1. Responses to cadmium intoxication in the liver of the wall lizard Podarcis sicula
- Author
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Simoniello, Palma, Filosa, Silvana, Riggio, Marilisa, Scudiero, Rosaria, Tammaro, Stefania, Trinchella, Francesca, and Motta, Chiara M.
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CADMIUM , *ALCOHOLISM , *SYNODONTIDAE , *PODARCIS sicula , *HEAVY metals , *ATOMIC absorption spectroscopy , *KUPFFER cells , *METALLOTHIONEIN - Abstract
Abstract: This study examined the cytological and molecular effects of cadmium, a toxic heavy metal, in the liver of the Italian wall lizard Podarcis sicula. Cadmium was administered in single dose, by diet, to induce a concentration comparable with that measured in animals living in contaminated sites. For comparison, cadmium was also administered in multiple doses by food (chronic) or in a single dose intraperitoneally (i.p.); the effects were followed at regular time intervals up to 30days post treatments. Atomic absorption spectrometry analysis demonstrated cadmium ion uptake and accumulation in the parenchyma with an estimated half-life of approximately 8days. Cytological analyses revealed that the metal induced oedema, activated metallothionein expression in Kupffer cells and extracellular matrix production in fat storing cells. It also caused swelling and alteration in lipid and sugar metabolism in hepatocytes. In conclusion, in the wall lizard cadmium is toxic to the liver even at very low concentrations, the response is not strictly dose and time dependent and almost no recovery occurs in short (30days) time periods. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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