| Literature DB >> 29755963 |
Steven D Forsythe1, Mahesh Devarasetty1, Thomas Shupe1, Colin Bishop1, Anthony Atala1,2, Shay Soker1,2,3,4, Aleksander Skardal1,2,3,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Environmental toxins, such as lead and other heavy metals, pesticides, and other compounds, represent a significant health concern within the USA and around the world. Even in the twenty-first century, a plethora of cities and towns in the U.S. have suffered from exposures to lead in drinking water or other heavy metals in food or the earth, while there is a high possibility of further places to suffer such exposures in the near future.Entities:
Keywords: cardiomyocytes; environmental toxins; hepatocytes; organoids; three dimensional; tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
Year: 2018 PMID: 29755963 PMCID: PMC5932352 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2018.00103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Summary of the effects of the environmental toxins on liver spheroids.
| Environmental toxins on liver organoids | Range of doses | Live/dead effective dose | ATP IC50 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glyphosate | 25 µM–25 mM | 250 µM–2.5 mM | 10.53 mM |
| Lead | 10 µM–10 mM | 100 µM–1 mM | 2.98 mM |
| Mercury | 200 nM–200 µM | 2–20 µM | 30.8 µM |
| Thallium | 10 nM–10 µM | 1–10 µM | 13.5 µM |
Effective dose for live/dead imaging is summarized as a qualitative measure of rapid cell death detected in images.
Summary of the effects of the environmental toxins on cardiac spheroids.
| Environmental toxins on cardiac organoids | Range of Doses | Live/Dead Effective Dose | IC50 | Heart beat effective dose at 30 min | Heart beat effective dose at 24 h | Heart beat effective dose at 48 h |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glyphosate | 25 µM–25 mM | 2.5–25 mM | 10.85 mM | 2.5 mM | 2.5 mM | 2.5 mM |
| Lead | 10 µM–10 mM | 1–10 mM | 2.45 mM | 10 mM | 100 µM | 100 µM |
| Mercury | 200 nM–200 µM | 2–20 µM | 44 µM | 2 µM | 2 µM | 2 µM |
| Thallium | 10 nM–10 µM | 10–100 µM | 1.35 µM | 10 µM | 1 µM | 1 µM |
Effective dose for live/dead imaging is summarized as a qualitative measure of rapid cell death detected in images. Effective dose for heart beat assay at each time point is described by a p-value of 0.05.
Figure 1Visual assessment of environmental toxin effects on liver organoids by live/dead assay. The effects of glyphosate, lead, mercury, and thallium on liver organoids using ethidium homodimer dead (red) and calcein AM live (green) staining. Scale bars are equal to 100 µm.
Figure 2Visual assessment of environmental toxin effects on cardiac organoids by live/dead assay. The effects of glyphosate, lead, mercury, and thallium on cardiac organoids using ethidium homodimer dead (red) and calcein AM live (green) staining. Scale bars are equal to 100 µm.
Figure 3Environmental toxin effects on liver organoid ATP activity. ATP survival curves for liver organoids exposed to glyphosate (A), lead (B), mercury (C), and thallium (D) over the course of two days. Adjusted ATP activity is a comparison of the ATP value of organoids exposed to toxins over the control liver organoids. Statistical significance: *p < 0.01 with bracket encompassing all doses with this value. IC50 value was determined through calculation of line crossing the IC50 marker.
Figure 4Environmental toxin effects on cardiac organoid ATP activity. Survival curves for cardiac organoids exposed to glyphosate (A), lead (B), mercury (C), and thallium (D) over the course of two days. Adjusted ATP activity is a comparison of the ATP value of organoids exposed to toxins over the control cardiac organoids. Statistical significance: *p < 0.01 with bracket encompassing all doses with this value. IC50 value was determined through calculation of line crossing the IC50 marker.
Figure 5Environmental toxin influence on cardiac organoid beating kinetics. Figure 4 demonstrates the effect of glyphosate (A), lead (B), mercury (C), and thallium (D) on cardiac organoid beat rate. All values (n = 3) were taken over 20 s videos and multiplied by three to find per minute. The adjusted rate is calculated by taking average value of each condition and dividing over the control average. A T-test was performed to determine significance between control rates and time after drug was added. Statistical significance: #p < 0.05 at 2 days; *p < 0.05 at 1 day; $p < 0.05 at 30 min.