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1.
BMC Genomics ; 15: 1067, 2014 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25475078

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Comparison of toxicogenomic data facilitates the identification of deregulated gene patterns and maximizes health risk prediction in human. RESULTS: Here, we performed phenotypic anchoring on the effects of acute exposure to low-grade polluted groundwater using mouse and zebrafish. Also, we evaluated two windows of chronic exposure in mouse, starting in utero and at the end of lactation. Bioinformatic analysis of livers microarray data showed that the number of deregulated biofunctions and pathways is higher after acute exposure, compared to the chronic one. It also revealed specific profiles of altered gene expression in all treatments, pointing to stress response/mitochondrial pathways as major players of environmental toxicity. Of note, dysfunction of steroid hormones was also predicted by bioinformatic analysis and verified in both models by traditional approaches, serum estrogens measurement and vitellogenin mRNA determination in mice and zebrafish, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In our report, phenotypic anchoring in two vertebrate model organisms highlights the toxicity of low-grade pollution, with varying susceptibility based on exposure window. The overlay of zebrafish and mice deregulated pathways, more than single genes, is useful in risk identification from chemicals implicated in the observed effects.


Subject(s)
Groundwater/chemistry , Phenotype , Toxicogenetics , Water Pollution/adverse effects , Animals , Biomarkers , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Female , Gene Expression , Gene Expression Profiling , Groundwater/analysis , Liver/drug effects , Liver/metabolism , Liver Function Tests , Male , Mice , Reproducibility of Results , Species Specificity , Time Factors , Toxicity Tests, Acute , Toxicity Tests, Chronic , Zebrafish
2.
Toxicology ; 304: 21-31, 2013 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23238275

ABSTRACT

Bisphenol A (BPA) is an endocrine-disrupting chemical that leads to low-dose human exposure due to its ability to leach from chemically derived products, as polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resin. In addition to its known xeno-endocrine action, BPA exerts a wide range of metabolic effects. Despite the documented BPA exposure outcomes on synthesis of thyroid hormones, there are not any data available on its actions on the thyroid follicular cells, site of synthesis of the thyroid hormones. Recently, it has been shown that several environmental pollutants, as BPA, can exert a thyroid disrupting activity. In this study, we employed in vitro and in vivo (zebrafish) models to examine the effects of BPA in regulating the expression of genes involved in the thyroid hormone synthesis and of their transcriptional regulators at BPA doses as low as 10(-9)M, a dose that is environmentally pertinent and far below the one detected in infants plasma. In both systems we could detect an altered expression of the genes involved in thyroid hormones synthesis and of thyroid specific transcriptional factors in BPA dose and time dependent manner. Our results suggest that BPA exerts a direct effect on thyroid follicular cell. We show that these cells can "sense" very low amount of BPA. Thus they, potentially, represent an ideal in vitro system to develop assays to detect BPA and other pollutants with thyroid disrupting activity at level far below the ones considered to be environmental relevant. Moreover, this report may provide new insight into the mode of BPA-induced deregulation of physiological processes as well as on the extensively debated molecular pathways underlying its biological activities.


Subject(s)
Benzhydryl Compounds/toxicity , Endocrine Disruptors/toxicity , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Phenols/toxicity , Thyroid Gland/drug effects , Thyroid Hormones/genetics , Animals , Benzhydryl Compounds/administration & dosage , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Endocrine Disruptors/administration & dosage , Environmental Pollutants/administration & dosage , Environmental Pollutants/toxicity , Phenols/administration & dosage , Pituitary Gland/metabolism , Rats , Thyroid Gland/cytology , Time Factors , Zebrafish
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