| Literature DB >> 22654829 |
Vance L Trudeau1, Belinda Heyne, Jules M Blais, Fabio Temussi, Susanna K Atkinson, Farzad Pakdel, Jason T Popesku, Vicki L Marlatt, Juan C Scaiano, Lucio Previtera, David R S Lean.
Abstract
Endocrine disrupting chemicals are adversely affecting the reproductive health and metabolic status of aquatic vertebrates. Estrone is often the dominant natural estrogen in urban sewage, yet little is known about its environmental fate and biological effects. Increased use of UV-B radiation for effluent treatments, and exposure of effluents to sunlight in holding ponds led us to examine the effects of environmentally relevant levels of UV-B radiation on the photodegradation potential of estrone. Surprisingly, UV-B-mediated degradation leads to the photoproduction of lumiestrone, a little known 13α-epimer form of estrone. We show for the first time that lumiestrone possesses novel biological activity. In vivo treatment with estrone stimulated estrogen receptor (ER) α mRNA production in the male goldfish liver, whereas lumiestrone was without effect, suggesting a total loss of estrogenicity. In contrast, results from in vitro ER-dependent reporter gene assays indicate that lumiestrone showed relatively higher estrogenic potency with the zebrafish ERβ2 than zfERα, suggesting that it may act through an ERβ-selectivity. Lumiestrone also activated human ERs. Microarray analysis of male goldfish liver following in vivo treatments showed that lumiestrone respectively up- and down-regulated 20 and 69 mRNAs, which was indicative of metabolic upsets and endocrine activities. As a photodegradation product from a common estrogen of both human and farm animal origin, lumiestrone is present in sewage effluent, is produced from estrone upon exposure to natural sunlight and should be considered as a new environmental contaminant.Entities:
Keywords: endocrine disruption; environmental estrogens; estrone; fish; liver; lumiestrone; photochemistry; sewage effluents
Year: 2011 PMID: 22654829 PMCID: PMC3356028 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2011.00083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Conversion of estrone into lumiestrone in acetonitrile following exposure to UV-B radiation, followed by gas chromatography. Irradiation times were (A) 0 min, (B) 5 min, (C) 15 min, (D) 30 min.
Figure A1Quenching of the transient bi-radical by nitric oxide. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum obtained upon irradiation of a 5 × 10−4-M solution of estrone in acetonitrile under UV-B. A solution of estrone (0.5 mM) dissolved in acetonitrile was degassed with nitrogen in order to avoid in situ formation of nitric dioxide. The solution was then saturated with a mixture containing 5% nitric oxide in nitrogen, and was allowed to flow through a conventional Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) flat cell (Suprasil) at a rate of 1 mL/min. The solution saturated with nitric oxide was continuously irradiated in the EPR cavity by the means of a Xenon illuminator (model LUZ-XE, Luzchem). The EPR spectra were recorded at room temperature on a FA-100 JEOL EPR spectrometer. The experimental setting was as followed: microwave power 1 mW, modulation width 0.1 mT, sweep time 1 min, time constant 0.03 s.
Figure 2Proposed mechanism for the phototransformation of estrone into lumiestrone.
Figure A2Conversion of estrone into lumiestrone in water (ethanol <1%) following exposure to UV-B radiation followed by gas chromatography. Irradiation times were (A) 0 min, (B) 15 min, (C) 45 min.
Figure A3High-pressure liquid chromatography chromatograms of estrone solutions (10 μM) irradiated by sunlight at different times. (A) t = 0, (B) t = 15, (C) t = 60, (D) t = 120, and (E) t = 180 min. In order to simulate environmental conditions estrone was dissolved in untreated sewage water and irradiated by sunlight in Napoli (Italy) in July 2007. HPLC analysis was performed under isocratic conditions (H2O/CH3CN 1:1) on an Agilent 1100 Binary HPLC pumps system equipped with a UV-detector. The column used was a reverse-phase Gemini 5 μ C-18 (250 × 4.60 mm). The detector was set at 220 nm.
Figure A4High-pressure liquid chromatography chromatograms of estrone solutions (10 μM) in untreated sewage water) irradiated by UV-B (135 μW cm. (A) t = 0, (B) t = 1 min, (C) t = 4 min, and (D) t = 10 min. HPLC analysis under isocratic conditions (H2O/CH3CN 1:1) was performed on an Agilent 1100 Binary HPLC pumps system equipped with a UV-detector. The column used was a reverse-phase Gemini 5 μ C-18 (250 × 4.60 mm). The detector was set at 220 nm.
Figure A5The effect of i.p. injections (0.5 μg/g) of estradiol (E2), estrone (E1), lumiestrone (LE), and control (charcoal-stripped peanut oil; 5 μL/g) on expression of liver estrogen receptor (ER)α in sexually in sexually inactive male goldfish using multiplex real-time PCR (8) after 24 h. Data (n = 6) are expressed as the mean (n = 6; ±SEM) fold change relative to the ERβ/β-actin ratios of the controls. Data were tested for normality and homoscedasity, and were transformed when appropriate prior to analysis by one-way ANOVA (treatment; p < 0.001) followed by Tukey’s post hoc test (S-Plus, v8.0). a,bMeans labeled with different superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05). Note that ER β1 and ER β2 mRNAs were also measured in this PCR (not shown) but were not affected by treatment (p > 0.05). A subset (n = 3) of samples was screened by SYBR-Green-based PCR for vitellogenin-1 (VTG-1). VTGs are abundant phosphoproteins normally produced in the female liver that are released into circulation and accumulate in developing oocytes to provide nourishment for developing fish larvae. The gene is largely silent and undetectable in males unless they are exposed to estrogenic chemicals. No VTG-1 transcripts were amplified from control or LE-treated samples whereas it was detectable in all three of the samples from the E2 and E1-treatment groups. These data followed the general pattern for ERα and the average VTG-1/β-actin ratios for control, E2, E1, and LE were respectively 0 (not-detectable), 4.2, 5.9, and 0 (not-detectable).
Figure 3Screening transcriptional activities of estradiol (E2), estrone (E1) and lumiestrone (LE) using estrogen receptor-dependent reporter gene assays . ER-negative U251-MG glial cells were transfected with zebrafish ERα ((A)), ERβ1 (B), and ERβ2 (C) and exposed to estrogens or the dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) control. In (D) ERα and ERβ-positive human breast cancer MCF-7 cells were used. Data are presented as mean + SEM of luciferase activity relative to β-gal (n = 3). Data were tested for normality and homoscedasticity, and were transformed when appropriate prior to analysis by one-way ANOVA (treatment; p < 0.001) followed by Tukey’s post hoc test (S-Plus, v8.0). a,b,c,dMeans labeled with different superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05).
Multilevel gene ontology classifications of transcripts expressed in male goldfish liver identified by version 1.1 of the goldfish-carp cDNA microarray to be affected by lumiestrone.
| Gene_ID | Gene Blast X hit | Biological process | Molecular function | Cellular component | Direction | Fold Change | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15b05 | COP9 constitutive photomorphogenic homolog subunit 4 | – | Protein binding | Cytoplasm, signalosome | Down | 3.65 | 1.635 |
| 25m12 | TPA_exp: glutamine synthetase | Glutamine biosynthetic process, peptidoglycan biosynthetic process | Glutamate–ammonia ligase activity | – | Up | 3.99 | 1.553 |
| 27l09 | High-mobility group box 1 | Regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent | DNA binding | Chromatin, nucleus | Down | 3.65 | 1.407 |
| 28c20 | Glutathione | – | Transferase activity | – | Up | 0 | 1.856 |
| 30g10 | Integral membrane protein 2B | Induction of apoptosis | Protein binding, ATP binding | Membrane fraction, integral to membrane, mitochondrion | Down | 3.65 | 1.430 |
| 30h23 | Glucose-6-phosphatase | – | Hydrolase activity | Membrane | Up | 0 | 1.843 |
| 30h24 | FK506 binding protein 5 | Protein folding | Peptidyl-prolyl cis–trans isomerase activity | – | Up | 0 | 1.811 |
| 39c13 | Predicted: similar to ribosomal protein S2 | Translation, ribosome biogenesis and assembly | RNA binding, structural constituent of ribosome | Cytosolic small ribosomal subunit | Up | 0 | 1.540 |
| 40e24 | Ribosomal protein S15a, isoform CRA_b | Translation, ribosome biogenesis and assembly | RNA binding, structural constituent of ribosome, protein binding | Cytosolic small ribosomal subunit | Up | 0 | 1.711 |
| 42f19 | Cytochrome oxidase subunit I | Mitochondrial electron transport (cytochrome-c to oxygen), aerobic respiration, proton transport | Cytochrome-c oxidase activity, iron ion binding, copper ion binding, heme binding | Mitochondrial respiratory chain, respiratory chain complex IV, integral to membrane | Down | 4.88 | 1.426 |
| 42m12 | Beta-tubulin | Microtubule-based movement, spindle assembly, protein polymerization | GTPase activity, GTP binding, structural constituent of cytoskeleton | Cytoplasm, tubulin complex | Down | 3.65 | 1.465 |
| 42n16 | Apolipoprotein Eb | Lipid transport, negative regulation of signal transduction, lipoprotein metabolic process | Lipid binding | Extracellular region, signal recognition particle (endoplasmic reticulum targeting) | Down | 3.65 | 1.479 |
| 43k04 | RTN4-M | – | – | Endoplasmic reticulum | Up | 0 | 1.565 |
| 43n02 | Somatostatin-1B precursor | Signal transduction | Hormone activity | Extracellular region | Up | 3.23 | 1.481 |
| 43p01 | Somatostatin receptor type 2 | Neuropeptide signaling pathway, synaptic transmission, G-protein signaling (adenylate cyclase inhibiting pathway), response to nutrient, digestion, peristalsis, negative regulation of cell proliferation, regulation of muscle contraction | Somatostatin receptor activity, PDZ domain binding, melanin-concentrating hormone activity, purinergic nucleotide receptor activity (G-protein coupled), neuropeptide Y receptor activity | Membrane fraction, integral to plasma membrane | Up | 0 | 1.575 |
| 54m19 | Hypothetical protein LOC553288 | – | UDP-glucose:glycoprotein glucosyltransferase activity | – | Down | 3.65 | 1.451 |
| 55k21 | Hypothetical protein LOC564707 | Transcription initiation from RNA polymerase II promoter, androgen receptor signaling pathway, positive regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter | Thyroid hormone receptor binding, receptor activity, RNA polymerase II transcription mediator activity, ligand-dependent nuclear receptor transcription coactivator activity, vitamin D receptor binding | Mediator complex, transcription factor complex | Down | 3.65 | 1.513 |
| 59d21 | Echinoderm microtubule associated protein like 2 | Regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent | – | Microtubule | Down | 3.65 | 1.467 |
| 59d24 | Transposase | Transposition, DNA-mediated | DNA binding, transposase activity | – | Down | 0 | 1.547 |
| 59k22 | RNA binding motif protein, X-linked | – | Nucleotide binding, nucleic acid binding | Ribonucleoprotein complex | Down | 3.65 | 1.420 |
| 61g21 | Hypothetical protein LOC563359 | Protein complex assembly, intracellular protein transport, signal transduction, vesicle-mediated transport, antigen processing, and presentation (exogenous lipid antigen via MHC class Ib), positive regulation of NK T cell differentiation | Receptor activity, protein binding, protein transporter activity | Golgi apparatus, integral to membrane, membrane coat | Down | 4.88 | 1.399 |
The microarray data have been submitted to GEO (GSE11252).