Article

Toxicokinetics/toxicodynamics links bioavailability for assessing arsenic uptake and toxicity in three aquaculture species.

Department of Bioenvironmental Systems Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, 10617, Republic of China.
Environmental Science and Pollution Research (impact factor: 2.65). 06/2012; 19(9):3868-78. DOI:10.1007/s11356-012-1012-z pp.3868-78
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was to link toxicokinetics/toxicodynamics (TK/TD) and bioavailability-based metal uptake kinetics to assess arsenic (As) uptake and bioaccumulation in three common farmed species of tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus), milkfish (Chanos chanos), and freshwater clam (Corbicula fluminea). We developed a mechanistic framework by linking damage assessment model (DAM) and bioavailability-based Michaelis-Menten model for describing TK/TD and As uptake mechanisms. The proposed model was verified with published acute toxicity data. The estimated TK/TD parameters were used to simulate the relationship between bioavailable As uptake and susceptibility probability. The As toxicity was also evaluated based on a constructed elimination-recovery scheme. Absorption rate constants were estimated to be 0.025, 0.016, and 0.175 mL g(-1) h(-1) and As uptake rate constant estimates were 22.875, 63.125, and 788.318 ng g(-1) h(-1) for tilapia, milkfish, and freshwater clam, respectively. Here we showed that a potential trade-off between capacities of As elimination and damage recovery was found among three farmed species. Moreover, the susceptibility probability can also be estimated by the elimination-recovery relations. This study suggested that bioavailability-based uptake kinetics and TK/TD-based DAM could be integrated for assessing metal uptake and toxicity in aquatic organisms. This study is useful to quantitatively assess the complex environmental behavior of metal uptake and implicate to risk assessment of metals in aquaculture systems.

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Keywords

Absorption rate constants
 
acute toxicity data
 
bioavailability-based metal uptake kinetics
 
bioavailability-based Michaelis-Menten model
 
bioavailability-based uptake kinetics
 
Chanos chanos
 
common farmed species
 
complex environmental behavior
 
constructed elimination-recovery scheme
 
damage assessment model
 
damage recovery
 
elimination-recovery relations
 
estimated TK/TD parameters
 
farmed species
 
link toxicokinetics/toxicodynamics
 
mechanistic framework
 
potential trade-off
 
risk assessment
 
TK/TD-based DAM
 
uptake mechanisms
 

Wei-Yu Chen