Artigo

Acute waterborne cadmium uptake in rainbow trout is reduced by dietary calcium carbonate

The effects of elevated dietary calcium (as CaCO3) and acute waterborne Cd exposure (50 μg/l) on whole body uptake, tissue uptake, and internal distribution of newly accumulated Cd, Ca2+, and Na + in juvenile rainbow trout were examined. Fish were fed with three diets (mg Ca2+/g food): 20 (control),...

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Autor principal: Baldisserotto, Bernardo
Outros Autores: Kamunde, Collins N., Matsuo, Aline Y.O., Wood, Chris M.
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: English
Publicado em: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology - C Toxicology and Pharmacology 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18947
Resumo:
The effects of elevated dietary calcium (as CaCO3) and acute waterborne Cd exposure (50 μg/l) on whole body uptake, tissue uptake, and internal distribution of newly accumulated Cd, Ca2+, and Na + in juvenile rainbow trout were examined. Fish were fed with three diets (mg Ca2+/g food): 20 (control), 30 and 60 for 7 days before fluxes were measured with radiotracers. The highest dietary Ca2+ elevation reduced waterborne whole body Ca2+ uptake, but did not protect against inhibition of waterborne Ca2+ uptake by waterborne Cd. Both Ca2+-supplemented diets reduced newly accumulated Ca 2+ in the gills in relation to the control treatment, but did not prevent the Cd-inhibiting effect against accumulation of new Ca2+ in most compartments. Fish fed with Ca2+-supplemented diets showed markedly lower rates of whole body uptake and internalization (in some tissues) of waterborne Cd, illustrating that, while dietary Ca2+ supplementation did not protect against the impact of waterborne Cd on waterborne Ca2+ uptake, it did protect against the uptake of Cd. Waterborne Cd had no effect on Na+ fluxes, total Cl-, and in most body compartments, newly accumulated Na+ and total Na + were also not affected. Dietary supplementation with CaCO 3 had the same protective effect as demonstrated by dietary supplementation with CaCl2 in an earlier study. Thus, the reduction of waterborne Cd uptake and internalization by dietary Ca2+ was specifically due to Ca2+ and not to the anion. © 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.