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Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Comparative Pharmacology | 1991

In vivo and in vitro effects of cadmium on selected enzymes in different organs of the fish Barbus conchonius Ham. (rosy barb).

Tejendra S. Gill; Hema Tewari; Jaishree Pande

1. Enzyme modulation by cadmium in selected organs of the fish, Barbus conchonius (rosy barb), was investigated in vivo (48 hr exposure to 12.6 mg/l cadmium chloride) and in vitro (10(-6) M cadmium chloride). 2. The acetylcholinesterase (AchE) activity was depressed in the gills but stimulated in the skeletal muscles and brain in vivo. The hepatic, branchial, and renal acid phosphatase (AcP) activity decreased marginally in vivo but it was significantly increased in the gut and ovary. In vitro, except for the liver, the AcP activity was depressed in the selected organs. Collaterally, gut alkaline phosphatase (AlP) was significantly inhibited but a pronounced stimulation was noted in the kidneys and ovary in vivo. In vitro, the AlP activity was conspicuously elevated in the kidneys and gut, and moderately in the gills. 3. Cadmium inhibited the glutamate-oxaloacetate and glutamate-pyruvate transaminases (GOT and GPT) in the liver, gills and kidneys in vivo. In vitro, the GOT and GPT activities were decreased in the liver, gills and kidneys. The lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) was significantly stimulated by Cd in the heart in vivo but in vitro the metal inhibited the enzyme in the gills. 4. Enzymes in the liver, followed by those in the kidneys and gills seem to be most seriously affected by Cd poisoning in this fish.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Comparative Pharmacology | 1990

Use of the fish enzyme system in monitoring water quality: Effects of mercury on tissue enzymes

Tejendra S. Gill; Hema Tewari; Jaishree Pande

1. Rosy barb (Puntius conchonius) were exposed to 181 micrograms/l mercuric chloride for 48 h and the activity of acid and alkaline phosphatases (AcP and AIP), aspartate aminotransferase (AAT), alanine aminotransferase (AIAT), lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), and acetylcholinesterase (AchE) were measured in vivo in several organs. 2. The AcP activity was inhibited in the liver, gills, kidneys, and gut but stimulated in the gonads. With the exception of kidney, the AIP activity showed an increase in all the organs examined. The AAT and AIAT were generally inhibited in different organs. An increase in LDH activity occurred in the cardiac and skeletal muscles while the AchE activity was considerably lowered in the brain, gills, and liver. 3. In vitro exposure to mercury at concentrations ranging between 10(-10) and 10(-4) M, inhibited the AIP, AAT, AIAT, LDH, and AchE activities in the tissues examined. The AcP activity was also depressed in all the tissues except in the testes, in which a marginal increase was noted. 4. The in vivo and in vitro effects of Hg were not of similar quality implying sequestration of toxic cations in the intact animals.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 1991

Effects of endosulfan on the blood and organ chemistry of freshwater fish, Barbus conchonius hamilton

Tejendra S. Gill; Jaishree Pande; Hema Tewari

Prolonged exposure (4 weeks) to 6.72 ppb of the organochlorine insecticide endosulfan induced disturbances in the blood and organ chemistry values of a common fish, Barbus conchonius. In blood the total lipids, cholesterol, and proteins were decreased in comparison to unexposed controls, while the free fatty acids (FFA), glucose, total phosphorus, and lactate were increased. Total lipids, FFA, and proteins were augmented in liver; cholesterol, in liver and ovary; and phosphorus and glycogen, in skeletal muscles. Compared to the controls, a decrease was seen in the total lipids (skeletal muscles and ovary), glycogen (liver, brain, and heart), and cholesterol (testes). Hyperlipemia, hyperproteinemia, and hyperlactemia persisted during a recovery period of 1 week in clean water following endosulfan poisoning.


Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology | 1990

Enzyme modulation by sublethal concentrations of aldicarb, phosphamidon, and endosulfan in fish tissues.

Tejendra S. Gill; Jaishree Pande; Hema Tewari

Abstract Enzyme modulation by acutely sublethal concentrations of aldicarb, phosphamidon, and endosulfan was examined in vivo and in vitro in different tissues of a fish, Puntius conchonius Ham. The AchE activity in brain and gills was decreased by three pesticides tested. In the skeletal muscles, while aldicarb and phosphamidon inhibited the enzyme, the endosulfan caused stimulation of AchE activity. The hepatic AcP was inhibited by aldicarb and phosphamidon but stimulated by endosulfan in vivo. In the gills, kidneys, and gut, however, the AcP activity was generally enhanced in vivo and decreased in vitro. Liver, gut, and ovaries showed inhibition of AIP with aldicarb and phosphamidon whereas the endosulfan induced both a reduction and a stimulation of the enzyme activity. Gills and kidneys revealed AlP stimulation with all three pesticides. The GOT was inhibited in the liver, gills, and kidneys but the activity was raised in the heart during pesticide exposure. In the liver, kidneys, and heart, the GPT activity was both increased and decreased during varying test conditions but the pesticides generally caused stimulation of this enzyme in the gills and skeletal muscles. The LDH activity was increased by aldicarb in the gills, skeletal muscles, and heart but inhibited in the liver. Phosphamidon and endosulfan induced inhibition of LDH activity in all the tissues except for an increase seen in heart muscles in vitro. With few exceptions, the in vivo and in vitro effects of pesticides on enzymes were qualitatively similar.


Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology | 1990

Sublethal effects of an organophosphorus insecticide on certain metabolite levels in a freshwater fish, Puntius conchonius Hamilton

Tejendra S. Gill; Jaishree Pande; Hema Tewari

Abstract Alterations in the metabolite levels were monitored in a common freshwater bony fish, Puntius conchonius, chronically exposed to a sublethal concentration (109.5 ppm) of an organophosphorus insecticide, phosphamidon. Significant hyperglycemia, hyperlactemia, hypercholesterolemia, hyperlipemia, hyperproteinemia, and increased blood-free fatty acids were manifested in the exposed fish for up to 4 weeks. The phosphorus levels in the blood, however, fell. In other tissues, there was an increase in the hepatosomatic index, moderate hepatic and skeletal muscle glycogenesis, a severe depletion of glycogen reserves in the brain, and a significant increase in heart glycogen. Cholesterol (liver, ovary, and testes), total lipids (liver and ovary), free fatty acids (liver and skeletal muscles), and total proteins (liver) were elevated in the exposed fish, and there were signs of lipolysis and protein breakdown in the skeletal muscles. Except for the liver-free fatty acids and heart glycogen, organophosphorus effects on other variables were not abolished during recovery in clean water.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 1992

Short- and long-term effects of copper on the rosy barb (Puntius conchonius Ham.)

Tejendra S. Gill; Hema Tewari; Jaishree Pande

The rosy barb (Puntius conchonius) was exposed to copper (Cu) for short (48 hr) and long (8 weeks) terms and effects on enzyme activities and biochemical variables in the blood and tissues were examined. In vivo exposure to 571 micrograms CuSO4/liter (96-hr median tolerance limit (TLm)) for 48 hr stimulated to varying degrees acid phosphatase (AcP), alkaline phosphatase (AlP) (except in the liver), and acetylcholinesterase activities in selected tissues. The alanine aminotransferase and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) (except in the heart) activities were inhibited to varying degrees in vivo. In vitro, the presence of 10(-6) M Cu suppressed enzyme activities in the tissues examined, with a few exceptions such as AcP in ovaries and gut, AlP in liver, gills, gut, and testes, and LDH in liver. Hyperglycemia, hyperlactemia, hyperproteinemia, elevated blood free fatty acid (FFA) levels, and hypocholesterolemia were manifested in the fish exposed to 190 micrograms CuSO4/liter (1/3 96-hr TLm). Effects on the tissues included glycogenolysis (liver and skeletal muscles), glycogenesis (brain and heart), a marked rise in hepatic proteins, accumulation of FFAs in liver and skeletal muscles, and reduction in hepatic and gonadal cholesterol contents. After 8 weeks, a trend toward recovery was noted in the biochemical variables (except blood and hepatic protein levels).


Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 1991

Effects of water-borne copper and lead on the peripheral blood in the rosy barb,Barbus (Puntius) conchonius Hamilton

Tejendra S. Gill; Hema Tewari; Jaishree Pande

The Pb-induced abnormalities of hematopoiesis are primarily confined to the erythrocytes the leucocytes and platelets do not appear to be altered during chronic exposure. Pb effects in fishes show responses similar to those in mammals. The absence of erythrocyte {delta}-ALAD inhibition in fish exposed to Cd, Cu, Zn, and Hg indicated that this enzyme is quite specific for Pb. The objective of this work was to examine the effects of chronically sublethal concentrations of Cu and Pb on the peripheral blood parameters in the rosy barb, Barbus (Puntius) conchonius, a widely distributed freshwater bony fish.


Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 1991

In vivo tissue enzyme activities in the rosy barb (Barbus conchonius Hamilton) experimentally exposed to lead

Tejendra S. Gill; Hema Tewari; Jaishree Pande; Sudha Lal

Lead (Pb) is biologically nonessential and if present in excessive levels in the body, it can cause clinical disorders both in humans and animals. Pathologies associated with experimental Pb poisoning have been described in fishes, and several markers have been utilized to monitor effects of short- and long-term exposures. The specific aim of this study was to examine the effects of acute Pb poisoning on the enzymes concerned with membrane transport, neurotransmission, and energy metabolism in selected tissues of the rosy barb, Barbus conchonius, a freshwater fish.


Indian Journal of Experimental Biology | 1991

Individual and combined toxicity of common pesticides to teleost Puntius conchonius Hamilton.

Tejendra S. Gill; Jaishree Pande; Hema Tewari


Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 1991

Hemopathological changes associated with experimental aldicarb poisoning in fish (Puntius conchonius Hamilton)

Tejendra S. Gill; Jaishree Pande; Hema Tewari

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