| Literature DB >> 29632997 |
Christopher J Borgert1, John C Matthews2, Stephen P Baker3.
Abstract
The European Commission has recently proposed draft criteria for the identification of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) that pose a significant hazard to humans or the environment. Identifying and characterizing toxic hazards based on the manner by which adverse effects are produced rather than on the nature of those adverse effects departs from traditional practice and requires a proper interpretation of the evidence regarding the chemical's ability to produce physiological effect(s) via a specific mode of action (MoA). The ability of any chemical to produce a physiological effect depends on its pharmacokinetics and the potency by which it acts via the various MoAs that can lead to the particular effect. A chemical's potency for a specific MoA-its mechanistic potency-is determined by two properties: (1) its affinity for the functional components that comprise the MoA, i.e., its specific receptors, enzymes, transporters, transcriptional elements, etc., and (2) its ability to alter the functional state of those components (activity). Using the agonist MoA via estrogen receptor alpha, we illustrate an empirical method for determining a human-relevant potency threshold (HRPT), defined as the minimum level of mechanistic potency necessary for a chemical to be able to act via a particular MoA in humans. One important use for an HRPT is to distinguish between chemicals that may be capable of, versus those likely to be incapable of, producing adverse effects in humans via the specified MoA. The method involves comparing chemicals that have different ERα agonist potencies with the ability of those chemicals to produce ERα-mediated agonist responses in human clinical trials. Based on this approach, we propose an HRPT for ERα agonism of 1E-04 relative to the potency of the endogenous estrogenic hormone 17β-estradiol or the pharmaceutical estrogen, 17α-ethinylestradiol. This approach provides a practical way to address Hazard Identification according to the draft criteria for identification of EDCs recently proposed by the European Commission.Entities:
Keywords: Endocrine disruptor/disruption; Estrogen system; European Commission; HRPT; Hazard identification; Potency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29632997 PMCID: PMC5962616 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-018-2186-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Relative potencies calculatedA from published human ERα transactivation results
| Chemical | Mean | Median | Range | Data sources |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hormones | ||||
| 17β-estradiol | 1.0E+00 | All sources | ||
| Estrone | 3.5E−02 | 2.9E−02 | 1.0E−02 to 7.5E−02 | B, K1, K2, K3, P, Y |
| Estriol | 1.4E−01 | 8.3E−02 | 3.3E−02 to 4E−01 | B, K1, K2, K3, P |
| Pharmaceuticals | ||||
| 17α-estradiol | 2.6E−02 | 2.6E−02 | 5.3E−03 to 4.7E−02 | B, Y |
| 17α-ethinyl estradiol | 2.1E+00 | 1.3E+00 | 1.1E+00 to 5.7E+00 | B, K1, K2, K3, P, Y |
| Diethylstilbestrol | 2.0E+00 | 1.4E+00 | 2.5E−01 to 8.0E+00 | B, C, G, K1, K2, K3, L, O |
| Tamoxifen | 1.6E−05 | 8.3E−06 | 7.1E−07 to 4E−05 | K1, K2, K3 |
| Botanicals | ||||
| Equol | 2.4E−03 | 3.6E−04 | 1.8E−04 to 1E−02 | F, G, H, J, L, Q, S |
| Dehydroequol | NA | 6.3E−05 | NA | Q |
| Coumestrol | 8.3E−03 | 1.0E−03 | 4.0E−05 to 8.0E−02 | B, C, G, J, K1, K2, K3, L, P, S, U |
| Genistein | 1.3E−03 | 4.5E−04 | 1.2E−05 to 1.0E−02 | B, C, D, E, F, H, J, K1, K2, K3, L, N1, N2, O, P, Q, S, T, U, Y |
| Genistein glucuronide | NA | 6.7E−07 | NA | T |
| Daidzein | 1.8E−04 | 4.7E−05 | 2.7E−06 to 9.7E−04 | B, C, D, E, F, H, J, N1, N2, O, P, Q, S, T |
| Daidzein glucuronide | NA | 6.7E−08 | NA | T |
| | NA | 1.4E−04 | NA | S |
| 347-IF (daidzein metabolite) | 6.1E-05 | 6.1E−05 | 2.8E−06 to 1.2E−04 | L, S |
| 674-IF (daidzein metabolite) | NA | 6.0E−05 | NA | L |
| Resveratrol | 1.0E−04 | 1.0E−04 | 1.3E−07 to 2E−04 | L, S |
| Resveratrol-3- | NA | 1.4E−05 | NA | M |
| Biochanin A | 2.2E−04 | 1.5E−04 | 2.5E−06 to 6.2E−04 | C, D, E, F, H, J, P, S |
| Formononetin | 2.4E−04 | 2.4E−04 | 9.6E−06 to 4.9E−04 | D, E, F, J, S |
| Zearalenol | NA | 7.0E−02 | NA | C |
| Zearalenone | 4.5E−01 | 3.4E−01 | 5.1E−03 to 1E+00 | C, L, Y |
| Enterolactone | 4.7E−05 | 2.1E−06 | 1.0E−07 to 1.4E−04 | S, L, V |
| Enterodiol | NA | 3.5E−07 | NA | S |
| Sesamol | NA | 2.0E−06 | NA | V |
| Sesamin | 3.3E−05 | 2.3E−05 | 2E−07 to 7.7E−05 | H, J, V |
| Sesamolin | NA | 6.7E−08 | NA | V |
| Apigenin | 9.7E−05 | 9.7E−05 | 3.4E−06 to 1.9E−04 | J, S |
| Naringenin | 6.1E−05 | 2.3E−05 | 1.9E−06 to 2E−04 | C, H, J, S, W2 |
| 8-Prenylnaringenin (8-PN) | 7.0E−02 | 8.6E−02 | 1E−02 to 1E−01 | W1, W2, X1, X2 |
| 6-(l,l-dimethylallyl)naringenin | 1.3E−02 | 1.7E−03 | 1E−03 to 1E−02 | W1, W2, X2 |
| 8-PN-OH (metabolite of 8-PN) | 2.1E−03 | 2.1E−03 | 1E−01 to 3.1E−03 | X1, X2 |
| 8-PN-O (metabolite of 8-PN) | NA | 1.4E−03 | NA | X1 |
| α-Erythroidin | 1.1E−03 | 1.1E−03 | 1.0E−03 to 1.2E−03 | R1, R2 |
| β-Erythroidin | 5.0E−04 | 5.0E−04 | 5E−04 to 5E−04 | R1, R2 |
| Androgens | ||||
| Testosterone | NA | 7.1E−06 | NA | B |
| Dihydrotestosterone | NA | 9.6E−06 | NA | Y |
| Methyltestosterone | NA | 2.5E−06 | NA | B |
| 19-Nortestosterone | NA | 4.7E−06 | NA | B |
| Test case chemical | ||||
| D4 | NA | 5.0E-06 | NA | I |
Individual potency values for this table are found in electronic supplementary material
AUnless provided in the publication, Relative Potencies were derived by dividing an EC% value of the primary endogenous human estrogen, 17β-estradiol, by the equivalent EC% value of each chemical. EC% values were either extracted from tables or interpolated from figures. Where necessary, concentrations were adjusted to better approximate equivalent EC% values. NA not applicable
BValues derived from Table 4-1; ICCVAM 2011. [BG1Luc]
CValues derived from Table 3; Jefferson et al. 2002. [BG1Luc]
DValues derived from Table 2; Dornstauder et al. 2001. [YES]
EValues derived from Table 3; Beck et al. 2003. [YES]
FValues derived from Table 2; Pfitscher et al. 2008. [YES]
GValues derived from Fig. 1; Coldham et al. 1997. [YES]
HValues derived from Table 1; Breinholt and Larsen 1998. [YES]
IValues taken from Fig. 4; Quinn et al. 2007. [MCF-7]
JValues from Table 3; Procházková et al. 2017. [HeLa-9903]
KValues from Table 2; Gutendorf and Westendorf 2001
LValues from Fig. 3a RP ratios; Mueller et al. 2004. [Ishikawa EREα]
MValues from Table 1; Ruotolo et al. 2013. [YES]
NValues from Fig. 1; Chrzan and Bradford 2007. [N-1: MCF-7 / N-2: G-292]
OValues from Table 1; Chu et al. 2009. [YES-SRC-1]
PValues from Table 2; Escande et al. 2006. [HELN]
QValues from Table 2; De Angelis et al. 2005. [HEC-1]
RValues from Figs. 2, 3; Djiogue et al. 2014. [R-1: MVLN / R-2: U2OS]
SValues from Table 1; Takeuchi et al. 2009. [CHO]
TValues from Table 1; Islam et al. 2015. [U2OS]
UValues from Table 2; Harris et al. 2005. [MCF-7]
VValues from Pianjing et al. 2011. [TD47-KBLuc]
WValues from Zierau et al. 2002. [W-1: YES / W-2: MVLN]
XValues from Zierau et al. 2004. [X-1: YES / X-2: MVLN]
YValues from Table 1 (PC10, PC50), Yamasaki et al. 2002b. [HeLa229]
Uterotrophic relative potencies calculated* from values reported in the literature
*Unless provided in the publication, Relative Potencies (RP) were derived by dividing an EC% value (listed or estimated) of the reference chemical 1,2,3 by the equivalent EC% value (listed or estimated) of each test chemical. EC% values were either extracted from tables or interpolated from figures. Where necessary, concentrations were adjusted to better approximate equivalent EC% values. ND not different than control
1Estradiol-17β (E2) used as reference chemical for calculation of relative potencies
2Ethinyl estradiol-17α (EE) used as reference chemical for calculation of relative potencies
3Diethylstilbestrol (DES) used as reference chemical for calculation of relative potencies
aHigh content of genistin/genistein/glycitein
bLow content of genistin/genistein/glycitein
AJefferson et al. (2002). CD-I immature mice; SQ injection; dose range 0.01–1000 000 ng/kg/day
BLomnitski et al. (2003). Immature CD-I mice; SQ injection; 500 and 500,000 μg/kg/day
CSwankar et al. (2012). Ovariectomized Balb/cByJ mice; SQ injection; 5 mg/kg/day
DHe et al. (2003). Ovariectomized B6C3F1 mice; oral dose; 1, 10, 50, 100, 250, 500, 1000 mg/kg
ESong et al. (1999). Immature B6D2F1 mice; oral gavage; 3 mg/day
FSelvarag et al. (2004). Ovariectomized age-matched C57BL/6 mice; SQ injection 0, 4, 8, 12, 20 mg/kg/day or in the diet 0, 500, 1000 ppm for 12 days
GColdham et al. (1997). Prepubertal CFLP mice; SQ injection; DES doses of 0.5, 5, 50 ng; coumestrol doses of 1, 10, 100 μg
HRachon et al. (2007). Ovariectomized SD rats; in diet; 400 mg/kg of chow
JMcKim et al. (2001). Immature Sprague-Dawleyc and Fischer − 344d rats; oral gavage; 10, 50, 100, 250, 500, 1000 mg/kg/day
KYamasaki et al. (2002a). Immature Crj:CD(SD) rats; SQ injection; 0.6 ng/kg/day (EE) − 30 mg/kg/day (Genistein)
LSchmidt et al. (2006). Ovariectomized Wistar rats; oral dose by gastric tube; 100 mg/kg
Mde Lima Toccafondo Vieira et al. (2008). Immature Wistar rats; oral gavage; doses 125, 300, 720, 1730, 4150 mg/kg/day
NPunt et al. (2013). Immature rats, SQ injection of 35 mg/kg/day
OBarlas et al. (2014). Immature Wistar rats; oral gavage; 1, 10, 100 mg/kg/day
PYamasaki et al. 2003. Immature Crj:CD(SD) rats; SQ injection; 0.6 ng/kg/day–40 mg/kg/day
QYamasaki et al. (2002b). Immature Crj:CD(SD) rats; SQ injection; 0.2 ng/kg/day–200 mg/kg/day
RKeiler et al. (2015). Immature Lewis rats; SQ injection; 4 μg/kg/day–15 mg/kg/day, e6-(l,l-dimethylallyl)naringenin
SOverk et al. (2008). Ovariectomized Sprague Dawley rats, 200 g body weight. 50 μg/kg/day E2; 4 mg/kg/day (8-PN); 4-400 mg/kg/day (extracts). Chemicals measured in plasma (< 0.5–3.7 ng/mL), liver (< 2–4.4 ng/g) and mammary gland (< 3–0.6 ng/g). fMetabolite of 8-prenylnaringenin
Estrogenic efficacy of flaxseed/linoleic acid
| Estrogenic endpoint | In vitro activity | In vivo effects | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rodents | Women | ||
| Cell proliferation (MCF-7/MDA-MB-231) | ✓ [1] | ||
| Cell proliferation (non-breast cell lines) | − [1] | ||
| Alkaline phosphatase activity | − [2] | ||
| Prog-RmRNA induction | ✓ [2] | ||
| Era binding | ✓ [2] | ||
| Erp binding | ✓ [2] | ||
| Uterine columnar luminal epithelial | ✓ [5] | ||
| Enhanced responses to low-dose E2 | − [5] | ||
| Uterine cell proliferation | − [5] | ||
| Enhanced responses to low-dose E2 | − [5] | ||
| Serum El, El-sulfate, E2 | − [3] | ||
| Serum deoxypyridinoline (free-DPD) | − [3] | ||
| Bone-specific alkaline phosphatase | − [3] | ||
| Urinary estrogen metabolites altered | ✓ [3] | ||
| Blood E2 | − [4] | ||
| Blood FSH | − [4] | ||
| Vaginal epithelial thickness | − [4] | ||
| Endometrial thickness | − [4] | ||
| Kupperman Index (paired | ✓ [4] | ||
| Kupperman Index (Anova) | − [4] | ||
✓ Activity; – No Activity; [1] Rose and Connolly (1989); [2] Liu et al. (2004); [3] Brooks et al. (2004); [4] Colli et al. (2012); [5] Sacco et al. (2012)
Human effects of soy foods and soy isoflavones
| Estrogen-related endpoint | Dose/subjects | Result | Receptor involvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Messina ( | |||
| Bone mineral density | 24,403 PM Asian women/>10 g/day soy protein | No effect | ERα, ERB |
| Hip fracture risk reduction | 28–37% | ERα, ERβ; Calcium | |
| Hip fracture risk reduction | 35,241 PM Asian women/>10 g/day soy protein | 21–36% | ERα, ERβ; calcium |
| Hip fracture risk reduction | 307 PM women | 56% | ERα, ERβ; calcium |
| Reduced hot flashes | 60 clinical trials/various products | Mixed | ERα, ERβ |
| Reduced hot flashes | > 50 mg/day total isoflavones for > 12 weeks | ~ 50% | ERα, ERβ |
| Reduced hot flashes | > 19 mg/day genistein dose threshold | 29% | ERα, ERβ |
| Reduced hot flashes | < 19 mg/day genistein dose threshold | 12% | ERα, ERβ |
| EFSA ( | |||
| Breast tissue morphology | No adverse effects | ERα, ERβ | |
| Breast tissue; disease progression | 2216 women: 4 epidemiology studies of high isoflavone intake 816 women: intervention trials of soy food supplements | No adverse effects | ERα, ERβ |
| Uterine endometrial thickness | No change | ERα, ERβ | |
Fig. 1Human-relevant potency threshold for the ERα-agonist MoA