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Fasting modifies Aroclor 1254 impact on plasma cortisol,glucose and lactate responses to a handling disturbance in Arctic charr
Authors:Jørgensen E H  Vijayan M M  Aluru N  Maule A G
Affiliation:1. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, the Polar Environmental Centre, N-9296 Tromsø, Norway;2. Department of Biology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada;3. USGS-BRD, WFRC, Columbia River Research Laboratory, 5501A Cook-Underwood Rd., Cook, WA 98605, USA
Abstract:Integrated effects of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) and nutritional status on responses to handling disturbance were investigated in the Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus). The fish were orally contaminated with Aroclor 1254 and held either with or without food for 5 months before they were subjected to a 10-min handling disturbance. Food-deprived fish were given 0, 1, 10 or 100 mg PCB kg(-1) and the fed fish 0 or 100 mg PCB kg(-1). Plasma cortisol, glucose and lactate levels were measured at 0 (pre-handling), 1, 3, 6 and 23 h after the handling disturbance. Food-deprived control fish had elevated plasma cortisol levels compared with fed fish before handling. These basal cortisol levels were suppressed by PCB in food-deprived fish, and elevated by PCB in fed fish. The immediate cortisol and glucose responses to handling disturbance were suppressed by PCB in a dose-dependent way in food-deprived fish. Although these responses were also lowered by PCB in the fed fish, the effect was much less pronounced than in food-deprived fish. There were only minor effects on plasma lactate responses. Our findings suggest that the stress responses of the Arctic charr are compromised by PCB and that the long-term fasting, typical of high-latitude fish, makes these species particularly sensitive to organochlorines such as PCB.
Keywords:Arctic charr  Aroclor 1254  Cortisol  Food deprivation  Stress  Glucose  Lactate
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