxicological risks. Among emergent stressors, 4-methylbenzylidenecamphor (4-MBC) and benzophenone-3 (BP-3) UV-filters are compounds widely used in increasing consumer products, resulting in their ubiquity in aquatic environments and possible pressing challenges on gamete susceptibility. Since most marine invertebrates reproduce by external fertilization, after spawning, gametes may be exposed to several pressures, affecting reproductive success and outcome. The present study focuses on the spermiotoxicity of the environmentally relevant UV-filters 4-MBC and BP-3 combined with salinity shifts, as potential modulators of their harmful effects. For this, Mytilus galloprovincialis male gametes were exposed in vitro to environmentally relevant and slightly higher concentrations (1, 10 and 100 µg/L) of 4-MBC or BP-3 under three different salinities (S 20, 30 and 40). Sperm quality endpoints associated with oxidative status, viability, motility, kinetics, and genotoxicity were evaluated. Similarities and differences in sperm responses among all conditions were highlighted by principal coordinates analysis (PCO). Results showed that salinity acting alone posed greater sperms impairments at the lowest (20) and highest (40) tested levels. When salinity acts as a co-varying stressor, salinity-dominant interactive effects resulted evident, especially for 4-MBC at S 40 and BP-3 at S 20. These findings were pointed out as the worst exposure conditions for M. galloprovincialis sperms, since caused major toxicological effects in terms of: (I) oxidative stress, sperm structural impairments, motility and kinetic alterations in 4-MBC-exposed sperms; (II) DNA damage, compromised mitochondrial activity and hyperactivation in BP-3-exposed ones. Overall, it stands out that salinity influences UV-filter toxicological pathways and, thereby, the potential environmental risk of these contaminants on M. galloprovincialis male gametes, especially in an expected salinity stress scenario.
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ISSN:0166-445X
1879-1514
DOI:10.1016/j.aquatox.2022.106263