Journal Pre-proof Phenotypic and trascriptomic changes in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos/larvae following cypermethrin exposure T. Sri Ranjani, Gopi Krishna Pitchika, K. Yedukondalu, Y. Gunavathi, T. Daveedu, S.B. Sainath, G.H. Philip, Jangampalli Adi Pradeepkiran PII:
S0045-6535(20)30341-6
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.126148
Reference:
CHEM 126148
To appear in:
ECSN
Received Date: 9 December 2019 Revised Date:
6 February 2020
Accepted Date: 6 February 2020
Please cite this article as: Ranjani, T.S., Pitchika, G.K., Yedukondalu, K., Gunavathi, Y., Daveedu, T., Sainath, S.B., Philip, G.H., Pradeepkiran, J.A., Phenotypic and trascriptomic changes in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos/larvae following cypermethrin exposure, Chemosphere (2020), doi: https:// doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.126148. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Conceptualization: S.B. Sainath, G.H. Philip, Methodology: S.B. Sainath, G.H. Philip and Jangampalli Adi Pradeepkiran. Investigation:T. Sri Ranjani, Gopi Krishna Pitchika, K. Yedukondalu, Y. Gunavathi, T. Daveedu. Resources: S.B. Sainath, Data Curation: S.B. Sainath, T. Sri Ranjani, Gopi Krishna Pitchika, Jangampalli Adi Pradeepkiran. Writing Original Draft: S.B. Sainath, Gopi Krishna Pitchika, Writing- Reviewing and Editing: S.B. Sainath, Jangampalli Adi Pradeepkiran Supervision: S.B. Sainath, G.H. Philip.
1
Phenotypic and trascriptomic changes in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos/larvae following
2
cypermethrin exposure
3
4
T. Sri Ranjani1,2$, Gopi Krishna Pitchika3$, K. Yedukondalu3, Y. Gunavathi3, T. Daveedu4,
5
S.B. Sainath4*, G.H. Philip1* and Jangampalli Adi Pradeepkiran5,6*
6
7
1
Department of Zoology, Sri Krishnadevaraya University, Anantapuramu-515003
8
2
Department of Zoology, D.K. Govt. Degree College for Women (Autonomous), Dargamitta,
9
Nellore-524003
10
3
Department of Zoology, Vikrama Simhapuri University Post-Graduation Centre, Kavali-524201
11
4
Department of Biotechnology, Vikrama Sihapuri University, Nellore-524320
12
5
Department of Internal Medicine, Texas Tech University of Health Science Centre, Lubbock-
13
79413, TX, USA.
14
6
Department of Zoology, Sri Venkateswara University, Tirupati-517502, AP, India.
$
Equal Contribution
15 16 17 18
Corresponding authors:
Prof. G.H. Philip (
[email protected])
19
Dr. S.B. Sainath (
[email protected])
20
Dr. Jangampalli Adi Pradeepkiran
21
(
[email protected])
22
1
23
Abstract
24
Cypermethrin is one of the widely used type-II pyrethroid and the indiscriminate use of this
25
pesticide leads to life threatening effects and in particular showed developmental effects in
26
sensitive populations such as children and pregnant woman. However, the molecular
27
mechanisms underlying cypermethrin-induced development toxicity is not well defined. To
28
address this gap, the present study was designed to investigate the phenotypic and transcriptomic
29
(next generation RNA-Seq method) impact of cypermethrin in zebrafish embryos as a model
30
system. Zebrafish embryos at two time points, 24 hours postfertilization (hpf) and 48 hpf were
31
exposed to cypermethrin at a concentration of 10µg/L. Respective control groups were
32
maintained. Cypermethrin induced both phenotypic and transcriptomic changes in zebrafish
33
embryos at 48 hpf. The phenotypic anomalies such as delayed hatching rate, increased heartbeat
34
rate and deformed axial spinal curvature in cypermethrin exposed zebrafish embryos at 48 hpf as
35
compared to its respective controls. Transcriptomic analysis indicated that cypermethrin
36
exposure altered genes associated with visual/eye development and gene functional profiling also
37
revealed that cypermethrin stress over a period of 48 hrs disrupts phototransduction pathway in
38
zebrafish embryos. Interestingly, cypermethrin exposure resulted in up regulation of only one
39
gene, tnnt3b, fast muscle troponin isoform 3T in 24 hpf embryos as compared to its respective
40
controls. The present model system, cypermethrin exposed zebrafish embryos elaborates the
41
toxic consequences of cypermethrin exposure during developmental stages, especially in fishes.
42
The present findings paves a way to understand the visual impairment in sensitive populations
43
such as children exposed to cypermethrin during their embryonic period and further research is
44
warranted.
45
Keywords: Cypermethrin; development toxicity; Zebrafish; embryos; Transcriptomic analysis.
46 2
47
Introduction
48
Cypermethrin (CP) is one of the type II pyrethroids used to protect the economically
49
important crops such as cotton, fruits and vegetables against wide range of insects of different
50
arthropod classes, leipdoptera, hemiptera and coleopteran. Further, it is used in household
51
purposes to eradicate cockroaches, lice and mosquitoes. CP is also used to control pests in
52
various activities like wool processing and sheep dipping (USEPA, 1998), to control salmonids
53
for sea lice (Ernst etal., 2001), in forestry (Torstensson et al., 1999), and also to control pests of
54
cotton and soybean, moths etc., (Carriquiriborde et al.,2007). Therefore, the broad spectrum
55
activity of CP attracted the attention of farmers and as a consequence its consumption increased
56
globally. Moreover, lower toxicity to the mammals and birds and low persistence in the soil,
57
makes the CP an important product of agriculture. However, due to repetitive usage of this
58
pyrethroid, the non-target organisms such as humans and animals are exposed to CP and
59
therefore, there is a much scope for the elevated risk of intoxication in non-target organisms via
60
contaminated water (Vryzas et al., 2011; Singh et al., 2012).
61
The toxic effects of CP has been reported in humans and experimental models and is
62
mostly associated with nervous system disorders (Power and Sudakin, 2007). In humans, the
63
toxic effects of CP include hypersensitivity reaction, reflex hyper excitability, tremors, throat and
64
epigastric pain, nausea, headache, dizziness and fatigue (Aggarwal et al., 2015). Studies of
65
Lessenger (1992) reported that five workers who inadvertently exposed to CP showed shortness
66
of breath, nausea and headache. Further, fertility related problems and epileptic signs has been
67
reported in humans exposed to CP (Condes-Lara et al., 1999). CP-induced cytotoxicity has also
68
been reported in human lymphocytes (Charvarthi et al., 2007). In experimental models, multiple
69
toxic effects of CP have been documented, such as neurotoxicity (Singh et al., 2012),
3
70
reproductive toxicity (Pitchika et al., 2019), cardiac problems (Grewal et al., 2010),
71
hepatotoxicity (El-Tawil and Abdel-Rahman, 2001; Grajeda-Cota et al., 2004; Sushma and
72
Devasena, 2010) and nephrotoxicity (Grewal et al., 2010). Further, it has been shown that CP
73
exposure interferes with sodium channels thereby negatively affect the neural signal transduction
74
mechanisms (Wolansky et al., 2006; Wolansky and Harrill, 2008). The other toxic effects
75
induced by CP include limb weakness, ataxia and muscular tremors to serious onset of
76
convulsions, coma and respiratory depression followed by death of organism (Ullah et al., 2006).
77
CP enters the aquatic ecosystem via agricultural run-off and thus, fishes are easily susceptible
78
targets to CP. In fishes, exposure to CP causes abnormalities in behaviour, biochemical and
79
haematological variables, inhibition of tissue antioxidant status and developmental toxicity,
80
neurotoxicity, reprotoxicity and histological changes in the gills and intestine (Moore and
81
Warming, 2001; Marino and Ronco, 2005; Prashanth and David, 2006; Carriquiriborde et al.,
82
2007; Prashanth et al., 2011; Ullah et al., 2018).
83
It is believed that the embryonic period is crtical for the development and differentiation
84
of vital organs. Therefore, disturbances at this level may harm developing fetus, and
85
consequently alters phenotypic changes later in life. Published reports have shown that the
86
perinatal exposure to CP impairs reproductive development of female rats at their adulthood
87
(Obinna and Agu, 2019). Prenatal and perinatal exposure to CP showed negative effects on
88
eyelid opening, righting reflex acquisition, eye opening, pinna development and auditory startle
89
reflex in experimental models, suggesting that the developing brain is one of the vulnerable
90
targets of CP (Husain et al., 1992; Singh et al., 2015; Laugeray et al., 2017). Moreover, CP was
91
detected in the plasma samples of workers in Pakistan (Khan et al., 2010) and in the urine of
92
pregnant women, children and infants (Whyatt et al., 2002; Berkowitz et al., 2003; Lu et al.,
4
93
2006; 2009). Most notably, CP-induced developmental toxicity in non-target organisms is of
94
major concern, as the negative effects may persist from one generation to another.
95
Danio rerio (zebrafish) is globally accepted alternative model for vertebrates as it possess
96
exceptional portfolio of features such as short life cycle, ease of culture, prolific egg production
97
with high fertilization as compared to traditional mice models, transparency during early life
98
stages and the experiments designed in zebrafish embryos are believed to be pain-free and
99
embryonic development is vulnerable to environmental stress (Zhou et al., 2009; Babcock et al.,
100
2017; Shabnam and Philip, 2018). The other important features include, the genomic similarity
101
between zebrafish and humans are at least 87% (Howe et al., 2013), and this high level of gene
102
homology results in high conservation of signaling cascades between the zebrafish and humans
103
(Chakraborty et al., 2016).
104
In the present study, zebrafish embryos were exposed to low concentrations of
105
cypermethrin i.e. 10 µg/L at two different time points, 24 hours post fertilization (hpf) and 48 hpf
106
to evaluate the developmental toxicity by considering the a) phenotypic variables such as
107
hatching efficiency, eye pigmentation, heartbeat, somitogenesis and axial spinal curvature, and
108
b) transcriptomic analysis. By analyzing the results, this study attempts to assess the
109
developmental toxicity of cypermethrin in zebrafish embryos.
110
Materials and methods
111
1.1.
112
Chemicals Cypermethrin
(a-Cyano-(3-phenoxyphenyl)methyl
3-(2,2-dichlorovinyl)-2,2-
113
dimethylcyclopropanecarboxylate; CAS Number: 52315-07-8) was obtained from Sigma-
114
Aldrich (St Louis,MO, USA) (Fig. 1). In this study, molecular kits such as Trizol reagent (Sigma
115
Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) and other molecular kits including first strand cDNA synthesis kit 5
116
(iScriptTM, Bio-Rad, CA, USA), Taq polymerase with high fidelity Phusion mixture (Thermo-
117
Scientifics, Waltham, USA), SYBR green master mix (Applied Biosystems, Warrington, UK)
118
and Trueseq RNA library prep Kit (Illumina, San Diego, CA) were used. The molecular grade
119
water used in this study was obtained from HiMedia (India). All other chemicals used in this
120
study were of analytical grade.
121
1.2.
Fish maintenance and breeding
122
Adult zebrafish were purchased from a local pet shop (Nellore, Andhra Pradesh, India)
123
and reared in the animal house facility available at Department of Zoology, VSUPG Centre,
124
Kavali, Nellore District, AP, India for two generations. All the fishes were maintained in
125
constant aerated 100L glass aquaria (50 fishes/tank) under defined laboratory conditions:
126
dechlorinated tap water at 26 ± 20 C, continuous aeration to maintain dissolved oxygen levels
127
between 7.5 to 8 µg/L and photoperiod of 12:12hrs light and dark cycles. Fish in stock were fed
128
twice a day, with alternating diet of freshly hatched brine shrimp (Sanders Brine Shrimp Co,
129
Utah) and dry flake food (Tetra, Germany). Male and female fishes were kept in breeding boxes
130
(2:1 ratio) overnight prior to spawning. The breeding was finished at the beginning of the light
131
cycle and the fertilized eggs were collected, washed twice with fresh water. The embryos that
132
reached blastula stage were considered as normal (observed under microscope) and used for the
133
current experiments. .
134
1.3.
Experimental design
135
Briefly, the fertilized eggs at 2 hours post-fertilization (hpf) were collected and
136
transferred in to glass petridishes. Each dish (n=25) received 40 ml of filtered water containing
137
10µg/L concentration of CP. The CP stock solution was prepared by dissolving 5 mg of CP in
138
1.0 ml of absolute alcohol and stored at -200C. The stock solution (2 µl) was diluted with filtered
6
139
water (1000 ml) to get working concentration i.e. 10 µg/L of CP whenever needed. In this study,
140
we selected 10 µg/L of CP as a test dose based on our previous study, wherein we noticed CP
141
exposure even at 10 µg/L induced spermatotoxicity in zebrafish (Pitchika et al., 2019). CP
142
treated embryos were maintained in triplicates, up to 24 hpf (E24) and 48 hpf (E48). Respective
143
solvent control groups (C24 and C48) were also maintained simultaneously which received
144
alcohol alone. The embryonic development was monitored and the parameters such as mortality
145
rate, hatching rate and malformations such as pericardial edema, pigmentation, and axial spinal
146
curvature in the hatched larvae were recorded during the exposure period (Shabnam and Philip,
147
2018). No significant effects were noticed in the selected phenotypic alterations such as mortality
148
rate, hatching rate, heart beat rate and axial spinal curvature in zebrafish embryo/larvae exposed
149
to solvent (2 µl of absolute alcohol diluted to 1 L of filtered water) as compared to controls at
150
selected time points (data not shown).
151
RNA isolation, reverse transcription and transcriptomic analysis
152
The process of pipeline of transcriptomic analysis was illustrated in (Supplementary
153
material: Fig. 1). Embryos from each group were pooled and homogenized using sterilized
154
mortar and pestle in the presence of liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was isolated from the embryos
155
using Qiagen mini RNeasy kit). After isolation of total RNA, the quality was analyzed
156
spectrophotometrically and quantity of total RNA was performed using Qubit analysis (Life
157
Technologies). Further, RNA electrophernogram and RNA integrity number (RIN) was
158
determined using Bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies). RIN values provide objective metric of
159
total RNA quality ranging from 10 (high intact RNA) to 1 (degraded RNA). In this study, the
160
RIN values for RNA isolated from zebrafish embryos (24 hrs)/larvae (48 hrs) were found to be
161
8.5 for both control and experimentals. After completion of the quantitative and qualitative
7
162
analysis, total RNA (1 µg) was reverse transcribed to cDNA libraries using Trueseq RNA library
163
prep Kit (Illumina, San Diego, California). Library preparation was performed according to the
164
manufacturer’s instructions. The qualified libraries were subjected to (Agilent Bioanalyzer
165
2100), transcriptomic analysis on Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform using paired-end sequencing
166
mode (2 x 100 bp) to match more accurately the reference genome sequence and improve
167
sequence efficiency. Illumina-adapted library pools were prepared by a commercial service
168
(Agrigenome Pvt. Labs Ltd., Hyderabad, Telangana State, India). Based on the quality of
169
sequence reads, trimming was performed where necessary to retain only high quality sequence.
170
In addition, the low-quality sequence reads were excluded from the analysis. The pre-processed
171
reads were aligned to the zebrafish genome downloaded from Ensembl database
172
(ftp://ftp.ensembl.org/pub/release-94/fasta/danio_rerio/dna/Danio_rerio.GRCz11.dna.toplevel.
173
fa.gz). The alignment was performed using Hisat2 program (version 2.0.5) with default
174
parameters. After alignment, the reads with reference gene model, the aligned reads were used
175
for estimating expression of the genes and transcripts, using cufflinks program (version 2.2.1).
176
More than 90% of total reads of all samples passed >= 30 Phred score (Supplementary material:
177
Table 1). The differential expression of gene (DEGs) analysis was performed using cuffdiff
178
program of cufflinks package with default settings. The genes were considered differentially
179
expressed only if they attain q-value <= 0.05. The functional enrichment analysis of DEGs in
180
terms of Gene ontology (biological process, cellular components and molecular functions) was
181
analyzed using The Database for Annotation, Vsiualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID;
182
Version: v6.8) (Huang et al., 2008), Protein Analysis Through Evolutionary Relationships
183
(Panther; Version: 14.1) (Mi et al., 2019) and g:profiler (Raudvere et al., 2019) databases which
184
facilitate high-throughput analysis.
8
185
1.4.
Validation of transcriptomic data using qPCR
186
To validate the differential expression of genes obtained from transcriptomic analysis, the
187
expression of five selected differentially expressed genes were determined with qPCR. The
188
selected genes were tnnt3b, pax6a, pax2a, sox2, and six3b in CP exposed zebrafish embryos at
189
selected time points. Briefly, total RNA was isolated using the Trizol plus purification system
190
(Invitrogen, Carlsbad, USA) and the purity of RNA was analyzed spectrophotometrically
191
(Model: Jasco V-750; Mary’s CourtEaston, MD 2160) and by agarose gel electrophoresis. The
192
quantity of purified RNA was determined using NanoDrop-2000 spectrophometer (Thermo-
193
Fisher Scientific). The first strand cDNA synthesis was performed as per the manufacturer’s
194
instructions of iscriptTM cDNA synthesis kit (Biorad, India) using 1 µg of total RNA. The reverse
195
transcribed cDNA was used for expression of selected genes using quantitative Real-Time PCR
196
(qPCR; Applied Biosystems). The primer pairs (Supplemenatry material: Table 2) for respective
197
genes
198
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/tools/primer-blast). Prior to the use of primer pairs, the efficiency
199
of primers were analyzed by standard curves from a dilution series. The efficiency of primers
200
was found to be >90%. The qRT-PCR assay was carried out using SYBRTM green master mix
201
(Thermo-Fisher Scientific) and analyzed on step-one real time PCR system (Agilent
202
technologies, Stratagene, Mx3005P). All samples were run in triplicates, including a negative
203
control. The mean Ct values were determined from the triplicates. The obtained Ct values were
204
used for quantification of normalized expression according to the 2-∆∆Ct method (Schmittgen and
205
Livak, 2008) using reference gene beta actin. The data was expressed as relative mRNA
206
expression after normalization for each sample in CP exposed and the control groups.
207
1.5.
were
designed
using
the
Statistical analysis 9
NCBI-Primer
Blast
tool
208
For qRT-PCR experiments, one treatment group comprised of 4 wells of zebrafish
209
embryos. Three such samples were used for the interpretation of data. The data were represented
210
as mean ± SD. and statistically analyzed using non-parametric student’s t-test for comparison
211
between two groups using GraphPad Prism 5.01 (GraphPad Software Inc., La Jolla, CA, USA).
212
The P values < 0.05 were considered as statistically significant.
213
The DEGs were subjected to three standalone gene enrichment analysis tools, DAVID
214
version 6.7 (https://david.ncifcrf.gov/), PANTHER (www.pantherdb.org/) and g:profiler
215
(https://biit.cs.ut.ee › gprofiler). For DAVID, the statistical parameters were Benjamini multiple
216
test correction. For PANTHER database, the statistical parameters were Bonferroni correction
217
for multiple testing set at p<0.05. For g:profiler, the statistical parameters were Benjamini
218
Hochberg False discovery rate (FDR) with a threshold of 0.05. The DEGs between the control
219
and experimental groups were also represented via Venn diagram (Heberle et al., 2015).
220
2.
Results
221
2.1.
Developmental toxicities
222
No mortality was observed in any of the control and experimental groups. CP (10 µg/L)
223
exposure showed phenotypic malformations such as delayed hatching rate, increased heartbeat
224
rate and deformed axial spinal curvature in zebrafish larvae over a period of 48 hpf as compared
225
to C48 group (Fig. 2).
226
3.2.
Gene enrichment analysis
227
Of the 32518 genes annotated, 21092 genes were mapped using Panther and DAVID
228
databases. The gene enrichment analysis indicated that out of 21092 genes, 20922, 14323 and
229
14105 and 7079 genes were categorized to biological process, cellular component, molecular
230
function and KEGG pathways, respectively (supplementary material: Tables 3 and 4).
10
231
Transcriptomic analysis identified the profile of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in
232
zebrafish embryos after 24 hpf and 48 hpf exposure to CP at a dose of 10µg/L. A Venn diagram
233
demonstrated the over lapped and specific genes between the groups C24 versus C48, C24
234
versus E24 and C48 versus E48 (Fig. 3).
235
In total, 59 genes (up-regulation: 50 and down-regulation: 9; Supplementary material:
236
Table 5) were found to be significantly altered in expression during the development as the
237
zebrafish embryos progress from 24 hpf stage to 48 hpf . The gene enrichment analysis indicated
238
that out of 50 genes, a total of 42 genes were mapped using panther database and out of which 26
239
genes were categorized under molecular function, 34 genes were categorized under biological
240
process and 28 genes were categorized under cellular component. Most of the genes under the
241
gene enrichment term molecular function (13 out of 26 genes), biological process (10 out of 34
242
genes) and cellular component (10 out of 28 genes) fall under the sub-categories binding (GO:
243
0005488), cellular process (GO: 0009987) and cell (GO: 0005623), respectively. Further, the
244
functional profiling of genes under biological process indicated that most of the genes were
245
related to vision/ocular development (Supplementary material: csv file1). With respect to the
246
down regulated genes between C24 versus C48, only 37.5% (i.e. 3 out of 8) genes were enriched
247
under the category biological process. The functional profiling of top four biological processes of
248
down regulated genes between C24 versus C48 groups were anterior/posterior axis speciation,
249
regionalization, axis speciation and somitogenesis (Supplementary material: csv file1). KEGG
250
pathway analysis showed that up-regulated genes (cldn11a: claudin11a and myhz1.1: myosin,
251
heavy polypeptide 1.1 skeletal muscle) in C48 group were predominantly enriched in tight
252
junction related pathway (DAVID analysis; p value: 5.9E-2 and benjamini value: 2.2E-1:
253
Supplementary material: Fig. 2).
11
254
On the other hand, only one gene i.e. tnnt3b was found to be differentially expressed in
255
E24 group as compared to C24 group. Interestingly, a gradual up-regulation of tnnt3b was
256
observed as the embryos progress from 24 hpf stage to 48 hpf stage and while such response was
257
not observed in the expression of tnnt3b in E48 group as compared to E24 group (Table 1).
258
In total, 43 genes (Table 1) were found to be differentially expressed in E48 group as
259
compared to C48 group and out of which 24 genes were up regulated and 19 genes were down
260
regulated. Interestingly, majority of the differentially expressed genes in E48 group were found
261
to be different from that of genes that were observed between C24 versus C48 group. The gene
262
enrichment analysis indicated that out of 24 up regulated genes, a total of 23 genes were mapped
263
using panther database and out of which 19 genes were categorized under molecular function, 33
264
genes were categorized under biological process and 14 genes were categorized under cellular
265
component. Most of the genes under the gene enrichment term molecular function (7 out of 19
266
genes), biological process (8 out of 33 genes) and cellular component (6 out of 14 genes) fall
267
under sub-categories transporter regulator activity (binding (GO: 0005488), metabolic process
268
(GO: 0008152) and organelle (GO: 0043226), respectively. Further, the functional profiling of
269
genes under biological process indicated that most of the differentially expressed genes under CP
270
stress over a period of 48 hpf were related to vision/ocular development (Supplementary
271
material: csv file 3). With respect to the down regulated genes between C48 versus E48, there
272
were 16, 16 and 9 functional hits under the categories biological process, molecular function and
273
cellular component, respectively (Supplementary material: csv file 4). Most of the genes under
274
the gene enrichment terms biological process (6 out of 16 genes), and molecular function (6 out
275
of 16 genes) fall under the subcategories multicellular organismal process and bidning,
276
respectively. Further, functional profiling of down regulated genes in E48 group using g: profiler
12
277
database indicated that cypermetrhin exposure disrupts phototransduction pathway in zebrafish
278
larvae and the altered genes were gnat1 (Guanine nucleotide binding protein alpha transducing
279
activity polypeptide 1) and pde6a (phosphodiesterase 6A, cyclic GMP specific, rod alpha)
280
(DAVID analysis; p value: 1.9E-2; Benjamini value: 9.0E-2; Fold enrichment value: 79.5; EASE
281
value: 0.1) (Figure 4).
282
qPCR studies
283
In order to authenticate the differential genes detected with RNA-seq, five genes were
284
selected randomly from DEGs belonging to the visual/ocular development and one gene related
285
to troponinT and subjected to transcriptional validation. The results indicated that expression
286
patterns of selected genes by qRT-PCR were in concurrence with those by RNA-seq (Table 2).
287
Discussion
288
The present findings demonstrated that CP exposure at 10 µg/L induced significant
289
noticeable signs of developmental toxicity in zebrafish embryos as evidenced by phenotypic
290
abnormalities such as delay in hatching process, increased heartbeat rate, and deformed axial
291
spinal curvature. Our results support the studies of Sathya et al. (2014) and Shabnam and Philip
292
(2018). Hatching process is one of the developmental indicators, as this process is linked to
293
biochemical and physical aspects. In order to hatch, the outer chorion layer of the egg is digested
294
by hatching enzyme and to accomplish this task, normal tail, notochord and axial spinal cord are
295
important prerequisite. A delay in hatching process in zebrafish embryos which was observed in
296
this study might be associated with the CP-induced disturbances at the level of structural and
297
functional integrity of tail and/or notochord (Richterova et al., 2015; Liu et al., 2016). An
298
increase in the pericardial edema observed in this study might be linked to the increased
299
heartbeat rate associated with slow blood flow in CP exposed zebrafish embryos (Xu et al., 2010;
13
300
Sathya et al., 2014). Notochord is a transient structure that functions to provide support to
301
vertebrae and spine during embryogenesis (Zeng et al., 2018). Thus, malformed axial spinal
302
curvature which was observed in this study might reflect notochord abnormalities in zebrafish
303
embryos exposed to CP (Shabnam and Philip, 2018). In this study, the mortality rate was below
304
1% in control zebrafish embryos/larvae as required for early life stage test validity (Kimmel et
305
al., 1995).
306
In the present study, high through-put data analysis using RNA-Seq was employed to
307
understand the moelcular basis of CP-induced toxicity in zebrafish embryos (24 hpf)/larvae (48
308
hpf). To our surprise, Tnnt3b (fast muscle troponin isoform) was found to be the only one gene
309
that was altered in E24 group relative to their respective controls. While the expression levels of
310
tnnt3b in E48 group was reduced as compared to E24 group. In contrast, the expression levels of
311
tnnt3b mRNA increases as the zebrafish embryos progress from 24 hpf to 48 hpf under normal
312
conditions. Tnnt3b is predominant isoform of troponin T, in an adult zebrafish and found at the
313
highest levels within immature hearts and serves as an indicator for the switch between
314
fetal/neonatal and the adult heart (Stefancsik et al., 2003; Hsiao et al., 2003). Earlier studies have
315
shown that exposure of zebrafish embryos to sodium metam, an agricultural dithiocarbamate
316
pesticide altered myogenesis associated genes including tnnt3b (Tilton et al., 2008). Knock-
317
down studies conducted by Ferrante et al. (2011) have shown that tnnt3b also plays a key role in
318
the troponin T activity and eventually stabilizes sarcomere functions. From the findings, we
319
propose that the detection of tnnt3b (confirmed by qPCR studies) in zebrafish embryos at 24 hpf
320
stage might reflect early transcriptional indicator during CP-induced developmental toxicity. We
321
hypothesize that the altered expression of tnnt3b mRNA observed in CP-exposed zebrafish
14
322
embryos (24 hpf) might reflect disrupted cardiac muscular functions. Further studies are
323
warranted to support this notion.
324
At 48 hpf, many genes were found to be differentially expressed in controls and
325
experimental groups. In the current study, CP stress predominantly altered the genes related to
326
visual/eye development. It is well documented that during embryogenesis, visual system is
327
believed to be one of the vulnerable targets to environmental pollutants, as they can able to attain
328
ability to enter and accumulate in the eyes, followed by genomic and proteomic changes of
329
visual system and eventually disorganize and disturb visually mediated behavior (Xu et al., 2017;
330
Chen et al., 2018; Liu et al., 2018). Published reports indicated that CP exposure significantly
331
reduced eye size in fish embryos (Shi et al., 2011; Dawar et al., 2016).
332
Developmental exposure to CP altered genes related to retinal pigment epithelium (RPE),
333
and integral structural components of eye in zebrafish larvae at 48 hpf. It is believed that the
334
thickness (six3b and sox2) and differentiation (pax genes) of RPE from neural retina is pivotal
335
for the development of visual system in vertebrates as it is involved in the protection of light-
336
receptive cells (Baumer et al., 2003; Yasuo et al., 2009). The differentiation of RPE is precisely
337
regulated by microphthalmia-associated transcription factor in association with two genes pax6a
338
and pax2a and thus, down regulation of pax6a and pax2a (confirmed by qPCR data) might
339
suggest improper differentiation of RPE from neural retina in E48 group (Baumer et al., 2003).
340
Published reports also indicated that over expression of six3b and sox2 during xenopus and avian
341
embryogenesis, respectively negatively affect RPE morphogenesis and cellular diferntiation
342
(Bernier et al., 2000; Yasuo et al., 2009). Studies of Babich et al. (2019) demonstrated that
343
arsenic (500 ppb) exposure over a period of 48 hpf caused a significant reduction in the thickness
15
344
of RPE and attributed to the down regulation of pax genes and up regulation of six3b and sox2,
345
respectively in zebrafish larvae relative to controls.
346
Fatty acid binding protein 11b (fabp11b) is a paralog of zebrafish fabp11a and play a key
347
role in fatty acid metabolism of developing eyes (Karanth et al., 2008). In this study,
348
transcriptomic analysis revealed that as the zebrafish embryo (24 hpf) transforms to larvae (48
349
hpf), the expression of fabp11b increases and in constrast, down regulation of fabp11b in
350
zebrafish larvae was found under CP stress relative to controls. This might indicate that the
351
developmental exposure of zebrafish larvae to CP primarily targets
352
metabolism in the ocular system. .
fabp11b of fatty acid
353
Previous studies highlighted that exposure of zebrafish embryos/larvae to pollutants
354
altered gene expression levels of crystallins associated with impairment of eye development
355
(Chen et al., 2016; Xu et al., 2016; Shi et al., 2019). Crystallins are integral structural
356
components of eyes to regulate the transparency and function of lens and cornea (Vihtelic et al.,
357
1999). Among the crystallins, gammaM crystallins (crygm) are abundantly expressed during
358
early life stages of zebrafish and are essential for underwater vision (Easter and Nicola, 1996).
359
Based on the transcriptomic data, under normal conditions as the zebrafish embryos progress
360
from 24 hpf to 48 hpf, the gamma crystallin genes such as crygmd1, crygmd2, crygmd4,
361
crygmd5, crygmd6, crygmd7, crygmd9, crygmd11, crygmd12, crygmd17, crygmd20, crygmd21
362
and crygmxl2 were found to be over expressed. Interestingly, over expression of crygmd3
363
associated with absence of expression of crygmd1, crygmd6, crygmd17, crygmd20, crygmd21
364
and crygmxl2 were found in E48 group relative to controls. Therefore, alterations in the
365
expression of gamma crystallins under CP stress can be used as one of the indicators of visual
366
toxicity. Other studies also demeonstrated that zebrafish larvae exposed to gold nanoparticles
16
367
(Kim et al., 2013), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, phenanthrene (Huang et al., 2013) and
368
alkaloid cyclopamine (Stenkamp and Frey, 2003) also resulted in the impairment of ocular
369
development.
370
Zebrafish embryos/larvae are widely used to assess the chemical-induced toxicity at the
371
level of developmental processes as they comprise of evolutionary conserved structures and their
372
dynamic response to chemical stimulus (Vesterlund et al., 2011). Zebrafish embryos/larvae under
373
CP stress were subjected to transcriptomic analysis to understand the toxic effects of CP on
374
developmental process at the molecular level. In this study, we validated few genes using qPCR
375
studies and many more genes must be validated via qPCR and western blotting analysis. This is
376
one of the limitations of this study. Despite of this limitation, the present study provides valuable
377
information about the CP-induced birth defects.
378
In conclusion, CP exposure is one of the public health concerns and most notably, it has
379
been found in the urine of pregnant women. In this study for the first time we demonstrated the
380
developmental toxic effects of CP zebrafish embryos/larvae as model systems. Research
381
investigating how CP affect zebrafish development is more translatable to human biology
382
(Parng, 2005). Herein, we sought to link the developmental toxicological outcome(s) of CP (10
383
µg/L) at molecular level in zebrafish embryos/larvae using transriptomic analysis. The major
384
outcome of this study was two fold: a) exposure to CP causes phenotypic alterations such as
385
hatching rate, heartbeat rate and axial spinal curvature and b) transcriptomic analysis revealed
386
early indicators of CP-induced developmental toxicity in zebrafish embryos/larvae at the
387
molecular level. Based on the results, it can be concluded that CP developmental exposure
388
caused interference with cardiac muscle formation at 24 hpf, while altered genes related to ocular
17
389
development at 48 hpf. The developmental toxic effect of CP on zebrafish embryo was
390
illustrated in figure 5. The results of this study may pose a developmental hazard to mammals.
391
Acknowledgements
392
The authors thank the Head, Dept. of Zoology and Dept. of Biotechnology for supporting
393
the space to maintain animals and also providing instruments.
394
Conflict of interest
395 396
Nothing to disclose References
397 398 399 400 401 402 403
Aggarwal, P., Jamshed, N., Ekka, M., Imran, A. 2015. Suicidal poisoning with cypermethrin: A clinical dilemma in the emergency department. J Emerg Trauma Shock, 8, 123-125. Babcock, H., Cochran, K., Daggett, M. A. 2017. The Effects of Imidacloprid on Danio rerio (Zebrafish) Ocular and Osteological Development. The FASEB Journal, 31, 869.1. Babich, R., and Van Beneden, R.J. 2019. Effect of arsenic exposure on early eye development in zebrafish (Danio rerio). Journal of Applied Toxicology, 39: 824-831.
404
Bäumer, N., Marquardt, T., Stoykova, A., Spieler, D., Treichel, D., Ashery-Padan, R., Gruss, P.,
405
2003. Retinal pigmented epithelium determination requires the redundant activities of Pax2
406
and Pax6. Development, 130:2903-2915.
407
Berkowitz, G.S., Obel, J., Deych, E., Lapinski, R., Godbold, J., Liu, Z., Landrigan, P.J., Wolff,
408
M.S., 2003. Exposure to indoor pesticides during pregnancy in amultiethnic, urban cohort.
409
Environ. Health Perspect 111, 79-84.
18
410
Bernier, G., Panitz, F., Zhou, X., Hollemann, T., Gruss, P., Pieler, T., 2000. Expanded retina
411
territory by midbrain transformation upon overexpression of Six6 (Optx2) in Xenopus
412
embryos. Mechanisms of development, 93(1-2), 59-69.
413
Carriquiriborde, P., Diaz, J., Mugni, H., Bonetto, C. Ronco, A.E., 2007. Impact of cypermethrin
414
on stream fish populations under field-use in biotech-soybean production. Chemosphere,
415
68, 613-621.
416 417
Chakraborty, C., Sharma, A.R., Sharma, G., Lee, S.S., 2016. Zebrafish: A complete animal model to enumerate the nanoparticle toxicity. J. Nanobiotechnol. 14, 65.
418
Chakravarthi, K., Naravaneni, R., Philip, G.H., 2007. Study of cypermethrin cytogenesis effects
419
on human lymphocytes using in-vitro techniques. J. Appl. Sci. Environ. Manage. 11, 77-
420
81.
421
Chen, A., Chiu, C.N., Mosser, E.A., Kahn, S., Spence, R., Prober, D.A. 2016. QRFP and its
422
receptors regulate locomotor activity and sleep in zebrafish. Journal of Neuroscience, 36
423
(6), 1823-1840.
424
Chen, X., Mu, Y., Hu, Y., Kuan, A.T., Nikitchenko, M., Randeltt, O.l, Chen, A.B., Gavornik,
425
J.P., Sompolinsky, H., Engert, F., Ahrens, M.B., 2018. Brain-wide Organization of
426
Neuronal Activity and Convergent Sensorimotor Transformations in Larval Zebrafish.
427
Neuron, 100 (4), 876–890.
428
Condés-Lara, M., Graff-Guerrero, A., Vega-Riveroll, L., 1999. Effects of cypermethrin on the
429
electroencephalographic activity of the rat: a model of chemically induced seizures.
430
Neurotoxicol Teratol. 21(3), 293-8.
19
431
Dawar, F.U., Zuberi, A., Azizullah, A., Khattak, M.N.K., 2016. Effects of cypermethrin on
432
survival, morphological and biochemical aspects of rohu (Labeo rohita) during early
433
development. Chemosphere. 144, 697-705.
434 435 436 437
Easter Jr, S.S., Nicola, G.N., 1996. The development of vision in the zebrafish (Danio rerio). Developmental biology, 180 (2), 646-663. El-Tawil, O.S., Abdel-Rahman, M.S., 2001. The role of enzyme induction andinhibition on cypermethrin hepatotoxicity. Pharmacol. Res. 44, 33-40.
438
Ernst, W., Jackman, P., Doe, K., Page, F., Julien, G., Mackay, K., Sutherland, T., 2001.
439
Dispersion and toxicity to non-target aquatic organisms of pesticides used to treat sea lice
440
on salmon in net pen enclosures. Mar.Pollut. Bull., 42, 433-444.
441 442 443 444
Ferrante, M.I., Kiff, R.M., Goulding, D.A., Stemple, D.L., 2011. Troponin T is essential for sarcomere assembly in zebrafish skeletal muscle. J. cell sci. 124, 565-577. Grajeda-Cota, P., Ramirez-Mares, M.V., Gonzalez de Mejia, E., 2004. Vitamin Cprotects against in vitro cytotoxicity of cypermethrin in rat hepatocytes.Toxicol. In Vitro, 18, 13-19.
445
Grewal, K.K., Sandhu, G.S., Ranjit, Kaur., Brar, R.S., Sandhu, H.S., 2010. Toxic impacts of
446
cypermethrin on behavior and histology of certain tissues of albino rats. Toxicol. Int. 17
447
(2), 94-98.
448
Heberle, H., Meirelles, G.V., da Silva, F.R., Telles, G.P., Minghim, R., 2015. InteractiVenn: A
449
web-based tool for the analysis of sets through Venn diagrams. BMC Bioinformatics. 16
450
(1), 169.
451
Howe, K., Clark, M.D., Torroja, C.F., Torrance, J., Berthelot, C., Muffato, M., Collins, J.E.,
452
Humphray, S., McLaren, K., Matthews, L., et. al., 2013. The zebrafish reference genome
453
sequence and its relationship to the human genome. Nature, 496, 498-503.
20
454
Hsiao, C.D., Tsai, W.Y., Horng, L.S., Tsai, H.J., 2003. Molecular structure and developmental
455
expression of three muscle-type troponin T genes in zebrafish. Developmental dynamics,
456
227 (2), 266-279.
457 458
Huang da, W., Sherman, B.T., Lempicki, R.A., 2008. Systematic and integrative analysis of large gene lists using DAVID bioinformatics resources. Nature Protocols. 4, 44-57.
459
Huang, L., Wang., C., Zhang, Y., Wu, M., Zuo, Z., 2013. Phenanthrene causes ocular
460
developmental toxicity in zebrafish embryos and the possible mechanisms involved. J.
461
Hazardous Materials. 261, 172-180.
462
Husain, R., Malaviya, M., Seth, P.K., Husain, R., 1992. Differential responses of regional brain
463
polyamines following in utero exposure to synthetic pyrethroid insecticides: a preliminary
464
report. Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol., 49, 402-409.
465
Karanth, S., Denovan‐Wright, E.M., Thisse, C., Thisse, B., Wright, J.M. 2008. The
466
evolutionary relationship between the duplicated copies of the zebrafish fabp11 gene and
467
the tetrapod FABP4, FABP5, FABP8 and FABP9 genes. The FEBS journal, 275 (12),
468
3031-3040.
469
Khan, D.A., Hashmi, I., Mahjabeen, W., Naqvi, T.A., 2010. Monitoring health implications of
470
pesticide exposure in factory workers in Pakistan. Environ. Monit. Assessmn. 168, 231-
471
240.
472 473 474 475
Kim, K.T., Zaikova, T., Hutchison, J.E., Tanguay, R.L., 2013. Gold Nanoparticles Disrupt Zebrafish Eye Development and Pigmentation. Toxicol. Sci., 133, 275–288. Kimmel, C.B., Ballard, W.W., Kimmel, S.R., Ullmann, B., Schilling, T.F., 1995. Stages of embryonic development of the zebrafish. Dev. Dyn. 203, 253-310.
21
476
Laugeray, A., Herzine, A., Perche, O., Richard, O., Dubourg, C.M., Menuet, A., Séverine, S.M.,
477
Lesné, L., Jegou, B., Mortaud, S., 2017. In utero and lactational exposure to low-doses of
478
the pyrethroid insecticide cypermethrin leads to neurodevelopmental defects in male
479
mice—An
480
10.1371/journal.pone.0184475.
481 482
ethological
and
transcriptomic
study.
PLOS
ONE.
12.
e0184475.
Lessenger, J.E., 1992. Five office workers inadvertently exposed to cypermethrin. J Toxicol Environ Health. 35(4), 261-7.
483
Liu, W., Zhang, X., Wei, P., Tian, H., Wang, W., Ru, S., 2018. Long‐term exposure to
484
bisphenol S damages the visual system and reduces the tracking capability of male
485
zebrafish (Danio rerio). J. Appl. Toxicol. 38(2), 248-258.
486
Liu, Z., Wang, Y., Zhu, Z., Yang, E., Feng, X., Fu, Z., Jin, Y., 2016. Atrazine and its main
487
metabolites alter the locomotor activity of larval zebrafish (Danio rerio). Chemosphere
488
148, 163-170.
489
Lu, C., Barr, D.B., Pearson, M., Bartell, S., Bravo, R., 2006. A longitudinal approach toassessing
490
urban and suburban children’s exposure to pyrethroid pesticides. Environ. Health Perspect.
491
114, 1419-1423.
492
Lu, C., Barr, D.B., Pearson, M.A., Walker, L.A., Bravo, R., 2009. The attribution of urbanand
493
suburban children’s exposure to synthetic pyrethroid insecticides: alongitudinal
494
assessment. J. Expo. Sci. Environ. Epidemiol. 19, 69–78.
495
Marino, D., Ronco, A., 2005. Cypermethrin and chlorpyrifos concentration levels in surface
496
water bodies of the Pampa Ondulada, Argentina. Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 75, 820-
497
826.
22
498
Mi, H., Muruganujan, A., Ebert, D., Huang, X., Thomas, P.D. 2019. PANTHER version 14:
499
More genomes, a new PANTHER GO-slim and improvements in enrichment analysis
500
tools. Nucleic Acids Res. 47, D419–D426.
501 502 503 504 505 506
Moore, A., Waring, C.P., 2001. The effects of a synthetic pyrethroid pesticide on some aspects of reproduction in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). Aquat. Toxicol. 52, 1-12. Obinna, V.C., Agu, G.O., 2019. Beta cypermethrin exposure and perinatal reproductive development of female f1 generation of albino rats. 80, 44. Parng, C., 2005. In vivo zebrafish assays for toxicity testing. Curr. Opin. Drug Discov. Dev. 3, 533-539.
507
Pitchika, G.K., Swamy, K.V., Ranjani, T.S., Tyler, C.R., Sainath, S.B., Phillip, G.H., 2019.
508
Effect of cypermethrin on reproductive efficacy in zebrafish (Danio rerio): In vivo and In
509
silico studies. J. Environ. Biol, 40(5), 985-994.
510 511
Power, Laura & Sudakin, Daniel., 2007. Pyrethrin and pyrethroid exposures in the United States: A longitudinal analysis of incidents reported to poison centers. J.Med. Toxicol. 3, 94-99.
512
Prashanth, M.S., David, M., 2006. Changes in Nitrogen Metabolism of the Freshwater Fish
513
Cirrhinus mrigala Following Exposure to Cypermethrin. Journal of basic and clinical
514
physiology and pharmacology. 17, 63-70.
515
Prashanth, M.S., Hiragond, N.C., Nikam, K.N., 2011. The effect of cypermethrin on different
516
tissues of freshwater fish Tilapia mossambica (Perters). Journal of basic and clinical
517
physiology and pharmacology. 22 (4), 115-119.
518
Raudvere, U., Kolberg, L., Kuzmin, I., Arak, T., Adler, P., Peterson, H., Vilo, J., 2019.
519
g:Profiler: A web server for functional enrichment analysis and conversions of gene lists
520
(2019 update). Nucl. Acids Res. 47, 191-198.
23
521
Richterova, Z., Machova, J., Stara, A., Tumova, J., Velisek, J., Sevcikova, M., Svobodova, Z.,
522
2015. Effects of a cypermethrin-based pesticide on early life stages of common carp
523
(Cyprinus carpio L.). Veterinary medicine. 60, 423-431.
524
Sathya, K., Thiripurasundari, M., Uma, A., Srinivasan, M.R., Bose, M.S.C., 2014. The toxic
525
effect of cypermethrin on zebrafish embryo -an alternative model for assessing the embryo
526
toxicity of environmental chemicals. Indo Am. J. Pharm. Res. 4 (5), 2316-2322.
527 528
Schmittgen, T.D., Livak, K.J., 2008. Analyzing real-time PCR data by the comparative C(T) method. Nat. Protocols. 3(6), 1101-1108.
529
Shabnam, K.R., Philip, G.H., 2018. Developmental toxicity of Deltamethrin and 3-
530
Phenoxybenzoic acid in embryo-larval stages of Zebrafish (Danio rerio). Toxicol. Mech.
531
Methods. 28 (6), 415–422.
532
Shi, Q., Tsui, M.M.P., Hu, C., Lam, J.C.W., Zhou, B., Chen, L., 2019. Acute exposure to
533
triphenyl phosphate (TPhP) disturbs ocular development and muscular organization in
534
zebrafish larvae. Ecotoxicol. Environ. Saf. 179, 119-126.
535
Shi, X., Gu, A., Ji, G., Li, Y., Di, J., Jin, J., Hu, F., Long, Y., Xia, Y., Lu, C., Song, L., Wang, S.,
536
Wand, X., 2011. Developmental toxicity of cypermethrin in embryo-larval stages of
537
zebrafish. Chemosphere. 85(6), 1010-1016.
538
Singh, A., Mudawal, A., Shukla, R.K., Yadav, S., Khanna, V.K., Sethumadhavan, R., Parmar,
539
D., 2015. Effect of Gestational Exposure of Cypermethrin on Postnatal Development of
540
Brain Cytochrome P450 2D1 and 3A1 and Neurotransmitter Receptors. Mol. Neurobiol.
541
52(1),741-756.
24
542
Singh, A.K., Tiwari, M.N., Prakash, O., Singh, M.P., 2012. A current review of cypermethrin-
543
induced
neurotoxicity
and
544
Neuropharmacol. 10: 64-71.
nigrostriatal
dopaminergic
neurodegeneration.
Curr.
545
Stefancsik, R., Randall, J.D., Mao, C., Sarkar, S., 2003. Structure and sequence of the human
546
fast skeletal troponin T (TNNT3) gene: insight into the evolution of the gene and the origin
547
of the developmentally regulated isoforms, Comp. Funct. Genomics. 4(6), 609–625.
548 549
Stenkamp, D.L., Frey, R.A., 2003. Extraretinal and retinal hedgehog signaling sequentially regulate retinal differentiation in zebrafish. Dev Biol. 258(2), 349-363.
550
Sushma, N., Devasena, T., 2010. Aqueous extract of Trigonella foenum graecum(fenugreek)
551
prevents cypermethrin-induced hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity. Hum. Exp. Toxicol. 29,
552
311–319.
553
Tilton, F., La Du, J., Tanguay, R., 2008. Sulfhydryl Systems Are a Critical Factor in the
554
Zebrafish Developmental Toxicity of the Dithiocarbamate Sodium Metam (NaM). Aquat.
555
Toxicol. 90, 121-127.
556 557 558 559
Torstensson, L., Borjesson, E., Arvidsson, B., 1999. Treatment of bare toot spruce seedlings with permethrin against pine weevil before lifting. Scand. J. For. Res., 14, 408-415. Ullah, M.S., Ahmad, M., Ahmad, N., Khan, M.Z., Ahmad, I., 2006. Toxic effects of cypermethrin on female rabbits. Pakistan Veterinary Journal, 26(4), 193–196.
560
Ullah, S., Zuberi, A., Alagawany, M., Farag, M.R., Dadar, M., Karthik, K., Tiwari, R., Dhama,
561
K., Iqbal, H.M.N.,2018. Cypermethrin induced toxicities in fish and adverse health
562
outcomes: Its prevention and control measure adaptation. J. Environ. Manag. 206, 863–
563
871.
25
564 565 566 567
USEPA. 1998. Guidelines for Neurotoxicity Risk Assessment. EPA/630/R-95/001F, Apr 1998. http://www.epa.gov/raf/publications/guidelines-neurotoxicity-risk-assessment.htm Vesterlund, L., Jiao, H., Unneberg, P., Hovatta, O., Kere, J., 2011. The zebrafish transcriptome during early development. BMC dev. Biol. 11, 30. 10.1186/1471-213X-11-30.
568
Vihtelic, T.S., Doro, C.J., Hyde, D.R., 1999. Cloning and characterization of six zebrafish
569
photoreceptor opsin cDNAs and immunolocalization of their corresponding proteins. Vis.
570
Neurosci. 16, 571–585.
571
Vryzas, Z., Alexoudis, C., Vassiliou, G., Galanis, K., Papadopoulou-Mourkidou, E., 2011.
572
Determination and aquatic risk assessment of pesticide residues inriparian drainage canals
573
in northeastern Greece. Ecotoxicol. Environ. Saf. 74,174–181.
574
Whyatt, R.M., Camann, D.E., Kinney, P.L., Reyes, A., Ramirez, J., Dietrich, J., Diaz,
575
D.,Holmes, D., Perera, F.P., 2002. Residential pesticide use during pregnancy among a
576
cohort of urban minority women. Environ. Health Perspect. 110, 507–514.
577 578 579 580 581 582 583
Wolansky, M.J., Gennings, C., Crofton, K.M., 2006. Relative potencies for acute effectsof pyrethroids on motor function in rats. Toxicol. Sci. 89, 271–277. Wolansky, M.J., Harrill, J.A., 2008. Neurobehavioral toxicology of pyrethroidinsecticides in adult animals: a critical review. Neurotoxicol. Teratol. 30, 55–78. Xu, C., Tu, W., Lou, C., Hong, Y., Zhao, M., 2010. Enantioselective separation and zebrafish embryo toxicity of insecticide beta-cypermethrin. J. Environ. Sci. China 22 (5), 738-743. Xu, T., Liu, Y., Pan, R., Zhang, B., Zhao, J., Yin, D., Zhao, Q., 2017. Vision, Color Vision, and
584
Visually
Guided
Behavior:
The
Novel
585
Tetrabromodiphenyl Ether (BDE-47). Environ. Sci. Technol. Lett. 4, 132-136.
26
Toxicological
Targets
of
2,2′,4,4′-
586
Xu, X., Weber, D., Burge, R., VanAmberg, K., 2016. Neurobehavioral impairments produced
587
by developmental lead exposure persisted for generations in zebrafish (Danio rerio),
588
Neurotoxicology, 52, 176-185.
589
Yasuo, I., Weinberg, K., Oda‐Ishii, I., Coughlin, L., Mikawa, T. 2009. Morphogenesis and
590
cytodifferentiation of the avian retinal pigmented epithelium require downregulation of
591
group B1 sox genes. Development, 136, 2579–2589
592
Zeng, Z., Lopez-Baez, J.C., Lleras-Forero, L., Brunsdon, H., Wyatt, C., Rybski, W., Patton, E.E.
593
2018. Notochord Injury Assays that Stimulate Transcriptional Responses in Zebrafish
594
Larvae. Bio-protocol, 8(23), e3100. doi:10.21769/BioProtoc.3100.
595 596
Zhou, S., Dong, Q., Li, S., Guo, J., Wang, X., Zhu, G., 2009. Developmental toxicity of cartap on zebrafish embryos. Aquat. Toxicol. 95, 339–346.
597
27
598
Table 1:
Effect of cypermethrin stress on zebrafish embryos (24 hrs)/larvae (48 hrs) transcriptome
599 600
Gene Symbol
Gene Name
Ensembl ID
Log fold change
Time point: 24 hrs zebrafish embryos exposed to cypermethrin over a period of 24 hrs as compared to unexposed embryos (24 hrs) Up-Regulated genes Tnnt3b
Fast muscle troponin T isoform TnnT3b
ENSDARG00000068457
5.15
Down-Regulated genes: No gene were differentially down-regulated Time point: 48 hrs zebrafish embryos as they progress from 24 to 48 hrs under cypermethrin stress Up-Regulated genes Crx
Cone-rod homeobox;crx;ortholog
ENSDARG00000011989 4.12
Cryaa
Alpha A crystallin;cryaa;ortholog
ENSDARG00000053502 3.28
cryba1l1
Beta A1-2-crystallin;cryba1l1;ortholog
ENSDARG00000032929 6.14
cryba2a
Beta A2-crystallin;cryba2a;ortholog
ENSDARG00000030349 6.36 ENSDARG00000007576
crybb1l1
Crystallin, beta B1,-like 1;crybb1l1;ortholog
ENSDARG00000016793
crybb1l2
Crystallin, beta B1,-like 2;crybb1l2;ortholog
crygm2d3
NA
ENSDARG00000088823 6.95
dnase1l1l
Deoxyribonuclease;dnase1l1l;ortholog
ENSDARG00000023861 3.54
foxq2
Forkhead box Q2;foxq2;ortholog
ENSDARG00000071394 3.12
GRIK2
NA
ENSDARG00000113771 2.97
krt15
Keratin 15;krt15;ortholog
ENSDARG00000036840 3.11 ENSDARG00000007715 4.28
Lgsn
Lengsin, lens protein with glutamine synthetase domain
neurod2
Neurogenic differentiation factor 2
ENSDARG00000016854 3.16
6.32 6.21
28
Neuronal PAS domain-containing protein 4A
ENSDARG00000055752 2.18
npas4a
ENSDARG00000045677 2.33
opn1sw1
Opsin-1, short-wave-sensitive 1;opn1sw1;ortholog
ENSDARG00000076978 1.89
Pmchl
Pro-melanin concentrating hormone-like protein
si:ch211196c10.13
Si:ch211-196c10.13;si:ch211196c10.13;ortholog
ENSDARG00000096756 2.96
Si:ch211-255g12.6
ENSDARG00000094310 2.36
six3b
Homeobox protein Six6;six3b;ortholog
ENSDARG00000054879 3.12
six7
Homeobox protein Six7;six7;ortholog
ENSDARG00000070107 3.25
slc4a8
Anion exchange protein;slc4a8;ortholog
ENSDARG00000015531 3.91
sox2
Transcription factor Sox-2;sox2;ortholog
ENSDARG00000070913 2.28
Tnmd
Tenomodulin;tnmd;ortholog
ENSDARG00000052615 4.13
si:ch211255g12.6
zgc:172323 Zgc:172323;zgc:172323;ortholog
ENSDARG00000053201 4.29
Down-regulated genes ENSDARG00000019763 -3.68
acp5a
Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase type 5;acp5a;ortholog
crygm2d11
Crystallin, gamma M2d8
ENSDARG00000069827 -3.97
crygm2d12
Crystallin, gamma M2d12
ENSDARG00000069801 -4.29
crygm2d2
Crystallin, gamma M2d2
ENSDARG00000086917 -5.29
crygm2d4
NA
ENSDARG00000087164 -5.02 ENSDARG00000069792 -5.32
crygm2d5
Crystallin gamma EM2-5 (Crystallin, gamma M2d5)
ENSDARG00000076572 -3.98
crygm2d7
Crystallin gamma EM2-7 (Crystallin, gamma M2d7)
crygm2d9
Crystallin, gamma M2d9
ENSDARG00000115701 -4.26 ENSDARG00000002311 -3.25
fabp11b
Adipocyte fatty acid-binding protein (Fabp11b protein)
29
ENSDARG00000044199 -3.67
gnat1
Guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G protein), alpha transducing activity polypeptide 1 (Rod transducin alpha subunit)
Gnsb
N-acetylglucosamine-6-sulfatase
ENSDARG00000098296 -3.54 ENSDARG00000102722 -4.29
itih3b
Inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor heavy chain 3b
ENSDARG00000017441 -6.25
mylz3
Fast skeletal muscle myosin light polypeptide3
pax2a
Paired box protein Pax-2a;pax2a;ortholog
ENSDARG00000028148 -2.87
pax6a
Paired box protein Pax-6;pax6a;ortholog
ENSDARG00000103379 -2.69
pde6a
Phosphodiesterase;pde6a;ortholog
ENSDARG00000000380 -3.98
slc25a1b
Slc25a1 solute carrier family 25
ENSDARG00000076381 -6.39
slc39a5
Solute carrier family 39 (zinc transporter)
ENSDARG00000079525 -1.98
601 602
30
603
Table 2:
Differentially expressed genes in zebrafish embryos/larvae confirmed by qPCR
604
Gene symbol
Fold change (RNA-Seq)
Fold Change (qPCR)c
tnnt3b
5.15a
6.29
pax6a
-2.87b
-3.08
pax2a
-2.69b
-2.97
sox2
2.28b
2.68
six3b
3.12b
2.39
605 606 607 608 609 610 611
a
Fold change refers to gene expression in the 24 hpf cypermethrin-treated samples compared with its respective control samples. b Fold change refers to gene expression in the 48 hpf cypermethrin-treated samples compared with its respective control samples. c p<0.05 by qPCR (n=3).
31
Figure Legends
612
613
Figure 1:
Chemical structure of cypermethrin
614
Figure 2:
Effect of cypermethrin (10 µg/L) on Mortality rate (a: 24 hpf and 48 hpf),
615
hatching rate (b: 48 hpf), heartbeat rate (c: 48 hpf) and axial spinal curvature (d
616
and e: 48 hpf)
617 618
Figure 3:
The venn diagram represents the overlap between the significantly differentially expressed genes in the zebrafish embryos treated with or without cypermethrin
619 620 621
Figure 4:
KEGG
pathway analysis
of
down
regulated
genes
involved
in
the
622
phototransduction cascade under dark and light conditions. Genes encoding for
623
gnat1 (Guanine nucleotide binding protein alpha transducing activity polypeptide
624
1) and pde6a (phosphodiesterase 6A, cyclic GMP specific, rod alpha) in 48 hpf
625
zebrafish larvae exposed to cypermethrin during development were shown in red
626
boxes.
627 628
Figure 5:
Schematic illustration of developmental effects of cypermethrin on zebrafish
629
embryos/larvae. Exposure of zebrafish embryos (24 hrs) to cypermethrin shows
630
up-regulation of tnnt3b gene (* indicates up-regulation). Exposure of zebrafish
631
larvae (48 hrs) to cypermethrin shows phenotypic and transcriptomic changes.
632
Cypermethrin exposure alters genes related to lens, fatty acid metabolism and
633
retinal pigment epithelium development (RPE). During normal development of
634
eye, the gamma crystallin genes such as crygmd1, crygmd2, crygmd4, crygmd5, 32
635
crygmd6, crygmd7, crygmd9, crygmd11, crygmd12, crygmd17, crygmd20,
636
crygmd21 and crygmxl2 were expressed in the lens of zebrafish larvae. However,
637
over expression of crygmd3 associated with absence of expression of crygmd1,
638
crygmd6, crygmd17, crygmd20, crygmd21 and crygmxl2 was observed in lens of
639
zebrafish larvae exposed to cypermethrin. With regard to fatty acid metabolism,
640
fabp11b gene was down regulated (** indicates down regulation) in the ocular
641
system of zebrafish larvae exposed to cypermethrin over controls. With regard to
642
RPE, pax6a** and pax2a** were down regulated and six3b* and sox2* were up
643
regulated in zebrafish larvae exposed to cypermethrin over controls.
33
Highlights Zebrafish embryos exposed to cypermethrin (10µgL-1) over a period of 24 hrs alters only one gene (tnnt3b) related to cardiac muscle development Zebrafish larvae exposed to cypermethrin (10µgL-1) over a period of 48 hrs induced phenotypic malformations Zebrafish larvae exposed to cypermethrin (10µgL-1) over a period of 48 hrs induced ocular developmental toxicity The present study provides valuable information about the early transcriptome indicators in zebrafish embryos/larvae following cypermethrin exposure