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One year exposure to Cd- and Pb-contaminated soil causes metal accumulation and alteration of global DNA methylation in rats
2019
Nakayama, Shouta M.M. | Nakata, Hokuto | Ikenaka, Yoshinori | Yabe, John | Oroszlany, Balazs | Yohannes, Yared B. | Bortey-Sam, Nesta | Muzandu, Kaampwe | Choongo, Kennedy | Kuritani, Takeshi | Nakagawa, Mitsuhiro | Ishizuka, Mayumi
Metal pollution has been associated with anthropogenic activities, such as effluents and emissions from mines. Soil could be exposure route of wild rats to metals, especially in mining areas. The aim of this study was to verify whether soil exposure under environmentally relevant circumstances results in metal accumulation and epigenetic modifications. Wistar rats were divided to three groups: 1) control without soil exposure, 2) low-metal exposure group exposed to soil containing low metal levels (Pb: 75 mg/kg; Cd: 0.4), and 3) high-metal exposure group exposed to soil (Pb: 3750; Cd: 6). After 1 year of exposure, the metal levels, Pb isotopic values, and molecular indicators were measured. Rats in the high-group showed significantly greater concentrations of Pb and Cd in tissues. Higher accumulation factors (tissue/soil) of Cd than Pb were observed in the liver, kidney, brain, and lung, while the factor of Pb was higher in the tibia. The obtained results of metal accumulation ratios (lung/liver) and stable Pb isotope ratios in the tissues indicated that the respiratory exposure would account for an important share of metal absorption into the body. Genome-wide methylation status and DNA methyltransferase (Dnmt 3a/3b) mRNA expressions in testis were higher in the high-group, suggesting that exposure to soil caused metal accumulation and epigenetic alterations in rats.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Consumption of drinking water N-Nitrosamines mixture alters gut microbiome and increases the obesity risk in young male rats
2019
Zhu, Jianqiang | Kong, Yuan | Yu, Jie | Shao, Shuai | Mao, Manfei | Zhao, Meirong | Yue, Siqing
N-nitrosamines (NAs) are an emerging group of disinfection by-products that occur as a mixture in drinking water. Although the potency of the individual NA components in drinking water is negligible, their combined effect is rarely reported. We tested whether multicomponent NAs mixtures at environmentally relevant levels would produce significant effects when each component was combined at extremely low concentrations i.e. a million times lower than its No Observed Effect Concentration (NOEC). Mixture L (the maximum values detected in drinking water) or mixture M (one order of magnitude higher than detected) were fed to male and female Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats since PND 28 for seven days. We found that the body weight gains and the triglyceride (TG) levels increased significantly in mixture M treated male rats. Correspondingly, an obesogenic microbiota profile was obtained in the mixture M treated young male rat: Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes and the obesity-related taxa including Alistipes, Ruminococcus were enriched. Collectively, this is the first in vivo demonstration of NAs mixtures at environmentally relevant levels. Despite the complicated relationship between gut microbiota and obesity, our study has demonstrated that changes in gut microbiota may contribute to the development of obesity after the exposure. Our results highlight that changes in gut microbiota could be a risk factor for obesity, which emphasizes the need to include gut microbiota in the traditional mammalian risk assessment.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]An integrated functional and transcriptomic analysis reveals that repeated exposure to diesel exhaust induces sustained mitochondrial and cardiac dysfunctions
2019
Karoui, Ahmed | Crochemore, Clément | Mulder, Paul | Preterre, David | Cazier, Fabrice | Dewaele, Dorothée | Corbière, Cécile | Mekki, Malik | Vendeville, Cathy | Richard, Vincent | Vaugeois, Jean-Marie | Fardel, Olivier | Sichel, François | Lecureur, Valérie | Monteil, Christelle
Diesel exhaust (DE) contributes to air pollution, an important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. However, the mechanisms by which DE exposure induces cardiovascular dysfunction remain unknown and there is still debate on the contribution of the primary particulate matter (PM) fraction compared to the gaseous phase. Although the mitochondria play a key role in the events leading to cardiovascular diseases, their role in DE-induced cardiovascular effects has not been investigated. The aim of this study was to highlight cardiac and mitochondrial events that could be disrupted following acute and/or repeated DE exposures and the contribution of gaseous pollutants to these effects. To address this question, Wistar rats were exposed to DE generated under strictly controlled and characterized conditions and extracted upstream or downstream of the diesel particulate filter (DPF). Evaluation of the cardiac function after acute DE exposure showed a disturbance in echocardiographic parameters, which persisted and worsened after repeated exposures. The presence of the DPF did not modify the cardiovascular dysfunction revealing an important implication of the gas phase in this response. Surprisingly, redox parameters were not altered by DE exposures while an alteration in mitochondrial oxidative capacity was observed. Exploration of the mitochondrial function demonstrated a more specific alteration in complex I of the respiratory chain after repeated exposures, which was further confirmed by transcriptional analysis of left ventricular (LV) tissue. In conclusion, this work provides new insights into cardiovascular effects induced by DE, demonstrating a cardiac mitochondrial impairment associated with the gaseous phase. These effects suggest deleterious consequences in terms of cardiac function for vulnerable populations with underlying energy deficit such as patients with heart failure or the elderly.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Short and long-term effects of bisphenol S (BPS) exposure during pregnancy and lactation on plasma lipids, hormones, and behavior in rats
2019
da Silva, Beatriz Souza | Pietrobon, Carla Bruna | Bertasso, Iala Milene | Lopes, Bruna Pereira | Carvalho, Janaine Cavalcanti | Peixoto-Silva, Nayara | Santos, Tatianne Rosa | Claudio-Neto, Sylvio | Manhães, Alex Christian | Oliveira, Elaine | de Moura, Egberto Gaspar | Lisboa, Patrícia Cristina
Bisphenol S (BPS) has replaced bisphenol A (BPA), a known non-persistent endocrine disrupting chemical, in several products. Considering that little is known regarding BPS effects, especially during critical windows of ontogenetic development, and that BPA, which is quite similar to BPS, is know to be transferred to the offspring via the placenta and milk, in the present study we investigated the behavioral, biochemical and endocrine profiles of Wistar rats born from dams that were BPS-exposed [groups: BPS10 (10 μg/kg/day), BPS50 (50 μg/kg/day)] during pregnancy and lactation. Due to the non-monotonic dose-response effect of bisphenol, the data of both BPS groups were directly compared with those of the controls, not to each other. Males and females were analyzed separately. At weaning, male BPS50 offspring had hypotriglyceridemia and hyperthyroxinemia, whereas BPS50 females showed higher 25(OH)D levels. At adulthood, BPS offspring of both sexes had lower food intake. BPS males showed lower visceral adiposity. BPS50 females had smaller fat droplets in brown adipocytes. BPS males showed higher anxiety and higher locomotor activity, while BPS10 females showed lower exploration. During a food challenge test at adulthood, BPS males consumed more high-fat diet at 30 min. BPS10 females initially (at 30 min) consumed more high-fat diet but, after 12 h, less of this diet was consumed. BPS50 males had hypertriglyceridemia and lower plasma T3, while BPS females showed lower plasma T4. BPS10 females had lower progesterone, whereas BPS50 females had higher plasma 25(OH)D. Maternal BPS exposure has adverse effects on the triacylglycerol, hormones levels and behavior of the progeny. Furthermore, the increased preference for the fat-enriched diet suggests an increased risk for obesity and its health consequences in the long term.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Dietary grape seed proanthocyanidin extract regulates metabolic disturbance in rat liver exposed to lead associated with PPARα signaling pathway
2018
Yang, Daqian | Jiang, Huijie | Lu, Jingjing | Lv, Yueying | Baiyun, Ruiqi | Li, Siyu | Liu, Biying | Lv, Zhanjun | Zhang, Zhigang
Lead, a pervasive environmental hazard worldwide, causes a wide range of physiological and biochemical destruction, including metabolic dysfunction. Grape seed proanthocyanidin extract (GSPE) is a natural production with potential metabolic regulation in liver. This study was performed to investigate the protective role of GSPE against lead-induced metabolic dysfunction in liver and elucidate the potential molecular mechanism of this event. Wistar rats received GSPE (200 mg/kg) daily with or without lead acetate (PbA, 0.5 g/L) exposure for 56 d. According to biochemical and histopathologic analysis, GSPE attenuated lead-induced metabolic dysfunction, oxidative stress, and liver dysfunction. Liver gene expression profiling was assessed by RNA sequencing and validated by qRT-PCR. Expression of some genes in peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) signaling pathway was significantly suppressed in PbA group and revived in PbA + GSPE group, which was manifested by Gene Ontology analysis and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathway analysis and validated by western blot analysis. This study supports that dietary GSPE ameliorates lead-induced fatty acids metabolic disturbance in rat liver associated with PPARα signaling pathway, and suggests that dietary GSPE may be a protector against lead-induced metabolic dysfunction and liver injury, providing a novel therapy to protect liver against lead exposure.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Predicting the effects of polychlorinated biphenyls on cetacean populations through impacts on immunity and calf survival
2018
Hall, Ailsa J. | McConnell, Bernie J. | Schwacke, Lori H. | Ylitalo, Gina M. | Williams, Rob | Rowles, Teri K.
The potential impact of exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) on the health and survival of cetaceans continues to be an issue for conservation and management, yet few quantitative approaches for estimating population level effects have been developed. An individual based model (IBM) for assessing effects on both calf survival and immunity was developed and tested. Three case study species (bottlenose dolphin, humpback whale and killer whale) in four populations were taken as examples and the impact of varying levels of PCB uptake on achievable population growth was assessed. The unique aspect of the model is its ability to evaluate likely effects of immunosuppression in addition to calf survival, enabling consequences of PCB exposure on immune function on all age-classes to be explored. By incorporating quantitative tissue concentration-response functions from laboratory animal model species into an IBM framework, population trajectories were generated. Model outputs included estimated concentrations of PCBs in the blubber of females by age, which were then compared to published empirical data. Achievable population growth rates were more affected by the inclusion of effects of PCBs on immunity than on calf survival, but the magnitude depended on the virulence of any subsequent encounter with a pathogen and the proportion of the population exposed. Since the starting population parameters were from historic studies, which may already be impacted by PCBs, the results should be interpreted on a relative rather than an absolute basis. The framework will assist in providing quantitative risk assessments for populations of concern.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Crotonaldehyde induces autophagy-mediated cytotoxicity in human bronchial epithelial cells via PI3K, AMPK and MAPK pathways
2017
Wang, Limeng | Li, Xiang | Yang, Zhihua | Pan, Xiujie | Liu, Xingyu | Zhu, Maoxiang | Xie, Jianping
Crotonaldehyde is an ubiquitous hazardous pollutant in the environment which can be produced naturally, artificially and endogenously. Acute exposure of crotonaldehyde was reported to induce severe lung injury in humans and experimental animals. However, the exact toxicity mechanisms of crotonaldehyde in organisms have not been fully explored. In the present study, we explored the role autophagy played in the cytotoxicity induced by crotonaldehyde in human bronchial epithelial cells (BEAS-2B), and the pathways that mediated autophagy, including the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway, the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) pathway and the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways, were examined and validated. We found that crotonaldehyde induced cytotoxicity and autophagy simultaneously in BEAS-2B cells, and blockage of autophagic flux significantly elevated the viability of BEAS-2B exposed to high concentrations of crotonaldehyde. Crotonaldehyde down-regulated the activity of PI3K pathway, and elevated the activities of AMPK and MAPK pathways. Pretreatment of specific agonist or antagonist of these pathways could inhibit autophagy and partly improve the viability. These results suggested that acute exposure of crotonaldehyde induced cell death mediated by autophagy, which might be helpful to elucidate the toxicity mechanisms of crotonaldehyde and contribute to environmental and human health risk assessment.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]An endocrine disruptor, bisphenol A, affects development in the protochordate Ciona intestinalis: Hatching rates and swimming behavior alter in a dose-dependent manner
2013
Matsushima, Ayami | Ryan, Kerrianne | Shimohigashi, Yasuyuki | Meinertzhagen, Ian A.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is widely used industrially to produce polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins. Numerous studies document the harmful effects caused by low-dose BPA exposure especially on nervous systems and behavior in experimental animals such as mice and rats. Here, we exposed embryos of a model chordate, Ciona intestinalis, to seawater containing BPA to evaluate adverse effects on embryonic development and on the swimming behavior of subsequent larvae. Ciona is ideal because its larva develops rapidly and has few cells. The rate of larval hatching decreased in a dose-dependent manner with exposures to BPA above 3 μM; swimming behavior was also affected in larvae emerging from embryos exposed to 1 μM BPA. Adverse effects were most severe on fertilized eggs exposed to BPA within 7 h post-fertilization. Ciona shares twelve nuclear receptors with mammals, and BPA is proposed to disturb the physiological functions of one or more of these.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Effects of perfluorooctanoic acid on stem Leydig cell functions in the rat
2019
Lü, Hemin | Zhang, Huishan | Gao, Jie | Li, Zhaohui | Bao, Suhao | Chen, Xianwu | Wang, Yiyan | Ge, Renshan | Ye, Leping
Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonic (PFOS) are two perfluorinated chemical products widely existing in the environment. Evidence suggested that PFOA might relate to male reproductive dysfunction in rats and humans. PFOA exposure inhibited the function of Leydig cells. However, it is still unknown whether PFOA affects stem Leydig cells (SLCs). In the present study, we examined the effects of a short-term exposure to PFOA on Leydig cell regeneration and also explored the possible mechanism involved. Thirty-six adult Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into three groups and intraperitoneally injected with a single dose of 75 mg/kg ethane dimethyl sulfonate (EDS) to eliminate all Leydig cells. From post-EDS day 7, the 3 group rats received 0, 25 or 50 mg/kg/day PFOA (n = 12 per group) for 9 consecutive days. Exposure to PFOA significantly decreased serum testosterone levels by day 21 and day 56 post-EDS treatment. Also, the expression levels of Leydig cell specific genes (Lhcgr, Scarb1, Star, Cyp11a1, Hsd3b1, Hsd11b1 and Cyp17a1) and their protein levels were all down-regulated. PFOA exposure may also affect proliferation of SLCs or their progeny since the numbers of PCNA-positive Leydig cells were reduced by post-EDS day 21. These in vivo observations were also confirmed by in vitro studies where the effects of PFOA were tested by culture of seminiferous tubules. In summary, PFOA exposure inhibits the development of Leydig cells, possibly by affecting both the proliferation and differentiation of SLCs or their progeny.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]In utero exposure to bisphenol A disrupts fetal testis development in rats
2019
Lv, Yao | Li, Lili | Fang, Yinghui | Chen, Panpan | Wu, Siwen | Chen, Xiuxiu | Ni, Chaobo | Zhu, Qiqi | Huang, Tongliang | Lian, Qingquan | Ge, Ren-Shan
Bisphenol A (BPA) is widely used in consumer products and is a potential endocrine disruptor linked with abnormal development of male reproductive tract. However, its action and its effects on the pathways in the development of male gonad are still unclear. Here we report that effects of BPA exposure during gestation on male gonad development. Sprague-Dawley rats were gavaged daily with BPA (0, 4, 40, and 400 mg/kg body weight) from gestational day 12 to day 21. BPA dose-dependently decreased serum testosterone levels (0.45 ± 0.08 ng/ml and 0.32 ± 0.08 ng/ml for 40 and 400 mg/kg BPA, respectively) versus the control level (1.11 ± 0.22 ng/ml, Mean ± SE). BPA lowered Leydig cell Insl3 and Hsd17b3 mRNA and their protein levels at doses of 40 and 400 mg/kg. BPA also lowered Leydig cell (Lhcgr, Cyp11a1, and Cyp17a1) and Sertoli cell (Amh) mRNA and their protein levels at 400 mg/kg. BPA decreased fetal Leydig cell number via inhibiting their proliferation, but it did not affect fetal Sertoli cell number. In conclusion, the current study shows that in utero exposure to BPA inhibits fetal Leydig and Sertoli cell differentiation, possibly disrupting the development of male reproductive tract.
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