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J Appl Toxicol ; 2024 Jun 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38888127

RESUMO

Thiourea, a widely used agrochemical, is known to inhibit the activity of thyroid peroxidase, a key enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway of thyroid hormones. Thyroid insufficiency compromises the basal metabolic rate in warm-blooded organisms and embryonic development in vertebrates. In this study, we looked for developmental defects by exposing the zebrafish embryos to an environmentally relevant dose of thiourea (3 mg/mL). Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was performed to validate thiourea's presence in the treated zebrafish embryos. Structural anomalies like bent tail and pericardial edema were noticed in 96-h post-fertilization (hpf) larvae. On histological examination, underdeveloped swim bladder was noticed in 96 hpf larvae exposed to 3 mg/mL thiourea. The treated larvae also failed to follow the characteristic swimming behavior in response to stimuli due to defective swim bladder. Swim bladder being homologous to the lung of tetrapod, the role of Bmp4, a major regulator of lung development, was studied along with the associated regulatory genes. Gene expression analysis revealed that thiourea administration led to the downregulation of bmp4, shh, pcna, anxa5, acta2, and the downstream effector snail3 but the upregulation of caspase3. The protein expression showed a similar trend, wherein Bmp4, Shh, and Pcna were downregulated, but Cleaved Caspase3 showed an increased expression in the treated group. Therefore, it is prudent to presume that exposure to thiourea significantly reduces the expression of Bmp4 and other key regulators; hence, the larvae fail to develop a swim bladder, a vital organ that regulates buoyancy.

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