Combinatory effects of low concentrations of 17α-etinylestradiol and citalopram on non-reproductive behavior in adult zebrafish (Danio rerio)

2017 
Abstract Sewage effluents contain pharmaceuticals, personal care products and industrial chemicals, exposing aquatic organisms to complex mixtures. The consequences of exposure to combinations of different classes of drugs in fish are largely unknown. In this study, we exposed adult zebrafish ( Danio rerio ) males and females for two weeks to low, environmentally relevant concentrations of the endocrine disrupting chemical 17α-etinylestradiol (EE 2 ) and the selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI) citalopram, alone and in combination, and analyzed behaviors of importance for population fitness, scototaxis (light/dark preference), the novel tank test and shoal cohesion. Control water contained 0.4 ng/L EE 2 and the measured exposure concentrations were 0.9 ng/L EE 2 (nominal 0.1) and 1 ng/L EE 2 (nominal 0.5). The measured concentrations of citalopram were 0.1 (nominal 0.1) and 0.4 μg/L (nominal 0.5). Both EE 2 exposures increased anxiety in males in the scototaxis test, with significantly longer latency periods before entering and fewer visits to the white zone of the tank. The combined exposures (0.9 ng/L EE 2  + 0.1 μg/L citalopram and 1 ng/L EE 2  + 0.4 μg/L citalopram) resulted in abolishment of effects of EE 2 , with shorter latency period and more transitions to white than for fish exposed to EE 2 alone. In the novel tank test, the results surprisingly indicated lower anxiety after both EE 2 and citalopram exposure. Significantly more transitions to the upper half of the tank observed in males exposed to 0.1 μg/L citalopram alone compared to control males. Males exposed to EE 2 (0.9 ng/L) had shorter latency period to the upper half. Combination exposure resulted in a longer latency and fewer transitions to the upper half compared to both control, EE 2 - and citalopram-exposed males. Males exposed to the combination spent significantly less time in the upper half than males EE 2 or citalopram-exposed males. Females exposed to 1 ng/L EE 2 had fewer transitions to the upper half than the control group and females exposed to 0.4 μg/L citalopram. In the shoaling test, males exposed to 0.1 μg/L citalopram + 0.9 ng/L EE 2 showed more transitions away from peers than males exposed to 0.1 μg/L citalopram alone. In conclusion, low concentrations of EE 2 , closely above the predicted no effect concentration (NOEC) of 0.1 ng/L, created anxiety-like behavior in zebrafish males. Citalopram showed marginal effects at these low concentrations but in the combination exposure the behavioral effects of EE 2 were abolished. This is an initial effort to understand the effects of cocktails of anthropogenic substances contaminating aquatic environments.
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