Saturday, January 30, 2010

A circadian clock regulates sensitivity to cadmium in Paramecium tetraurelia.

A circadian clock regulates sensitivity to cadmium in Paramecium tetraurelia.
Hinrichsen RD, Tran JR.
Cell Biol Toxicol. 2010 Jan 27. [Epub ahead of print]

Department of Biology, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, 975 Oakland Avenue, Indiana, PA, 15705, USA, bhinrich@iup.edu.

The heavy metal cadmium is a dangerous environmental toxicant that can be lethal to humans and other organisms. This paper demonstrates that cadmium is lethal to the ciliated protozoan Paramecium tetraurelia and that a circadian clock modulates the sensitivity of the cells to cadmium. Various concentrations of cadmium were shown to increase the number of behavioral responses, decrease the swimming speed of cells, and generate large vacuole formation in cells prior to death. Cells were grown in either 12-h light/12-h dark or constant dark conditions exhibited a toxic response to 500 muM CdCl(2); the sensitivity of the response was found to vary with a 24-h periodicity. Cells were most sensitive to cadmium at circadian time 0 (CT0), while they were least sensitive in the early evening (CT12). This rhythm persisted even when the cells were grown in constant dark. The oscillation in cadmium sensitivity was shown to be temperature-compensated; cells grown at 18 degrees C and 28 degrees C had a similar 24-h oscillation. Finally, phase shifting experiments demonstrated a phase-dependent response to light. These data establish the criteria required for a circadian clock and demonstrate that P. tetraurelia possesses a circadian-influenced regulatory component of the cadmium toxic response. The Paramecium system is shown to be an excellent model system for the study of the effects of biological rhythms on heavy metal toxicity.

PMID: 20108033 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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