| Literature DB >> 26029163 |
Marina Grimaldi1, Abdelhay Boulahtouf1, Vanessa Delfosse2, Erwan Thouennon1, William Bourguet2, Patrick Balaguer1.
Abstract
Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are exogenous substances interfering with hormone biosynthesis, metabolism, or action, and consequently causing disturbances in the endocrine system. Various pathways are activated by EDCs, including interactions with nuclear receptors (NRs), which are primary targets of numerous environmental contaminants. The main NRs targeted by environmental contaminants are the estrogen (ER α, β) and the androgen (AR) receptors. ERs and AR have pleiotropic regulatory roles in a diverse range of tissues, notably in the mammary gland, the uterus, and the prostate. Thus, dysfunctional ERs and AR signaling due to inappropriate exposure to environmental pollutants may lead to hormonal cancers and infertility. The pregnane X receptor (PXR) is also recognized by many environmental molecules. PXR has a protective role of the body through its ability to regulate proteins involved in the metabolism, the conjugation, and the transport of many exogenous and endogenous compounds. However, the permanent activation of this receptor by xenobiotics may lead to premature drug metabolism, the formation, and accumulation of toxic metabolites and defects in hormones homeostasis. The activity of other NRs can also be affected by environmental molecules. Compounds capable of inhibiting or activating the estrogen related (ERRγ), the thyroid hormone (TRα, β), the retinoid X receptors (RXRα, β, γ), and peroxisome proliferator-activated (PPAR α, γ) receptors have been identified and are highly suspected to promote developmental, reproductive, neurological, or metabolic diseases in humans and wildlife. In this review, we provide an overview of reporter cell lines established to characterize the human NR activities of a large panel of EDCs including natural as well as industrial compounds such as pesticides, plasticizers, surfactants, flame retardants, and cosmetics.Entities:
Keywords: environmental-disrupting compounds; nuclear receptors; reporter cell lines
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029163 PMCID: PMC4426785 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2015.00062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1General nuclear receptor structure and function. (A) Structural organization of NRs. NRs comprise six domains, including a N-terminal activation function domain, a central DNA binding domain, and a C-terminal ligand-binding domain carrying a ligand-dependant transcriptional function. (B) Schematic model of NR function. Before ligand binding, type I NRs form inactive complexes with chaperone proteins in the cytoplasm (AR) or in the nucleus (ERs) whereas type II NRs (RXR heterodimers) are bound to their target genes with corepressors. Ligand binding results in the dissociation of chaperone proteins and binding and activation to target genes for type I NRs. Ligand binding results in corepressors release and coactivator recruitment for type II NRs.
Nuclear receptor characterization.
| NR | Cellular localization in absence of ligand | Active form |
|---|---|---|
| ERα (NR3A1) | Nuclear | Homodimer |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | Nuclear | Homodimer |
| AR (NR3C4) | Cytoplasmic | Homodimer |
| ERRγ (NR3B3) | Nuclear | Monomer |
| PPARα (NR1C1) | Nuclear | RXR heterodimer |
| PPARγ (NR1C3) | Nuclear | RXR heterodimer |
| TRα (NR1A1) | Nuclear | RXR heterodimer |
| TRβ (NR1A2) | Nuclear | RXR heterodimer |
| PXR (NR1I2) | Nuclear | RXR heterodimer |
| RXRα (NR2B1) | Nuclear | Heterodimer or homodimer |
| RXRβ (NR2B2) | Nuclear | Heterodimer or homodimer |
| RXRγ (NR2B3) | Nuclear | Heterodimer or homodimer |
Nuclear receptor reporter cell lines developed to screen EDCs.
| NR | Cell type | Active NR | Reporter gene | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ERα (NR3A1) | MCF-7 | hERα | ERE-β-globin-luciferase | ( |
| T47-D | hERα | ERE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| BG1 | hERα | ERE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| BG1 | hERα | ERE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| U2OS | hERα | ERE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| 293 | hERα | ERE-MMTV-phosphatase | ( | |
| HS578T | hERα | ERE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | hERα | ERE-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | ΔAB-hERα | ERE-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | U2OS | hERβ | ERE3-TATA-luciferase | ( |
| 293 | hERβ | ERE-MMTV-phosphatase | ( | |
| HS578T | hERβ | ERE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | hERβ | ERE-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | ΔAB-hERβ | ERE-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| AR (NR3C4) | PC3 | hAR, hGR | MMTV-Luciferase | ( |
| MDA-MB-453 | hAR, hGR | MMTV-Luciferase | ( | |
| U2OS | hAR | ARE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | hARα ERα (DBD) | ERE-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| ERRγ (NR3B3) | HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-hERRγ (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( |
| PPARα (NRC1) | HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-hPPARα (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( |
| PPARβ (NRC2) | HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-hPPARβ (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( |
| PPARγ (NRC3) | U2OS | hPPARγ1 | PPARRE3-TATA-luciferase | ( |
| U2OS | hPPARγ2 | PPARRE3-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-hPPARγ (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| TRα (NR1A1) | GH3 | *rTRα, *rTRβ | DR42-TATA-luciferase | ( |
| PC12 | **cTRα | DR44-TATA-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-*rTRα (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| TRα (NR1A2) | HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-*rTRβ (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( |
| PXR (NR1I2) | HepG2 | hPXR | CYP3A4-luciferase | ( |
| HepG2 | hPXR | CYP3A4-luciferase | ( | |
| HepG2 | hPXR | CYP3A4-luciferase | ( | |
| HepG2 | hPXR | CYP3A4-luciferase | ( | |
| HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-hPXR (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( | |
| RXRα (NR2B1) | HeLa | GAL4 (DBD)-mRXRα (LBD) | GALRE5-β-globin-luciferase | ( |
WT, Wild type NR; ΔAB, AB domain-deleted NR; ERα DBD, NR within the DBD were replaced by the hERα DBD; GAL4 DBD-NR LBD, chimeric NR constituted by the yeast GAL4 DBD fused to the NR LBD; MMTV, mouse mammary tumor virus; CYP3A4, cytochrome P4510 3A4; *r, rat; **chicken.
Figure 2NR reporter cell establishment strategy. Different strategies to establish reporter cell lines have been used. The first consisted to transfect NR-positive cells with a NR-responsive reporter gene. When several NRs are able to activate the same promoter in a cell, an alternative strategy consists to transfect a chimeric NR-expressing plasmid. Cells are transfected by plasmids enabling the expression of the chimeric construct of the yeast GAL4 DBD fused to the NR LBD and the luciferase under the control of GAL4. Cells (ER negative) can also be transfected by a plasmid enabling the expression of a chimeric NR in which the DBD was replaced by the one of ERα and the luciferase gene under the control of estrogens. The third strategy consisted to transfect NR-negative cells in a first step by an NR-responsive reporter gene and in a second step by an NR-expressing plasmid.
EDCs and their NR targets.
| EDCs | NR targets | EC50 range | Lead compound | Nature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mycoestrogens | ERα (NR3A1) | 0.01–1 nM | Zearalenone | Full agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 0.01–1 nM | Zearalenone | Partial agonist | |
| AR (NR3C4) | 1–10 μM | Zearalenone | Antagonist | |
| PXR (NR1I2) | 1–10 μM | Zearalenone | Full agonist | |
| Phytoestrogens | ERα (NR3A1) | 0.1–1 μM | Genistein | Full agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 0.01–0.1 μM | Genistein | Partial agonist | |
| Parabens | ERα (NR3A1) | 1–10 μM | Butyl paraben | Full agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 1–10 μM | Butyl paraben | Full agonist | |
| Benzophenones | ERα (NR3A1) | 0.1–1 μM | Benzophenone-2 | Full agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 0.1–1 μM | Benzophenone-2 | Full agonist | |
| AR (NR3C4) | 1–10 μM | THB | Antagonist | |
| Bisphenols | ERα (NR3A1) | 0.01–1 μM | BPA | Partial agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 0.01–1 μM | BPA | Partial agonist | |
| AR (NR3C4) | 0.01–1 μM | BPA | Antagonist | |
| ERRγ (NR3B3) | 0.001–0.1 μM | BPA | Agonist | |
| PXR (NR1I2) | 1–10 μM | BPA | Agonist | |
| Halogenated bisphenols | ERα (NR3A1) | 0.1–10 μM | TetrachloroBPA | Partial agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 0.1–10 μM | TetrachloroBPA | Partial agonist | |
| PPARγ (NR1C3) | 1–10 μM | TetrabromoBPA | Partial agonist | |
| TRα (NR1A1) | 1–10 μM | TetrabromoBPA | Antagonist | |
| TRβ (NR1A2) | 1–10 μM | TetrabromoBPA | Antagonist | |
| Alkylphenols | ERα (NR3A1) | 0.01–1 μM | 4-tert-Octylphenol | Agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 0.01–1 μM | 4-tert-Octylphenol | Partial agonist | |
| AR (NR3C4) | 1–10 μM | 4-tert-Octylphenol | Antagonist | |
| ERRγ (NR3B3) | 1–10 μM | 4-tert-Octylphenol | Antagonist | |
| PXR (NR1I2) | 1–10 μM | 4-tert-Octylphenol | Agonist | |
| Phthalates | ERα (NR3A1) | 1–10 μM | BBP | Agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 1–10 μM | BBP | Partial agonist | |
| PPARα (NR1C1) | 1–100 μM | MEHP | Agonist | |
| PPARγ (NR1C3) | 1–100 μM | MEHP | Agonist | |
| Perfluorinated compounds | PPARα (NR1C1) | 1–100 μM | PFOA | Agonist |
| PPARγ (NR1C3) | 1–100 μM | PFOA | Agonist | |
| Pesticides | ERα (NR3A1) | 0.1–10 μM | 2,4′-DDE | Agonist |
| ERβ (NR3A2) | 0.1–10 μM | 2,4′-DDE | Partial agonist | |
| AR (NR3C4) | 0.1–1 μM | M2 vinclozolin | Partial agonist | |
| PXR (NR1I2) | 0.1–10 μM | Pretilachlor | Agonist | |
| Organotins | PPARγ (NR1C3) | 1–10 nM | TBT | Partial agonist |
| RXRα (NR2B1) | 1–10 nM | TBT | Agonist | |
THB, trihydroxy-benzophenone; BPA, bisphenol A; BBP, benzyl butyl phthalate; MEHP, mono ethyl hexyl phthalate; PFOA, perfluorinated octanoic acid; DDE, dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene; TBT, tributyltin.