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Fenpropathrin induces neurotoxic effects in common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.).

Fenpropathrin (FEN) is a synthetic pyrethroid that has been frequently detected in aquatic environments, yet the neurotoxic impacts and underlying mechanisms on nontarget organisms are lacking. In this experiment, common carp were exposed to 0.45 and 1.35 μg/L FEN for 14 d and exhibited abnormal locomotor behaviour. Biochemical and molecular analysis results indicated that FEN altered the contents of tight junction proteins (claudin-1, occludin, and ZO-1), disturbed Na+ -K+ -ATPase and AChE activities, caused abnormal expression of neurotransmitters (ACh, DA, GABA, 5-HT, and glutamate) and caused histological damage in the brain, suggesting that FEN may damage the blood-brain barrier and induce neurotoxicity in carp. Furthermore, FEN also promoted an increase in ROS, changed SOD and CAT activities, and generally upregulated the contents of MDA, 8-OHdG, and protein carbonyl in the brain, indicating that FEN can induce oxidative stress and cause damage to lipids, DNA, and proteins. Moreover, inflammation-related indicators (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, and IL-10), mitophagy-related genes (PINK1, parkin, ulk1, beclin1, LC3, p62, tfeb, and atg5), and apoptosis-related parameters (p53, bax, bcl-2, caspase-3, caspase-8, and caspase-9) were also significantly changed, suggesting that inflammation, mitophagy, and apoptosis may participate in FEN-induced neurotoxicity in carp. This study refines the understanding of the toxicity mechanism of FEN and thus provides data support for the risk assessment of FEN.

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