Local industrial pollution induces astrocyte cytoskeleton rearrangement in the dice snake brain: GFAP as a biomarker
Tarih
2020Yazar
Gasso, V. Y. and Hahut, A. N. and Yermolenko, V, S. and Hasso, I. A. and
Agca, C. A. and Sukharenko, V, E. and Nedzvetsky, V. S.
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The present study was designed to evaluate the responsiveness of
modulation of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) content and its
fragmentation in the snake brain as a biomarker of local industrial
pollution of aquatic ecosystems. Despite GFAP being a well known
cytoskeleton marker of astrocytes' reactivity in the brain of
vertebrates, its expression in the snake brain remains insufficiently
described. The GFAP expression and its fragmentation were detected using
the immunoblot method in the snake brain. ROS level was determined with
dichlorofluorescein diacetate fluorescence. The content of the glial
fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) of filament (cytoskeleton) and soluble
(cytosol) fractions in the brain of dice snake Natrix tessellata from
three ecosystems with different rates of industrial pollution were
studied (two polluted and one clean control site). Characteristic
increase in GFAP fragmentation was noted for the snakes from both the
researched polluted sites. Significant increase in the content of the
GFAP cleaved polypeptide fragments induced by industrial pollution
exposure was confirmed in the snakes' brains. Meaningful GFAP
fragmentation was determined in snake brain astrocytes as an increase in
cleaved fragments of 47-35 kDa molecular weight for both soluble and
cytoskeletal GFAP fractions. We found significant abnormality in the
ratio of the GFAP soluble fraction to the cytoskeletal one in
contaminant-exposed dice snakes. It should testify to significant
metabolic disturbance in nerve cells of the dice snakes. Furthermore,
growth of reactive oxygen species level as the main cause of oxidative
stress was determined in brains of the snakes exposed to environmental
toxicity. Thus, astrocyte cytoskeleton disorders are associated with
pollutant-induced redox imbalance in the snake brain. Despite the
limited data on glial cell biology in the reptilian brain, the observed
results prove that snake astrocytes can respond to the environmental
toxicity using typical astroglial response. The presented results
evidence that monitoring of molecular characteristics of glial
cytoskeleton in dice snakes could be used as reliable biomarker of
neurotoxicity and adverse effects of industrial pollution. Further
studies are required to elucidate the role of astrocyte cytoskeleton in
the response against neurotoxic contaminants.
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