| Literature DB >> 30307967 |
Lesa A Thompson1, Yoshinori Ikenaka1,2, Wageh S Darwish1,3, Yared B Yohannes1,4, Johan J van Vuren2, Victor Wepener2, Nico J Smit2, Atnafu G Assefa1,4, Ahmed Tharwat1,3, Walaa Fathy Saad Eldin5, Shouta M M Nakayama1, Hazuki Mizukawa6, Mayumi Ishizuka1.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to identify potential mRNA expression changes in chicken livers associated with environmental exposure to dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) and its metabolites (DDTs). In particular, we focused on genes relating to the immune system and metabolism. We analyzed liver samples from free-ranging chickens in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, for contamination by DDTs. This area predominantly uses DDT in its malaria control program, and homes are sprayed annually with the pesticide. Genes relating to the immune system and metabolism were selected as potential genetic biomarkers that could be linked to higher contamination with DDTs. RT-qPCR analysis on 39 samples showed strong correlations between DDTs contamination and mRNA expression for the following genes: AvBD1, AvBD2, AvBD6 and AvBD7 (down-regulated), and CYP17, ELOVL2 and SQLE (up-regulated). This study shows for the first time interesting and significant correlations between genetic material collected from environmentally-exposed chickens and mRNA expression of several genes involved in immunity and metabolism. These findings show the usefulness of analysis on field samples from a region with high levels of environmental contamination in detecting potential biomarkers of exposure. In particular, we observed clear effects from DDT contamination on mRNA expression of genes involved in immune suppression, endocrine-disrupting effects, and lipid dysregulation. These results are of interest in guiding future studies to further elucidate the pathways involved in and clinical importance of toxicity associated with DDT exposure from contaminated environments, to ascertain the health risk to livestock and any subsequent risks to food security for people.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30307967 PMCID: PMC6181288 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0204400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Map of region showing sampling sites in the northern part of KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa.
Biometric data for chickens sampled in KwaZulu-Natal for this study.
| Mean | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| Estimated age (months) | 13 ± 7 | 7–30 |
| Weight (kg) | 1.5 ± 0.4 | 0.9–2.8 |
| Body condition score | 2 ± 0.7 | 0–3 |
| Lipid % in liver samples | 3.8 ± 2.2 | 0.3–7.9 |
| Supplied diet | Maize (home-grown or shop-bought), leftovers, rice, bread, fresh vegetables | |
| Source | Shemula (11), Makanis (9), Ndumo (8), Mzondi (6), Mamfene (5) | |
N/K = not known
1. Age estimation by owner at time of purchase.
2. Body weights for chickens are ante-mortem.
3. Based on Gregory and Robins 0–3 scale for layer hens [47].
4. Diet supplied by owner in addition to chickens foraging around the homestead.
qRT-PCR primer sequence information used in this study.
| Gene | Sequence | Product size (bp) | Amplification efficiency (%) | Slope factor | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accession number | Forward | Reverse | ||||
| 145 | 92.24 | -3.52 | ||||
| 127 | 98.76 | -3.35 | ||||
| 95 | 96.96 | -3.40 | ||||
| 103 | 109.28 | -3.12 | ||||
| 164 | 96.65 | -3.41 | ||||
| 146 | 102.56 | -3.26 | ||||
| 71 | 101.82 | -3.28 | ||||
| 145 | 93.32 | -3.49 | ||||
| L08165 | 152 | 100.59 | -3.31 | |||
| 193 | 102.87 | -3.26 | ||||
Levels of DDT and metabolites detected in liver from free-ranging chickens in KwaZulu-Natal.
| ng/g wet weight | ng/g lipid weight | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | Range | Median | Range | |
| 692 | 18–10,537 | 20,186 | 289–227,891 | |
| 10 | <LOD—166 | 246 | <LOD—5,919 | |
| 89 | <LOD—1,840 | 2,929 | <LOD—47,273 | |
| 11 | <LOD—302 | 458 | <LOD—8,280 | |
| 54 | <LOD—1,923 | 1,333 | <LOD—18,756 | |
| Sum of DDTs | 919 | 36–14,398 | 29,235 | 555–288,928 |
Fig 2Correlation between mRNA expression and contamination levels (summed DDTs by wet weight).
Summed DDTs (ng/g wet weight, x-axis) are plotted against relative mRNA expression (y-axis). R2 values and p-values are shown.
Fig 3Principal components analysis of gene expression in chickens by summed DDTs concentrations.
The first axis explains 58.4% of the variance in the data, showing strong negative correlation between DDTs contamination and beta-defensin mRNA expression, and strong positive correlation with mRNA expression relating to metabolism (CYP17A1, ELOVL2 and SQLE). Key: AvBD1 (avian beta-defensin 1), AvBD2 (avian beta-defensin 2), AvBD6 (avian beta-defensin 6), AvBD7 (avian beta-defensin 7), IGFBP1 (insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 1), ELOVL2 (elongation of very long chain fatty acids elongase 2), SQLE (squalene epoxidase), CYP17A1 (cytochrome P450 Family 17 Subfamily A Member 1).
Correlation between DDT congeners and mRNA expression in KwaZulu-Natal chicken livers.
*A p-value of <0.05 was considered significant.
| Gene | Regression statistics (R-squared ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.0033 (0.7264) | 0.0920 (0.0604) | 0.0187 (0.4060) | 0.0975 (0.0529) | ||
| 0.1154 (0.0344) | 0.0550 (0.1507) | ||||
| 0.0522 (0.1617) | 0.0680 (0.1089) | 0.0761 (0.0891) | |||
| 0.0210 (0.3789) | 0.0078 (0.5939) | 0.0059 (0.6412) | 0.0045 (0.6838) | 0.0475 (0.1825) | |
| 0.0589 (0.1367) | 0.0420 (0.2105) | ||||
| 0.0363 (0.2451) | |||||
| 0.0570 (0.1432) | 0.0240 (0.3464) | ||||