Investigations of the Influence of Pollutants on the Endocrine and Immune Systems of Harbour Porpoises from the German North and Baltic Seas
Abstract
The harbour porpoise is the only true native cetacean species in the German
North Sea and Baltic Sea. Because of a decline of the population in recent decades a project was
launched aiming to investigate the influence of pollutants on the endocrinium and immune system of
harbour porpoises. Investigations are performed to find endocrine and immune disrupting effects on
animals originating from the North and Baltic Seas and to compare these findings with observations
from animals of Icelandic, Norwegian and Greenlandic waters.
Studies on the immune system revealed that several monoclonal and polyclonal
antibodies from other species showed a specific reaction with cells of lymphoid tissues from
harbour porpoises. Concanavalin A, pokeweed mitogen, phytohemagglutinin used in the lymphocyte
transformation test showed a mitogen-induced induction of proliferation of peripheral blood
lymphocytes. Using RT-PCR, cDNA of IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10 ,TGFβ und TNF-alpha was amplified
in mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes and expression of iNOS mRNA was detected in lymphoid tissue.
Adrenal glands, hypophyses and thyroid glands represent major target organs of
endocrine disruptors and were therefore investigated for possible pathological changes. The
thyroid glands in animals from Germany, Iceland and Norway showed a significant difference in the
degree of severity of fibrosis between the three groups. Minimal interfollicular fibrosis was
observed in the thyroid glands of Icelandic animals. In contrast thyroid glands from German and
Norwegian harbour porpoises showed a moderate to severe interfollicular fibrosis.
In addition polychlorinated biphenyls, DDT, toxaphene and polybrominated
diphenylethers were analysed in blubber samples of the harbour porpoises. The PCB concentrations
(sum of 15 congeners) ranged from 0.05 to 13 µg/g lipid and that the animals from Iceland had
lower levels.
Summarizing the preliminary results suggest that thyroid glands of harbour
porpoises are adversely affected by chemical endocrine disruptors, which might result in a thyroid
disfunction.