Feeding
mice with diets containing mercury-contaminated fish flesh
from French Guiana:
a model for the
mercurial intoxication of the Wayana
Amerindians
(Published : 29 October)
Jean-Paul Bourdineaud(1), Nadège Bellance(2),
Giovani Bénard(2), Daniel Brèthes(3), Masatake
Fujimura(4), Patrice Gonzalez(1), Aline Marighetto(5),
Régine Maury-Brachet(1), Cécile
Mormède(5), Vanessa Pédron(1), Jean-Nicolas
Philippin(5), Rodrigue Rossignol(2), William
Rostène(6), Masumi Sawada(4) and Muriel
Laclau(1),(3),(5)
- (1) Université de Bordeaux 1-CNRS UMR 5805,
Station Marine d'Arcachon, place du Docteur Peyneau,
Arcachon, 33120, France
- (2) Physiopathologie Mitochondriale, Université
Victor Segalen Bordeaux2-INSERM U688, 146 rue Léo
Saignat, Bordeaux, 33076 cedex, France
- (3) Institut de Biochimie et Génétique
Cellulaires, Université Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, 1
rue Camille Saint-Saëns, Bordeaux, 33077 cedex,
France
- (4) National Institute for Minamata Disease, Pathology
Section, Department of Basic Medical Sciences, 4058-18 Hama,
Minamata, Kumamoto 867-0008, Japan
- (5) Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives,
Université de Bordeaux 1-CNRS UMR 5106, Avenue des
Facultés, Talence, 33405, France
- (6) Centre de Recherches Saint-Antoine, INSERM U732,
Hôpital Saint-Antoine, 184 rue du Faubourg
Saint-Antoine, Paris, 75571 cedex 12, France
Abstract
Background
In, 84% of Wayana Amerindians living in the upper
marshes of the Maroni River in French Guiana presented a
hair mercury concentration exceeding the limit set up by the
World Health Organization (10 µg/g). To determine
whether this mercurial contamination was harmful, mice have
been fed diets prepared by incorporation of mercury-polluted
fish from French Guiana.
Methods
Four diets containing 0, 0.1, 1, and 7.5% fish flesh,
representing 0, 5, 62, and 520 ng methylmercury per g,
respectively, were given to four groups of mice for a month.
The lowest fish regimen led to a mercurial contamination
pressure of 1 ng mercury per day per g of body weight, which
is precisely that affecting the Wayana Amerindians.
Results
The expression of several genes was modified with mercury
intoxication in liver, kidneys, and hippocampus, even at the
lowest tested fish regimen. A net genetic response could be
observed for mercury concentrations accumulated within
tissues as weak as 0.15 ppm in the liver, 1.4 ppm in the
kidneys, and 0.4 ppm in the hippocampus. This last value is
in the range of the mercury concentrations found in the
brains of chronically exposed patients in the Minamata
region or in brains from heavy fish consumers. Mitochondrial
respiratory rates showed a 35-40% decrease in respiration
for the three contaminated mice groups. In the muscles of
mice fed the lightest fish-containing diet, cytochrome c
oxidase activity was decreased to 45% of that of the control
muscles. When mice behavior was assessed in a cross maze,
those fed the lowest and mid-level fish-containing diets
developed higher anxiety state behaviors compared to mice
fed with control diet.
Conclusion
We conclude that a vegetarian diet containing as little
as 0.1% of mercury-contaminated fish is able to trigger in
mice, after only one month of exposure, disorders presenting
all the hallmarks of mercurial contamination.
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