| Literature DB >> 23066391 |
René Viñas1, Yow-Jiun Jeng, Cheryl S Watson.
Abstract
Xenoestrogens (XEs) are chemicals derived from a variety of natural and anthropogenic sources that can interfere with endogenous estrogens by either mimicking or blocking their responses via non-genomic and/or genomic signaling mechanisms. Disruption of estrogens' actions through the less-studied non-genomic pathway can alter such functional end points as cell proliferation, peptide hormone release, catecholamine transport, and apoptosis, among others. Studies of potentially adverse effects due to mixtures and to low doses of endocrine-disrupting chemicals have recently become more feasible, though few so far have included actions via the non-genomic pathway. Physiologic estrogens and XEs evoke non-monotonic dose responses, with different compounds having different patterns of actions dependent on concentration and time, making mixture assessments all the more challenging. In order to understand the spectrum of toxicities and their mechanisms, future work should focus on carefully studying individual and mixture components across a range of concentrations and cellular pathways in a variety of tissue types.Entities:
Keywords: endocrine-disrupting chemicals; estrogenic mixtures; hormesis; kinases; non-genomic; non-monotonic dose-response curves; xenoestrogens
Mesh:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23066391 PMCID: PMC3447581 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph9082694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Working model of xenoestrogen (XE) alteration of physiologic estrogen non-genomic response effects. XEs of increasing dose were used to challenge the responses of the physiologic estrogen estradiol (10−9 M E2). These combinations examples are mainly summarized from [25,26]. In each case the vehicle control (V) and 10−9 M E2 responses are shown by horizontal bars. The response to an XE alone is shown by a solid line, and the combination of 10−9 M E2 plus the XE is shown by a dashed line. The types of combination responses are: (A) A weak XE enhances the physiologic estrogen E2response; (B) A moderate XE response enhances the E2 response at low concentrations, and inhibits it at higher concentrations; (C) The strongest XE inhibits the E2 response at all concentrations, with increasing inhibition as the XE concentration increases; and (D) If the XE exhibits a fluctuating non-monotonic estrogenic response, the effect on the E2 response also fluctuates, in line with cases A–C above. These idealized data summarize what we have seen in combinations using a variety of XEs. Depending on the estrogenic potency of the XE, when paired with a physiologic estrogen, an inverse relationship in responses occurs (enhancement or attenuation).