1. Acute indomethacin exposure impairs cardiac development by affecting cardiac muscle contraction and inducing myocardial apoptosis in zebrafish (Danio rerio)
- Author
-
Yi Liu, Xiaoling Shi, Chunjiao Lu, Guanhua Kou, Xuewei Wu, Xin Meng, Yuhang Lv, Juanjuan Luo, Wei Cui, and Xiaojun Yang
- Subjects
Indomethacin ,Cardiac development ,Developmental toxicity ,Cardiac muscle contraction ,Myocardial apoptosis ,Zebrafish ,Environmental pollution ,TD172-193.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
The accumulation of the active pharmaceutical chemical in the environment usually results in environmental pollution to increase the risk to human health. Indomethacin is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug that potentially causes systemic and developmental toxicity in various tissues. However, there have been few studies for its potential effects on cardiac development. In this study, we systematically determined the cardiotoxicity of acute indomethacin exposure in zebrafish at different concentrations with morphological, histological, and molecular levels. Specifically, the malformation and dysfunction of cardiac development, including pericardial oedema, abnormal heart rate, the larger distance between the venous sinus and bulbus arteriosus (SV-BA), enlargement of the pericardial area, and aberrant motor capability, were determined after indomethacin exposure. In addition, further investigation indicated that indomethacin exposure results in myocardial apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner in zebrafish at early developmental stage. Mechanistically, our results revealed that indomethacin exposure mainly regulates key cardiac development-related genes, especially genes related to the cardiac muscle contraction-related signaling pathway, in zebrafish embryos. Thus, our findings suggested that acute indomethacin exposure might cause cardiotoxicity by disturbing the cardiac muscle contraction-related signaling pathway and inducing myocardial apoptosis in zebrafish embryos.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF