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1.
Am J Physiol Renal Physiol ; 289(6): F1291-303, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15998846

ABSTRACT

Environmental chemicals play an etiological role in greater than 50% of idiopathic glomerular diseases. The present studies were conducted to define mechanisms of renal cell-specific hydrocarbon injury. Female rats were given 10 mg/kg benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) once a week for 16 wk. Progressive elevations in total urinary protein, protein/creatinine ratios, and microalbuminuria were observed in rats treated with BaP for up to 16 wk. The nephropathic response involved early reductions in mesangial cell numbers and fibronectin levels by 8 wk, coupled to transient increases in podocyte cellularity. Changes in podocyte numbers subsided by 16 wk and correlated with rebound increases in mesangial cell numbers and fibronectin levels, along with increased alpha-smooth muscle actin and Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase and fusion of podocyte foot processes. In culture, mesangial cells were more sensitive than podocytes to hydrocarbon injury and expressed higher levels of inducible aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity. Naïve mesangial cells exerted a strong inhibitory influence on podocyte proliferation under both direct and indirect coculture conditions, and this response involved a mesangial cell-derived matrix that selectively inhibited podocyte proliferation. These findings indicate that hydrocarbon nephropathy in rats involves disruption of glomerular cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions mediated by deposition of a mesangial cell-derived growth-inhibitory matrix that regulates podocyte proliferation.


Subject(s)
Cell Communication/physiology , Glomerulonephritis/physiopathology , Kidney Glomerulus/cytology , Animals , Benzo(a)pyrene , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/biosynthesis , Female , Glomerulonephritis/chemically induced , Immunohistochemistry , Kidney Glomerulus/pathology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
2.
Cardiovasc Toxicol ; 4(4): 385-404, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15531781

ABSTRACT

Exposure to environmental toxicants may play a role in the onset and progression of cardiovascular disease. Many environmental agents, such as dioxin, are risk factors for atherosclerosis because they may exacerbate an underlying disease by altering gene expression patterns. Expression profiling of vascular tissues allows the simultaneous analysis of thousands of genes and may provide predictive information particularly useful in early disease stages. Often, however, in vivo experiments are unfeasible for material or ethical reasons, and data from cultured cells must be used instead, even though it may not be known whether cultured cells and live tissues share common global responses to the same toxicant. In a search for genes responsive to dioxin exposure, we used oligonucleotide microarrays with DNA sequences from 13,433 genes to compare global gene expression profiles of C57BL/6 mice aortas with cultured vascular smooth muscle cells (vSMCs) of the same mice. Aorta segments and vSMCs differed in the expression of more than 4500 genes, many showing expression differences greater than 1000-fold. Integration of microarray data into Gene Ontology Project annotations showed that many of the genes differentially expressed belonged to the same biological process or metabolic pathway. Notwithstanding these results, a subset of 35 genes responded in the same fashion to dioxin exposure in both systems. Genes in this subset encoded phase I and phase II detoxification enzymes, signal transduction kinases and phosphatases, and proteins involved in DNA repair and the cell cycle. We conclude that vSMCS may be useful aorta surrogates to study early gene expression responses to dioxin exposure, provided that analyses focus on this subset of genes.


Subject(s)
Aorta/cytology , Environmental Pollutants/toxicity , Gene Expression Profiling , Muscle, Smooth, Vascular/cytology , Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins/toxicity , Animals , Aorta/drug effects , Aorta/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Female , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Muscle, Smooth, Vascular/drug effects , Muscle, Smooth, Vascular/metabolism , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/methods , RNA, Messenger/isolation & purification , RNA, Messenger/metabolism
3.
Toxicology ; 181-182: 171-7, 2002 Dec 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12505305

ABSTRACT

One of the most puzzling aspects of the biological impact of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon compounds is that they elicit an apparently unrelated variety of toxic, teratogenic, and carcinogenic responses in exposed animals and in humans. At the cellular level, these environmental toxicants affect cell cycle regulatory mechanisms and signal transduction pathways in ways that are equally diverse and often contradictory. For example, depending on the particular cell lines studied, exposure to these compounds may lead to cell proliferation, to terminal differentiation, or to apoptosis. These effects are mediated by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor, a ligand-activated transcription factor well known for its regulatory activity on the expression of several phase I detoxification cytochrome P450 genes. Research into the molecular mechanisms of aryl hydrocarbon receptor function has uncovered a novel role for this protein during cell cycle progression. The activated receptor acts as an environmental sensor and cell cycle checkpoint that commits cells exposed to adverse environmental stimuli to arrest before the onset of DNA replication.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle/physiology , Receptors, Aryl Hydrocarbon/physiology , Animals , Apoptosis/drug effects , Cell Cycle/genetics , Cytochrome a Group/metabolism , DNA Replication/drug effects , Environmental Pollutants/toxicity , Humans , Ligands , Plasmids/genetics , Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons/toxicity , Receptors, Aryl Hydrocarbon/genetics , Retinoblastoma Protein/physiology
4.
Free Radic Biol Med ; 33(9): 1268-78, 2002 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12398935

ABSTRACT

2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (dioxin; TCDD) is a pervasive environmental contaminant that induces hepatic and extrahepatic oxidative stress. We have previously shown that dioxin increases mitochondrial respiration-dependent reactive oxygen production. In the present study we examined the dependence of mitochondrial reactive oxygen production on the aromatic hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), cytochrome P450 1A1 (CYP1A1), and cytochrome P450 1A2 (CYP1A2), proteins believed to be important in dioxin-induced liver toxicity. Congenic Ahr(-/-), Cyp1a1(-/-) and Cyp1a2(-/-) knockout mice, and C57BL/6J inbred mice as their Ahr/Cyp1a1/Cyp1a2(+/+) wild-type (wt) counterparts, were injected intraperitoneally with dioxin (15 microg/kg body weight) or corn-oil vehicle on 3 consecutive days. Liver mitochondria were examined 1 week following the first treatment. The level of mitochondrial H(2)O(2) production in vehicle-treated Ahr(-/-) mice was one fifth that found in vehicle-treated wt mice. Whereas dioxin caused a rise in succinate-stimulated mitochondrial H(2)O(2) production in the wt, Cyp1a1(-/-), and Cyp1a2(-/-) mice, this increase did not occur with the Ahr(-/-) knockout. The lack of H(2)O(2) production in Ahr(-/-) mice was not due to low levels of Mn(2+)-superoxide dismutase (SOD2) as shown by Western immunoblot analysis, nor was it due to high levels of mitochondrial glutathione peroxidase (GPX1) activity. Dioxin decreased mitochondrial aconitase (an enzyme inactivated by superoxide) by 44% in wt mice, by 26% in Cyp1a2(-/-) mice, and by 24% in Cyp1a1(-/-) mice; no change was observed in Ahr(-/-) mice. Dioxin treatment increased mitochondrial glutathione levels in the wt, Cyp1a1(-/-), and Cyp1a2(-/-) mice, but not in Ahr(-/-) mice. These results suggest that both constitutive and dioxin-induced mitochondrial reactive oxygen production is associated with a function of the AHR, and these effects are independent of either CYP1A1 or CYP1A2.


Subject(s)
Mitochondria, Liver/metabolism , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Receptors, Aryl Hydrocarbon/metabolism , Aconitate Hydratase/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Animals , Blotting, Western , Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A1/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A2/metabolism , Female , Glutathione/metabolism , Glutathione Peroxidase/metabolism , Hydrogen Peroxide/metabolism , Liver/drug effects , Liver/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Oxidative Stress , Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins/toxicity , Succinic Acid/metabolism , Superoxide Dismutase/metabolism
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