Literature DB >> 23528616

Dietary exposure to a low dose of pesticides alone or as a mixture: the biological metabolic fingerprint and impact on hematopoiesis.

C Demur1, B Métais, C Canlet, M Tremblay-Franco, R Gautier, F Blas-Y-Estrada, C Sommer, L Gamet-Payrastre.   

Abstract

Consumers are exposed to a mixture of pesticides through their food intake. These compounds are considered risk factors for human health, and the impact of dietary exposure to low doses of pesticide mixtures remains poorly understood. For this study we developed a mouse model to mimic consumer exposure in order to compare the effect of pesticides both alone or combined at doses corresponding to their Acceptable Daily Intake value. Female mice were exposed to pesticides throughout gestation and lactation. After weaning pups were fed the same pesticide-enriched diet their mothers had received for an additional 11 weeks. A metabonomic approach using (1)H NMR-based analysis of plasma showed that exposure to each pesticide produced a specific metabolic fingerprint in adult offspring. Discriminant metabolites between groups were glucose or lactate, choline, glycerophosphocholine and phosphocholine. Interestingly, metabolite differences were observed as early as weaned animals that had not yet been directly exposed themselves. Studies of the hematopoietic system revealed that dietary exposure to one particular pesticide, endosulfan, produced a significant decrease in red blood cell and hemoglobin levels, consistent with hemolytic anemia. Moreover, cell signaling profiles of bone marrow progenitors were also clearly affected. Expression of cell signaling proteins such as P35, CDC27, FAK, P38 MAP kinase, calcineurin and caspase as well as proteins involved in the stability or structure of the cytoskeleton (vinculin, MAP2) was changed upon dietary exposure to pesticides. Finally, we found that dietary exposure to a mixture of pesticides had effects that differed and were often lesser or equal to that of the most efficient pesticide (endosulfan), suggesting that the effect of pesticide mixtures cannot always be predicted from the combined effects of their constituent compounds.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23528616     DOI: 10.1016/j.tox.2013.03.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicology        ISSN: 0300-483X            Impact factor:   4.221


  8 in total

Review 1.  Fetal Hematopoietic Stem Cells Are the Canaries in the Coal Mine That Portend Later Life Immune Deficiency.

Authors:  Michael D Laiosa; Everett R Tate
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2015-08-04       Impact factor: 4.736

2.  Environmental Toxins Are a Major Cause of Bone Loss.

Authors:  Joseph Pizzorno; Lara Pizzorno
Journal:  Integr Med (Encinitas)       Date:  2021-02

Review 3.  Critical review and analysis of literature on low dose exposure to chemical mixtures in mammalian in vivo systems.

Authors:  Chris S Elcombe; Neil P Evans; Michelle Bellingham
Journal:  Crit Rev Toxicol       Date:  2022-07-27       Impact factor: 6.184

4.  Challenges in food chemistry.

Authors:  Michael Rychlik
Journal:  Front Nutr       Date:  2015-04-27

5.  Juvenile Male Rats Exposed to a Low-Dose Mixture of Twenty-Seven Environmental Chemicals Display Adverse Health Effects.

Authors:  Niels Hadrup; Terje Svingen; Karen Mandrup; Kasper Skov; Mikael Pedersen; Hanne Frederiksen; Henrik Lauritz Frandsen; Anne Marie Vinggaard
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-09-06       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Metabolome disruption of pregnant rats and their offspring resulting from repeated exposure to a pesticide mixture representative of environmental contamination in Brittany.

Authors:  Nathalie Bonvallot; Cécile Canlet; Florence Blas-Y-Estrada; Roselyne Gautier; Marie Tremblay-Franco; Sylvie Chevolleau; Sylvaine Cordier; Jean-Pierre Cravedi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-06-20       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  In vitro impact of five pesticides alone or in combination on human intestinal cell line Caco-2.

Authors:  Sylvain Ilboudo; Edwin Fouche; Virginie Rizzati; Adama M Toé; Laurence Gamet-Payrastre; Pierre I Guissou
Journal:  Toxicol Rep       Date:  2014-07-25

8.  Metabolite Patterns in Human Myeloid Hematopoiesis Result from Lineage-Dependent Active Metabolic Pathways.

Authors:  Lars Kaiser; Helga Weinschrott; Isabel Quint; Markus Blaess; René Csuk; Manfred Jung; Matthias Kohl; Hans-Peter Deigner
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-08-24       Impact factor: 5.923

  8 in total

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