There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
In our sustained effort to understand mechanisms of mercury toxicity in fish, the
histopathological effects of a 96-h acute exposure to water-borne inorganic mercury
(inorganic Hg) (15 micro gL(-1)), as well as those of a single dietary dose of inorganic
and methyl mercury (methyl Hg) (0.260.05 micro g.Hgg(-1) body weight), over 30 days
were examined. Samples of gills, olfactory epithelium, kidneys, and liver of arctic
charr, Salvelinus alpinus, were studied using light and electron microscopy. The distribution
of dietary inorganic and methyl Hg in the intestinal epithelium was determined using
203Hg microautoradiography. Gills of fish exposed to water-borne inorganic Hg presented
a severe disorganization of epithelial cells after 12h and modifications of cilia
of ciliated olfactory cells appeared after 24h. Nevertheless, a partial recovery was
seen in both tissues by the end of the 96-h exposure period. Liver was little affected
by water-borne and single-trophic-dose contamination of inorganic Hg, but dietary
methyl Hg had drastic effects, despite its low dosage, with severe necrosis and alterations
of cytoplasmic organization. Microautoradiograms showed that inorganic Hg was distributed
evenly in the intestinal epithelium, whereas methyl Hg was found at very specific
locations on the epithelial surface.