Litcius/Paper detail

Environmental Evaluation on Toxicity, Toxic Mechanism, and Hydrolysis Behavior of Potential Acethydrazide Fungicide Candidates

Zhanfang Chen, Jing Chang, Shuo Wang, Hongbin Fang, Tiancheng Zhang, Yufei Gong, Jiayi Yang, Guiqin Liu, Yu‐Cheng Gu, Xuewen Hua

2024Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry12 citationsDOI

Abstract

The evaluation of toxicity and environmental behavior of bioactive lead molecules is helpful in providing theoretical support for the development of agrochemicals, in line with the sustainable development of the ecological environment. In previous work, some acethydrazide structures have been demonstrated to exhibit excellent and broad-spectrum fungicidal activity; however, its environmental compatibility needs to be further elucidated if it is to be identified as a potential fungicide. In this project, the toxicity of fungicidal acethydrazide lead compounds F51, F58, F72, and F75 to zebrafish was determined at 10 μg mL –1 and 1 μg mL –1 . Subsequently, the toxic mechanism of compound F58 was preliminarily explored by histologic section and TEM observations, which revealed that the gallbladder volume of common carp treated with compound F58 increased, accompanied by a deepened bile color, damaged plasma membrane, and atrophied mitochondria in gallbladder cells. Approximately, F58-treated hepatocytes exhibited cytoplasmic heterogeneity, with partial cellular vacuolation and mitochondrial membrane rupture. Metabolomics analysis further indicated that differential metabolites were enriched in the bile formation-associated steroid biosynthesis, primary bile acid biosynthesis, and taurine and hypotaurine metabolism pathways, as well as in the membrane function-related glycerophospholipid metabolism, linolenic acid metabolism, α-linolenic acid metabolism, and arachidonic acid metabolism pathways, suggesting that the acethydrazide F58 may have acute liver toxicity to common carp. Finally, the hydrolysis dynamics of F58 was investigated, with the obtained half-life of 5.82 days. The above results provide important guiding significance for the development of new green fungicides.

Topics & Concepts

MetabolismFungicideBiochemistryToxicityChemistryBiologyBotanyOrganic chemistryPeroxisome Proliferator-Activated ReceptorsSphingolipid Metabolism and SignalingPlant-derived Lignans Synthesis and Bioactivity