Abstract:
Growing trend of nano technology and excessive use of antibiotics in past few decades
have given rise to global concerns regarding fate and toxicological impacts of these
pollutants on ecosystem. Sulfamethoxazole (SMX) is a broad range bacteriostatic
antibiotic widely used in animal and fish farming and also employed in human medicine.
These antibiotics may ultimately end up in aquatic ecosystem and affect non-target
organisms like fish. The overview of experimental work in this research followed three
main phases linked to each other. In phase 1a, local fish Cyprinus carpio was used as
bioindicator for toxicity assessment of SMX. Effects were determined by chronic exposure
to environmentally relevant dosages of 25, 50,100 and 200 μg/L of SMX for 28 days.
Cytotoxicity assessed through hematological and biochemical profiling showed a dose-
response relationship. Hemoglobin, platelets, and erythrocytes levels were significantly
reduced in exposed fish. Leukocytes count was considerably enhanced with values varying
from 131-303 (x 103
/μL). Changes in biochemical indices showed biphasic trend with time
and dosages tested in study. An inverse relation between concentrations applied and
bioaccumulation in targeted fish muscles was discovered by HPLC analysis. The highest
concentrations quantified in fish muscles exposed to 25, 50, 100 and 200 μg/L were 124,
202,104.5, and 123.2 ng/g, respectively at several sampling times. Moreover, exposure to
SMX enabled ROS production and various histopathological lesions in various organs of
SMX exposed fish. Organ pathological index showed that the intensity of tissue lesions
increased as SMX dosage was increased. Upon completion of exposure time (28th day),
quantitative analysis of gill morphology revealed that the severity of histopathology
increased over time for all exposure groups, suggesting physio-metabolic turmoil brought
on by the biological and molecular action of SMX. The current study also determined the
exposure effects of a broad range of SMX concentrations to developing zebrafish, an ideal
indexical organism for ecotoxicological studies. To discern the effect of SMX on
developing zebrafish embryos and larvae, Phase 1 b of studies investigated a broad range
of toxicity endpoints including survivability, hatchability, malformations, oxidative stress,
behavioral changes, mitochondrial bioenergetics, apoptosis, and immune-related
transcripts. Results showed that higher concentrations of SMX affect survivability, cause
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hatch delay and induce malformations including edema of yolk sac, pericardial effusion,
bent tail and curved spine in developing embryos. Lower levels of SMX provoked an
inflammatory response in larvae at 7 dpf as noted by up-regulation of ifn and IL-1β
transcripts. SMX also increased transcript expression of genes related to apoptosis
including bad and bax at 50 μg/L and decreased casp3 expression in a dose-responsive
manner. SMX induced hyperactivity at 500 and 2500 μg/L based upon light/dark
preference test.
Titanium dioxide nanoparticles are most widely used nano materials employed in various
industries. It has been reported that presence of nanoparticles alters the toxicity and
bioavailability of organic toxicants. Still, combined toxic effects of nano titanium dioxide
and SMX antibiotic that are used world-widely remains unclear. In Phase 2 of study,
Cyprinus carpio was utilized as bioindicator for toxicity assessment of nano titanium and
SMX. Juvenile fish were exposed to selected dosages of 25-100 μg/L of SMX alone or co-
exposed with 1.5 mg/L of nano titanium for 96 h period. Results revealed that nano titanium
bioaccumulates in fish and it may also adsorb SMX. Nitroblue-tetrazolium (NBT)
reduction assay for determination of immunological changes provided clear evidence for
increase in respiratory burst activity triggered by nanoparticles. Nano titanium accelerated
the uptake of SMX, suggesting that it may increase the bioaccumulation of antibiotics in
fish muscles. Fish biochemical characteristics including glucose, alanine transaminase, and
total protein were also changed as a result of co-exposure to both contaminants. Current
study demonstrated that nano titanium increased SMX bioaccumulation and enhanced
SMX-induced toxicity in Cyprinus carpio.
Phase 3 of thesis is focused on the in silico identification of promising phytochemical agent
as drug candidate (and an alternative to conventional antibiotics) against vibriosis
infections by considering LuxR protein as a primary target involved in quorum sensing
(QS). Process of quorum sensing in Vibrio anguillarum (fish pathogen) depends on
interaction of (AHL) autoinducer molecule with a receptor protein LuxR that is a positive
transcriptional activator and results in vibriosis. In aquaculture vibriosis is responsible for
severe economic losses worldwide. Phase 3 of current study was designed to investigate
phytochemicals as an effective natural inhibitor (quorum quenching agent) of LuxR
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protein. The compounds with PubChem IDs; 99091, 443028, 44587196 and 42607999
showed successful binding with LuxR protein with minimum binding energy in the range
of -10.1753 Kcal/mol to -8.79 Kcal/mol. Lipinski rule of five and ADMET analysis were
further used to evaluate the drug like properties of selected compounds. Lead compound
with best drug like properties was additionally evaluated by molecular dynamics
simulations to evaluate the stability of the protein-ligand complex during the simulation
period. The study's findings indicate that compound with PubChem ID_42607999 might
serve as an effective quorum quenching agent for Vibrio anguillarum. Finally current study
may possibly facilitate the development of cost-effective and natural drug against vibriosis
in aquaculture.