コーホーサーモン大量死の原因物質を特定(WSU team unlocks biological process behind coho die-offs)

ad

2025-08-13 ワシントン州立大学(WSU)

WSUの研究チームは、雨天後にプージェット湾流域で発生するコホサーモン大量死の原因物質6PPD-キノンの作用機構を解明した。タイヤ防腐剤6PPDがオゾンと反応して生成するこの化合物は、脳血液関門と鰓血液関門を破壊し、酸素欠乏による窒息死を引き起こす。実験で道路雨水や実環境濃度の6PPD-キノンに曝露した魚は浮上や平衡喪失など典型的症状を示し、血管バリア透過性の上昇が確認された。本成果は代替化学物質評価や生態系保護政策に資する。

<関連情報>

道路排水と6PPD-キノンの暴露を受けたコホサケにおける血液-脳バリアと血液-鰓バリアの破壊 Blood–Brain and Blood–Gill Barrier Disruption in Coho Salmon Exposed to Roadway Runoff and 6PPD-Quinone

Stephanie I. Blair,Jill Wetzel,Melissa Gonzalez,Edward P. Kolodziej,Chelsea J. Mitchell,Garrett M. Foster,Valerie Lynch-Holm,and Jenifer K. McIntyre
Environmental Science & Technology  Published June 17, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5c01559

Abstract

コーホーサーモン大量死の原因物質を特定(WSU team unlocks biological process behind coho die-offs)

The tire-derived chemical N-(1,3-dimethylbutyl)-N′-phenyl-p-phenylenediamine-quinone (6PPD-quinone) causes acute mortality in coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), yet its mechanisms of toxicity remain poorly understood. We exposed juvenile coho salmon to roadway runoff or 6PPD-quinone to investigate whether disruption of the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and blood–gill barrier cause behavioral symptoms of urban runoff mortality syndrome in this sensitive species. BBB disruption was present in one-third of presymptomatic fish and in all symptomatic individuals, supporting its role in toxicity. Co-occurring brain and gill barrier disruptions at the onset of sustained surface swimming suggest a systemic vascular response rather than localized brain injury. Histological analysis of coho brains revealed red blood cell congestion within intact endothelia, consistent with circulatory collapse and plasma leakage, likely impairing oxygen delivery and disrupting neuronal signaling. Behavioral symptoms also coincided with altered expression of BBB junctional proteins genes (ocln, cld5α, and vecad). In Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), exposure to a high but environmentally relevant concentration of 6PPD-quinone reduced expression of the scaffolding protein zo-1, suggesting potential sublethal effects. These findings identify BBB disruption as a key event in 6PPD-quinone toxicity and link vascular injury to behavioral symptoms in coho salmon. Ongoing work in this model will further clarify mechanisms of action and support assessments of environmental and human health risks from tire-derived chemicals.

生物環境工学
ad
ad
Follow
ad
タイトルとURLをコピーしました