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Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute Develop a New "Kit" to Screen
Mercury in Fish
La Jolla, CA, April 12, 2001-- Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
(TSRI), have developed a screening method, similar to a home pregnancy test,
that can detect mercury contamination in fish. According to Kim D. Janda, Ph.D.,
Eli R. Callaway Chair in Chemistry and Professor, The Skaggs Institute for Chemical
Biology, the strategy could be used both by consumers and environmental professionals.
The article, "Practical Screening of Mercury Contamination in Fish Tissue," by
Oliver Brummer, James J. La Clair, and Kim D. Janda, is published in the April
2001 issue of Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry.
"It's fast and very inexpensive," Janda says, adding that more than one million
assays can be prepared in less than a week for just a few hundred dollars. For
consumers, he continues, the method could be safe and easy to use. "You could
buy your fish in the morning and have tested it by the time you're ready to cook
that evening."
Mercury in fish is a serious health hazard, especially for children and pregnant
women, because one particularly poisonous form, methylmercury, interferes with
developing nervous systems and can cause birth defects. Methylmercury contamination
occurs when mercury pollution from automobile emissions or industrial waste washes
into the ocean or groundwater. There, aquatic organisms convert normal mercury
ions into methlymercury and release the compound into the water.
Fish absorb it through their gills, or through their digestive tracts when
they feed, and the poison accumulates in their tissue. Larger fish are the most
risky because they eat smaller fish and have longer life spans during which the
methylmercury can build up.
In recent months, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued a
warning to women who are pregnant or who are considering becoming pregnant. The
EPA cautions them to avoid eating the larger, high-risk fish, such as swordfish,
king mackerel and tilefish. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which works
with state regulators and commercial fisheries to monitor methylmercury levels,
also has issued a warning in recent months. The agency has recommended a mercury
limit of no more than 1 part per million for human consumption.
Janda's method uses a solution that changes color if there is even half the
recommended FDA limit on mercury levels in fish. Basically, a tiny pellet of
fish is placed in a tube with a few drops of an acid and enzyme solution, which
digests the tissue for a few hours, in a way similar to human digestion. Then
the mixture is stirred with a special dipstick coated with a "chelating" resin.
If there is any mercury in the fish, it sticks to the resin. The dipstick is
then plunged into a second tube containing a mild acid, which pulls the mercury
off the resin, and then a few drops of lightly colored detector solution is added.
This solution has a molecule that precipitates when it binds to the mercury.
If the fish is contaminated, the liquid changes color, becoming clear. The addition
of a drop of dye allows a quantitative measure of the concentration of mercury
in the fish.
Janda believes that the colorimetric assay could be a boon to field environmentalists,
since their current mercury detection procedures demand that they catch whole
fish and bring them into the laboratory for slow, expensive and complicated testing.
"This method could be made field ready," he says. "Environmental professionals
could test the fish and then release them back into the water."
The research was funded by The Skaggs Institute for Research and Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft.
For more information contact:
Keith McKeown
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.8134
Fax: 858.784.8118
kmckeown@scripps.edu
Copyright © 1998 TSRI.
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