Connecting Suborganismal Data to Bioenergetic Processes: Killifish Embryos Exposed to a Dioxin‐Like Compound

Author:

Stevenson Louise M.123ORCID,Muller Erik B.45,Nacci Diane6ORCID,Clark Bryan W.6,Whitehead Andrew7,Nisbet Roger M.2

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Sciences Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge Tennessee USA

2. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology University of California Santa Barbara California USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences Bowling Green State University Bowling Green Ohio USA

4. Marine Science Institute University of California Santa Barbara California USA

5. Institut für Biologische Analytik und Consulting IBACON Rossdorf Germany

6. Atlantic Coastal Environmental Sciences Division, Office of Research and Development, Center for Environmental Measurement and Modeling US Environmental Protection Agency Narragansett Rhode Island

7. Department of Environmental Toxicology University of California Davis Davis California USA

Abstract

AbstractA core challenge for ecological risk assessment is to integrate molecular responses into a chain of causality to organismal or population‐level outcomes. Bioenergetic theory may be a useful approach for integrating suborganismal responses to predict organismal responses that influence population dynamics. We describe a novel application of dynamic energy budget (DEB) theory in the context of a toxicity framework (adverse outcome pathways [AOPs]) to make quantitative predictions of chemical exposures to individuals, starting from suborganismal data. We use early–life stage exposure of Fundulus heteroclitus to dioxin‐like chemicals (DLCs) and connect AOP key events to DEB processes through “damage” that is produced at a rate proportional to the internal toxicant concentration. We use transcriptomic data of fish embryos exposed to DLCs to translate molecular indicators of damage into changes in DEB parameters (damage increases somatic maintenance costs) and DEB models to predict sublethal and lethal effects on young fish. By changing a small subset of model parameters, we predict the evolved tolerance to DLCs in some wild F. heteroclitus populations, a data set not used in model parameterization. The differences in model parameters point to reduced sensitivity and altered damage repair dynamics as contributing to this evolved resistance. Our methodology has potential extrapolation to untested chemicals of ecological concern. Environ Toxicol Chem 2023;42:2040–2053. © 2023 Oak Ridge National Laboratory and The Authors. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of SETAC.

Funder

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Environmental Chemistry

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