Christoph Gade’s research while affiliated with University of Aberdeen and other places

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Publications (14)


FTIR spectra of three types of organic matter. Raw absorbance spectra data were transformed to transmittance data and normalized against 100% transmittance
Lethal effects in Instar I Artemia sp. after 24 h coexposure to A HgCl2 and B HgOAc2 with DOM#1–3 media (see respective colors). Assays were conducted in independent triplicate, solid lines show the combined four parameter logistic fit, and error bars show the standard error of the mean
Mercury body burden measured in the A bioaccumulation assay and B the adsorption assay using Instar I nauplii of Artemia sp. Assays were conducted in independent triplicate. Solid lines denote A the one compartment accumulation model and B the non-linear pseudo-second order kinetic adsorption model
Literature 24 h LC50 values derived from Artemia Instar I (yellow half) and Instar II + III nauplii (blue half) after exposure to Hg. Values are given as mean and the error bars denote the 95% confidence interval if provided. Red and blue datapoints were derived from HgCl2 exposure, orange datapoints were derived with HgOAc2
Hatching success of Artemia sp. cysts after 24 h coexposure to A HgCl2 and B HgOAc2 with DOM#1–3 media (see respective colors). Assays were conducted in independent triplicate, solid lines show the combined four parameter logistic fit, and error bars denote the standard error of the mean
Variable toxicity of inorganic mercury compounds to Artemia elicited by coexposure with dissolved organic matter
  • Article
  • Full-text available

November 2024

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59 Reads

Environmental Science and Pollution Research

Christoph Gade

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The chemical behavior of mercury (Hg) and its interactions with naturally occurring ligands shape its environmental fate and impact. The neurotoxic properties of Hg are widely known and studied both in vitro and in vivo. However, there continues to be limited information on the influence of chelation with large organic ligands on the toxicity to marine macro-organisms. This work examined the effect of Hg complexed with various types of dissolved organic matter (DOM) on the mortality and hatching success of Artemia sp. nauplii under varying marine media conditions. The results confirmed both, an alleviating as well as additive, DOM-specific, effect on mortality. DOM coexposure resulted in a compound specific decreased or increased toxicity in comparison with single exposure in artificial seawater, with LC50 values ranging from 2.11 to 62.89 µM. Hatching success under conditions of Hg exposure was almost two orders of magnitude more sensitive than toxicity in hatched individuals. Elevated DOM concentrations had no statistically significant impact on hatching success with computed EC50 values ranging from 196 to 324 nM. Graphical abstract

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Timeline of the zebrafish (D. rerio) embryo coiling assay and setup of well plates. A Spawning units are set up 24 h pre-exposure, and the 24-well plates are pre-exposed to the test solutions for 24 h. Fertilized eggs are collected the following morning and transferred to the 24-well plates. The medium is renewed completely every 24 h. Endpoints assessed are burst counts per minute and mean burst duration (sec). B The two alternative layouts of the wells within the 24-well plates: group rearing (left): Teflon® rings for group rearing of 5 zebrafish embryos; separate rearing (right): Teflon® plates with 5 inlets (•) for separate rearing of individual zebrafish embryos
Effect of rotenone on spontaneous tail movement of group-reared zebrafish (D. rerio) embryos during the light/dark cycles of the coiling assay: The mean burst duration [seconds] (A) and normalized burst duration (B), as well as the burst count per minute (C) and normalized burst count per minute (D) between 21 and 47 hpf is shown (n = 3, 20 embryos per concentration/replicate). A, C Data are given as means ± standard deviation; B, D normalized data adjusted to negative control group. Top bar: Light cycle phases (black = dark; white = light); *Time point and concentration (in corresponding color) of significant difference to controls (for p-values, see Table SI 3). Red box: ≥ 20% of individuals were excluded from analysis in at least one exposure concentration at this time point. Note: This figure was previously published by von Hellfeld et al. (2023) with permission of the publisher (article published under CCA 4.0 international license) and consent of all authors. It was included in the present publication to highlight differences with separately reared embryos shown in Fig. 3
Effect of rotenone on spontaneous tail movement of separately reared zebrafish (D. rerio) embryos during the light/dark cycles of the coiling assay. The mean burst duration [seconds] (A) and normalized burst duration (B), as well as the burst count per minute (C) and normalized burst count per minute (D) between 21 and 47 hpf is shown (n = 3, 20 embryos per concentration/replicate). A, C Data are given as means ± standard deviation; B, D normalized data adjusted to control group; Top bar: Light cycle phases (black = dark; white = light); *Time point and concentration (in corresponding color) of significant difference to controls (for p-values, see Table SI 3)
Effect of rotenone exposure on mean burst duration [seconds] (A) and burst counts per minute (B) in the coiling assay with group- (non-filled symbols) and separately reared (filled symbols) zebrafish (D. rerio) embryos during the illumination change at 37.5 hpf (circles: 37 hpf, triangles: 38 hpf). The grey scale indicates the different treatment groups for visualization purposes. N = 3, 20 embryos per concentration/replicate. Statistically significant difference in the coiling behavior between the two time points within one treatment group and rearing condition, based on the Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank test (* < 0.1, ** < 0.05, *** < 0.005). A table of p-values can be found in Table SI 4
Effect of rearing conditions on mean burst duration [seconds] (A) and burst count per minute (B) in group- (black) and separately reared (blue) zebrafish (D. rerio) embryos (control group, 0.1% DMSO) in the coiling assay between 21 and 47 hpf (n = 3, 20 embryos per replicate). Data are given as means ± standard deviation; Top bar: Light cycle phases (black = dark; white = light); *Time point of significant difference between the two groups, based on the Mann–Whitney U test. A table of all significant p-values can be found in Table SI 5
Rearing conditions (isolated versus group rearing) affect rotenone-induced changes in the behavior of zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos in the coiling assay

September 2024

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74 Reads

Environmental Science and Pollution Research

Under regulations such as REACH, testing of novel and established compounds for their (neuro)toxic potential is a legal requirement in many countries. These are largely based on animal-, cost-, and time-intensive in vivo models, not in line with the 3 Rs’ principle of animal experimentation. Thus, the development of alternative test methods has also received increasing attention in neurotoxicology. Such methods focus either on physiological alterations in brain development and neuronal pathways or on behavioral changes. An example of a behavioral developmental neurotoxicity (DNT) assay is the zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryo coiling assay, which quantifies effects of compounds on the development of spontaneous movement of zebrafish embryos. While the importance of embryo-to-embryo contact prior to hatching in response to environmental contaminants or natural threats has been documented for many other clutch-laying fish species, little is known about the relevance of intra-clutch contacts for zebrafish. Here, the model neurotoxin rotenone was used to assess the effect of grouped versus separate rearing of the embryos on the expression of the coiling behavior. Some group-reared embryos reacted with hyperactivity to the exposure, to an extent that could not be recorded effectively with the utilized software. Separately reared embryos showed reduced activity, compared with group-reared individuals when assessing. However, even the control group embryos of the separately reared cohort showed reduced activity, compared with group-reared controls. Rotenone could thus be confirmed to induce neurotoxic effects in zebrafish embryos, yet modifying one parameter in an otherwise well-established neurotoxicity assay such as the coiling assay may lead to changes in behavior influenced by the proximity between individual embryos. This indicates a complex dependence of the outcome of behavior assays on a multitude of environmental parameters.


Geographical extent of the Sea of Azov. Red dots indicate large cities, and blue rectangles indicate river mouths.
Computed total mercury (THg) concentrations using the Sea of Azov mass balance model.
Mercury concentration data from the literature for water and sediment in the Sea of Azov. Sediment concentrations are given on a dry weight (dw) basis.
Mercury Dynamics in the Sea of Azov: Insights from a Mass Balance Model

June 2024

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58 Reads

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1 Citation

The Sea of Azov, an inland shelf sea bounding Ukraine and Russia, experiences the effects of ongoing and legacy pollution. One of the main contaminants of concern is the heavy metal mercury (Hg), which is emitted from the regional coal industry, former Hg refineries, and the historic use of mercury-containing pesticides. The aquatic biome acts both as a major sink and source in this cycle, thus meriting an examination of its environmental fate. This study collated existing Hg data for the SoA and the adjacent region to estimate current Hg influxes and cycling in the ecosystem. The mercury-specific model “Hg Environmental Ratios Multimedia Ecosystem Sources” (HERMES), originally developed for Canadian freshwater lakes, was used to estimate anthropogenic emissions to the sea and regional atmospheric Hg concentrations. The computed water and sediment concentrations (6.8 ng/L and 55.7 ng/g dw, respectively) approximate the reported literature values. The ongoing military conflict will increase environmental pollution in the region, thus further intensifying the existing (legacy) anthropogenic pressures. The results of this study provide a first insight into the environmental Hg cycle of the Sea of Azov ecosystem and underline the need for further emission control and remediation efforts to safeguard environmental quality.








Citations (6)


... Recent studies highlight also a concerning deterioration in air quality in the Donbas region (Gade et al. 2024), particularly with increased mercury levels. Mercury pollution in the Sea of Azov has been attributed to emissions from heavy industrial coal and metal plants in the area (Pacyna et al. 2006), with ongoing hostilities exacerbating the issue. ...

Reference:

Russia–Ukraine war impacts on environment: warfare chemical pollution and recovery prospects
Mercury Dynamics in the Sea of Azov: Insights from a Mass Balance Model

... Marine environments act as sink and source for environmental Hg with major influx from wet deposition and anthropogenic emissions and efflux primarily as surface gas evasion and sediment burial (Mason and Fitzgerald 1996). The environmental fate and transport of Hg in aquatic systems is linked with particulate and dissolved organic matter (DOM), which chelate dissolved Hg with highly reactive functional groups (Dyrssen and Wedborg 1991;Gerbig et al. 2011;Jeremiason et al. 2015;Gade et al. 2024). Conte et al. (2007) defined DOM as 'supramolecular aggregates of small heterogeneous molecules strongly associated by dispersive forces in apparently large molecular sizes.' ...

Use of diffusive gradient in thin-films (DGTs) to advance environmental mercury research: Development, Growth, and Tomorrow.
  • Citing Article
  • February 2024

Trends in Environmental Analytical Chemistry

... It is largely accepted that a Se:Hg ratio below 1:1 is hazardous and that organisms are more protected against Hg toxicity when the ratio rises above 1 [19]. The paradigm behind this threshold is the higher bonding affinity of Hg to Se than sulfur (S), commonly observed during the detoxification of MeHg to the chemically inert HgSe in high trophic level cetaceans and seabirds [11,12,57,[61][62][63][64][65][66][67][68][69]. Another piece of supporting evidence for the high selenophilicity of Hg is the rapid exchange of thiolate ligands for selenolate ligands in aqueous medium [70][71][72][73]. ...

High resolution visualisation of tiemannite microparticles, essential in the detoxification process of mercury in marine mammals

Environmental Pollution

... Molecular descriptors derived from ChemDes Version 3.2, which integrates multiple software packages and tools for descriptor calculation, provide a more comprehensive description of chemical structure. These descriptors have been successfully applied to predict various chemical and biological properties, such as mercury ecotoxicity and target protein interactions [52,56,57]. For example, GATSe8 is a geometric descriptor that captures the spatial arrangement of atoms within a molecule, offering insights into how molecular structure can influence environmental behavior. ...

Considerations for future quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) modelling for heavy metals – A case study of mercury
  • Citing Article
  • November 2023

Toxicology

... This approach leverages the heightened sensitivity of early-stage zebrafish to toxins, which is greater than that of adult fish. This sensitivity is attributed to the expedited delivery of toxins to target organs in these smaller organisms [45,46]. The embryos were exposed to varying concentrations of cancer-targeting FA@nZIF-8 and nZIF-8, which was employed as a control. ...

The sensitivity of the zebrafish embryo coiling assay for the detection of neurotoxicity by compounds with diverse modes of action

Environmental Science and Pollution Research

... Em 2023, foram identificadas 61 instalações de produção do tipo FPSO (Floating Production Storage and Offloading) em operação em AJB (ANP, 2023). A Resolução ANP nº 817/2020 dispõe sobre o descomissionamento de instalações de E&P, estabelecendo que as instalações retiradas de operação, os equipamentos necessários para o descomissionamento e a área onde estão inseridas devem ser mantidos em condições de segurança para mitigar riscos à vida humana, ao meio ambiente e aos demais usuários até a finalização do descomissionamento (ANP, 2020, art.º 62 item 2.1) Com o fim da vida útil de muitas instalações de produção de petróleo offshore, o descomissionamento se tornará uma atividade crescente (VON HELLFELD et al., 2023). ...

An approach to assess potential environmental mercury release, food web bioaccumulation, and human dietary methylmercury uptake from decommissioning offshore oil and gas infrastructure

Journal of Hazardous Materials