Application of comet assay in aquatic organisms – summary and lessons learned in past 10 years of field research
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2022
Authors
Kolarević, StoimirKračun-Kolarević, Margareta
Jovanović Marić, Jovana
Đorđević, Jelena
Paunović, Momir
Kostić-Vuković, Jovana

Sunjog, Karolina
Gačić, Zoran

Vuković-Gačić, Branka
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Within the past decade, our research group placed great effort in exploration of the impact of treated/untreated wastewaters on aquatic ecosystems as less than 13 % of collected municipal wastewaters are processed before their release to receiving waters in Serbia. Having in mind that more than 90% of the rivers within the territory of Serbia belong to the Danube River Basin, our major focus is naturally on the large transnational waters such as the Danube and Sava rivers. Depended on the concept of the study and hydro-morphological characteristics of the sites, various approaches have been employed for in situ assessment of eco/geno-toxicity which use different organisms in passive and active biomonitoring. Aquatic organisms of different trophic levels have diverse life strategies, metabolism pathways, and consequently, they have a different response to pollutant pressure. In eco/geno-toxicological studies we have successfully employed several species of freshwater mussels (Unio tumid...us, Unio pictorum and Sinanodonta woodiana) as well as few economically important fish species (common carp (Cyprinus carpio), freshwater bream (Abramis brama), bleak (Alburnus alburnus, chub (Squalius cephalus)).Comet assay is our primary choice for the assessment of DNA damage considering its sensitivity and cost effectiveness. Selection of certain types of tissues for the assessment (such as blood or haemolymph), which do not require sacrificing of the animals or additional manipulation in preparation of cell suspension coupled with mini-gel format of the slides enables high-throughput screening of the genotoxic potential in situ. Additionally, cryopreservation of the blood samples directly onsite expands the research area as it overcomes issues related to safe transportation of the samples to the laboratory. Data obtained so far indicated that the genotoxic response in the studied indicator organisms significantly differ which is understandable considering the difference in uptake, accumulation and physiological responses.
Keywords:
ecogenotoxicology / freshwater mussels / freshwater fish / comet assaySource:
14th International Comet Assay Workshop (ICAW) & 50th meeting of the European Environmental Mutagen and Genomics Society (EEMGS), 2022, 42-Publisher:
- EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENTAL MUTAGENESIS & GENOMICS SOCIETY
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Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanjaTY - CONF AU - Kolarević, Stoimir AU - Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta AU - Jovanović Marić, Jovana AU - Đorđević, Jelena AU - Paunović, Momir AU - Kostić-Vuković, Jovana AU - Sunjog, Karolina AU - Gačić, Zoran AU - Vuković-Gačić, Branka PY - 2022 UR - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1725 AB - Within the past decade, our research group placed great effort in exploration of the impact of treated/untreated wastewaters on aquatic ecosystems as less than 13 % of collected municipal wastewaters are processed before their release to receiving waters in Serbia. Having in mind that more than 90% of the rivers within the territory of Serbia belong to the Danube River Basin, our major focus is naturally on the large transnational waters such as the Danube and Sava rivers. Depended on the concept of the study and hydro-morphological characteristics of the sites, various approaches have been employed for in situ assessment of eco/geno-toxicity which use different organisms in passive and active biomonitoring. Aquatic organisms of different trophic levels have diverse life strategies, metabolism pathways, and consequently, they have a different response to pollutant pressure. In eco/geno-toxicological studies we have successfully employed several species of freshwater mussels (Unio tumidus, Unio pictorum and Sinanodonta woodiana) as well as few economically important fish species (common carp (Cyprinus carpio), freshwater bream (Abramis brama), bleak (Alburnus alburnus, chub (Squalius cephalus)).Comet assay is our primary choice for the assessment of DNA damage considering its sensitivity and cost effectiveness. Selection of certain types of tissues for the assessment (such as blood or haemolymph), which do not require sacrificing of the animals or additional manipulation in preparation of cell suspension coupled with mini-gel format of the slides enables high-throughput screening of the genotoxic potential in situ. Additionally, cryopreservation of the blood samples directly onsite expands the research area as it overcomes issues related to safe transportation of the samples to the laboratory. Data obtained so far indicated that the genotoxic response in the studied indicator organisms significantly differ which is understandable considering the difference in uptake, accumulation and physiological responses. PB - EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENTAL MUTAGENESIS & GENOMICS SOCIETY C3 - 14th International Comet Assay Workshop (ICAW) & 50th meeting of the European Environmental Mutagen and Genomics Society (EEMGS) T1 - Application of comet assay in aquatic organisms – summary and lessons learned in past 10 years of field research SP - 42 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1725 ER -
@conference{ author = "Kolarević, Stoimir and Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta and Jovanović Marić, Jovana and Đorđević, Jelena and Paunović, Momir and Kostić-Vuković, Jovana and Sunjog, Karolina and Gačić, Zoran and Vuković-Gačić, Branka", year = "2022", abstract = "Within the past decade, our research group placed great effort in exploration of the impact of treated/untreated wastewaters on aquatic ecosystems as less than 13 % of collected municipal wastewaters are processed before their release to receiving waters in Serbia. Having in mind that more than 90% of the rivers within the territory of Serbia belong to the Danube River Basin, our major focus is naturally on the large transnational waters such as the Danube and Sava rivers. Depended on the concept of the study and hydro-morphological characteristics of the sites, various approaches have been employed for in situ assessment of eco/geno-toxicity which use different organisms in passive and active biomonitoring. Aquatic organisms of different trophic levels have diverse life strategies, metabolism pathways, and consequently, they have a different response to pollutant pressure. In eco/geno-toxicological studies we have successfully employed several species of freshwater mussels (Unio tumidus, Unio pictorum and Sinanodonta woodiana) as well as few economically important fish species (common carp (Cyprinus carpio), freshwater bream (Abramis brama), bleak (Alburnus alburnus, chub (Squalius cephalus)).Comet assay is our primary choice for the assessment of DNA damage considering its sensitivity and cost effectiveness. Selection of certain types of tissues for the assessment (such as blood or haemolymph), which do not require sacrificing of the animals or additional manipulation in preparation of cell suspension coupled with mini-gel format of the slides enables high-throughput screening of the genotoxic potential in situ. Additionally, cryopreservation of the blood samples directly onsite expands the research area as it overcomes issues related to safe transportation of the samples to the laboratory. Data obtained so far indicated that the genotoxic response in the studied indicator organisms significantly differ which is understandable considering the difference in uptake, accumulation and physiological responses.", publisher = "EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENTAL MUTAGENESIS & GENOMICS SOCIETY", journal = "14th International Comet Assay Workshop (ICAW) & 50th meeting of the European Environmental Mutagen and Genomics Society (EEMGS)", title = "Application of comet assay in aquatic organisms – summary and lessons learned in past 10 years of field research", pages = "42", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1725" }
Kolarević, S., Kračun-Kolarević, M., Jovanović Marić, J., Đorđević, J., Paunović, M., Kostić-Vuković, J., Sunjog, K., Gačić, Z.,& Vuković-Gačić, B.. (2022). Application of comet assay in aquatic organisms – summary and lessons learned in past 10 years of field research. in 14th International Comet Assay Workshop (ICAW) & 50th meeting of the European Environmental Mutagen and Genomics Society (EEMGS) EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENTAL MUTAGENESIS & GENOMICS SOCIETY., 42. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1725
Kolarević S, Kračun-Kolarević M, Jovanović Marić J, Đorđević J, Paunović M, Kostić-Vuković J, Sunjog K, Gačić Z, Vuković-Gačić B. Application of comet assay in aquatic organisms – summary and lessons learned in past 10 years of field research. in 14th International Comet Assay Workshop (ICAW) & 50th meeting of the European Environmental Mutagen and Genomics Society (EEMGS). 2022;:42. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1725 .
Kolarević, Stoimir, Kračun-Kolarević, Margareta, Jovanović Marić, Jovana, Đorđević, Jelena, Paunović, Momir, Kostić-Vuković, Jovana, Sunjog, Karolina, Gačić, Zoran, Vuković-Gačić, Branka, "Application of comet assay in aquatic organisms – summary and lessons learned in past 10 years of field research" in 14th International Comet Assay Workshop (ICAW) & 50th meeting of the European Environmental Mutagen and Genomics Society (EEMGS) (2022):42, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rimsi_1725 .