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Biomarker-based assessment of the toxicity of the antifungal clotrimazol to the microcrustacean Daphnia magna.

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Among the vast list of xenobiotics that may promote harmful effects in aquatic ecosystems, pharmaceuticals are currently a prominent class due to their ability to persist in these environments and… Click to show full abstract

Among the vast list of xenobiotics that may promote harmful effects in aquatic ecosystems, pharmaceuticals are currently a prominent class due to their ability to persist in these environments and also due to the lack of information regarding their effects on the different components of the aquatic biota. Antifungals in particular, despite their massive use, are not extensively studied in environbmental terms. The main objective of this study was to characterize the toxicity of the antifungal clotrimazole to the aquatic organism Daphnia magna. To attain this purpose, the effects of this compound were measured, focusing on the determination of acute lethality, and quantification of biomarkers, such as neurotoxicity (soluble cholinesterases, ChEs); and oxidative stress and metabolism (such as catalase, CAT; and glutathione-S-transferases, GSTs). The toxicity assessment with biomarkers was based on animals exposed to concentrations similar to those already found in surface waters in order to increase the ecological relevance of the obtained data. The results showed that exposure to clotrimazole was able to induce significant increases in both CAT amd GSTs activities. ChE activity was not significantly altered after clotrimazol exposure. In view of the above, it is concluded that the drug studied caused adverse effects in terms of oxidative stress, at an ecological relevant levels, showing that the presence of clotrimazol in the wild is not innocuous.

Keywords: toxicity; biomarker based; daphnia magna; toxicity antifungal

Journal Title: Environmental toxicology and pharmacology
Year Published: 2019

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