Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

This site is currently in beta, and your feedback is helping shape its ongoing development.

Metabolomic Investigations of the Temporal Effects of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals and 4 Personal Care Products and their Mixture in the Eastern Oyster (Crassostrea virginica)

Published by U.S. EPA Office of Research and Development (ORD) | U.S. Environmental Protection Agency | Metadata Last Checked: August 02, 2025 | Last Modified: 2019-12-12
The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) supports a large aquaculture industry and is a keystone species along the Atlantic seaboard. Native oysters are routinely exposed to a complex mixture of contaminants that increasingly includes pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs). Unfortunately, the biological effects of chemical mixtures on oysters are poorly understood. Untargeted GC-MS metabolomics was utilized to quantify the response of oysters exposed to fluoxetine, N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide (DEET), 17α-ethynylestradiol (EE2), diphenhydramine and their mixture. Oysters were exposed to 1 µg/L of each chemical or mixture for ten days, followed by an eight-day depuration period. Adductor muscle (n = 14/treatment) was sampled at days 0, 1, 5, 10 and 18. Trajectory analysis illustrated that metabolic effects and class separation of the treatments varied at each time point, and that overall, the oysters were only able to partially recover from these exposures post-depuration. Altered metabolites were associated with cellular energetics (i.e. Krebs cycle intermediates), as well as amino acid metabolism and the urea cycle. Exposure to these PPCPs also affected metabolic pathways associated with anaerobic metabolism, osmotic stress and oxidative stress, in addition to the physiological effects from each chemical’s postulated mechanism of action. Following depuration, there were fewer metabolites altered, but none of the treatments returned to their initial control values, indicating that metabolic disruptions were long-lasting. Interestingly, the mixture did not directly cluster with individual treatments in the scores plot from partial least squares discriminant analysis and many of its affected metabolic pathways were not well-predicted from the individual treatments. This research highlights the utility of untargeted metabolomics in developing exposure biomarkers for compounds with differing modes of action in bivalves. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Brew, D., M. Black, M. Santos, J. Rodgers, and W. Henderson. Metabolomic Investigations of the Temporal Effects of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products and Their Mixture in the Eastern Oyster (Crassostrea virginica). ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY. Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Pensacola, FL, USA, 39(2): 419-436, (2020).

Resources

1 resource available

  • https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11353085.v1

    FILE

data.gov

An official website of the GSA's Technology Transformation Services

Looking for U.S. government information and services?
Visit USA.gov