Friday, December 18, 2009
Asst Prof Zijuan Liu and Her Students Publish a Report on Arsenic Uptake
CBR member Zijuan Liu is one of an outstanding crop of promising young researchers in OU's Department of Biological Sciences. Liu, who arrived at OU in 2007, recently was awarded a grant from the National Institutes of Health to study arsenic uptake. While her work focuses on studies in an animal model--zebrafish--the work has important implications for human health. Recently, Liu published Arsenic Transport by Zebrafish Aquaglyceroporins in the open access journal BMC Molecular Biology (Volume 10, Article Number 104). First author on the study was Mohamad Hamdi, a graduate student in the Biomedical Sciences: Biological Communications PhD program, and a coauthor was Lauren Beene, a graduate student in the Master of Science in Biology program. The abstract of Liu's paper is reproduced below.
Background: Arsenic is one of the most ubiquitous toxins and endangers
the health of tens of millions of humans worldwide. It is a mainly a
water-borne contaminant. Inorganic trivalent arsenic (As-III) is one of
the major species that exists environmentally. The transport of As-III
has been studied in microbes, plants and mammals. Members of the
aquaglyceroporin family have been shown to actively conduct As-III and
its organic metabolite, monomethylarsenite (MAsIII). However, the
transport of As-III and MAsIII in in any fish species has not been
characterized.
Results: In this study, five members of the
aquaglyceroporin family from zebrafish (Danio rerio) were cloned, and
their ability to transport water, glycerol, and trivalent arsenicals
(As-III and MAsIII) and antimonite (Sb-III) was investigated. Genes for
at least seven aquaglyceroporins have been annotated in the zebrafish
genome project. Here, five genes which are close homologues to human
AQP3, AQP9 and AQP10 were cloned from a zebrafish cDNA preparation.
These genes were named aqp3, aqp31, aqp9a, aqp9b and aqp10 according to
their similarities to the corresponding human AQPs. Expression of
aqp9a, aqp9b, aqp3, aqp31 and aqp10 in multiple zebrafish organs were
examined by RT-PCR. Our results demonstrated that these
aquaglyceroporins exhibited different tissue expression. They are all
detected in more than one tissue. The ability of these five
aquaglyceroporins to transport water, glycerol and the metalloids
arsenic and antimony was examined following expression in oocytes from
Xenopus leavis. Each of these channels showed substantial glycerol
transport at equivalent rates. These aquaglyceroporins also facilitate
uptake of inorganic As-III, MAsIII and Sb-III. Arsenic accumulation in
fish larvae and in different tissues from adult zebrafish was studied
following short-term arsenic exposure. The results showed that liver is
the major organ of arsenic accumulation; other tissues such as gill,
eye, heart, intestine muscle and skin also exhibited significant
ability to accumulate arsenic. The zebrafish larvae also accumulate
considerable amounts of arsenic.
Conclusion: This is the first molecular identification of fish
arsenite transport systems and we propose that the extensive expression
of the fish aquaglyceroporins and their ability to transport metalloids
suggests that aquaglyceroporins are the major pathways for arsenic
accumulation in a variety of zebrafish tissues. Uptake is one important
step of arsenic metabolism. Our results will contribute to a new
understanding of aquatic arsenic metabolism and will support the use of
zebrafish as a new model system to study arsenic associated human diseases.