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Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish

Bisphenol-A is an important environmental contaminant due to the increased early-life exposure that may pose significant health-risks to various organisms including humans. This study aimed to use zebrafish as a toxicogenomic model to capture transcriptomic and phenotypic changes for inference of si...

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Autores principales: Lam, Siew Hong, Hlaing, Mya Myintzu, Zhang, Xiaoyan, Yan, Chuan, Duan, Zhenghua, Zhu, Lin, Ung, Choong Yong, Mathavan, Sinnakaruppan, Ong, Choon Nam, Gong, Zhiyuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3237442/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22194820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0028273
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author Lam, Siew Hong
Hlaing, Mya Myintzu
Zhang, Xiaoyan
Yan, Chuan
Duan, Zhenghua
Zhu, Lin
Ung, Choong Yong
Mathavan, Sinnakaruppan
Ong, Choon Nam
Gong, Zhiyuan
author_facet Lam, Siew Hong
Hlaing, Mya Myintzu
Zhang, Xiaoyan
Yan, Chuan
Duan, Zhenghua
Zhu, Lin
Ung, Choong Yong
Mathavan, Sinnakaruppan
Ong, Choon Nam
Gong, Zhiyuan
author_sort Lam, Siew Hong
collection PubMed
description Bisphenol-A is an important environmental contaminant due to the increased early-life exposure that may pose significant health-risks to various organisms including humans. This study aimed to use zebrafish as a toxicogenomic model to capture transcriptomic and phenotypic changes for inference of signaling pathways, biological processes, physiological systems and identify potential biomarker genes that are affected by early-life exposure to bisphenol-A. Phenotypic analysis using wild-type zebrafish larvae revealed BPA early-life exposure toxicity caused cardiac edema, cranio-facial abnormality, failure of swimbladder inflation and poor tactile response. Fluorescent imaging analysis using three transgenic lines revealed suppressed neuron branching from the spinal cord, abnormal development of neuromast cells, and suppressed vascularization in the abdominal region. Using knowledge-based data mining algorithms, transcriptome analysis suggests that several signaling pathways involving ephrin receptor, clathrin-mediated endocytosis, synaptic long-term potentiation, axonal guidance, vascular endothelial growth factor, integrin and tight junction were deregulated. Physiological systems with related disorders associated with the nervous, cardiovascular, skeletal-muscular, blood and reproductive systems were implicated, hence corroborated with the phenotypic analysis. Further analysis identified a common set of BPA-targeted genes and revealed a plausible mechanism involving disruption of endocrine-regulated genes and processes in known susceptible tissue-organs. The expression of 28 genes were validated in a separate experiment using quantitative real-time PCR and 6 genes, ncl1, apoeb, mdm1, mycl1b, sp4, U1SNRNPBP homolog, were found to be sensitive and robust biomarkers for BPA early-life exposure toxicity. The susceptibility of sp4 to BPA perturbation suggests its role in altering brain development, function and subsequently behavior observed in laboratory animals exposed to BPA during early life, which is a health-risk concern of early life exposure in humans. The present study further established zebrafish as a model for toxicogenomic inference of early-life chemical exposure toxicity.
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spelling pubmed-32374422011-12-22 Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish Lam, Siew Hong Hlaing, Mya Myintzu Zhang, Xiaoyan Yan, Chuan Duan, Zhenghua Zhu, Lin Ung, Choong Yong Mathavan, Sinnakaruppan Ong, Choon Nam Gong, Zhiyuan PLoS One Research Article Bisphenol-A is an important environmental contaminant due to the increased early-life exposure that may pose significant health-risks to various organisms including humans. This study aimed to use zebrafish as a toxicogenomic model to capture transcriptomic and phenotypic changes for inference of signaling pathways, biological processes, physiological systems and identify potential biomarker genes that are affected by early-life exposure to bisphenol-A. Phenotypic analysis using wild-type zebrafish larvae revealed BPA early-life exposure toxicity caused cardiac edema, cranio-facial abnormality, failure of swimbladder inflation and poor tactile response. Fluorescent imaging analysis using three transgenic lines revealed suppressed neuron branching from the spinal cord, abnormal development of neuromast cells, and suppressed vascularization in the abdominal region. Using knowledge-based data mining algorithms, transcriptome analysis suggests that several signaling pathways involving ephrin receptor, clathrin-mediated endocytosis, synaptic long-term potentiation, axonal guidance, vascular endothelial growth factor, integrin and tight junction were deregulated. Physiological systems with related disorders associated with the nervous, cardiovascular, skeletal-muscular, blood and reproductive systems were implicated, hence corroborated with the phenotypic analysis. Further analysis identified a common set of BPA-targeted genes and revealed a plausible mechanism involving disruption of endocrine-regulated genes and processes in known susceptible tissue-organs. The expression of 28 genes were validated in a separate experiment using quantitative real-time PCR and 6 genes, ncl1, apoeb, mdm1, mycl1b, sp4, U1SNRNPBP homolog, were found to be sensitive and robust biomarkers for BPA early-life exposure toxicity. The susceptibility of sp4 to BPA perturbation suggests its role in altering brain development, function and subsequently behavior observed in laboratory animals exposed to BPA during early life, which is a health-risk concern of early life exposure in humans. The present study further established zebrafish as a model for toxicogenomic inference of early-life chemical exposure toxicity. Public Library of Science 2011-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3237442/ /pubmed/22194820 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0028273 Text en Lam et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lam, Siew Hong
Hlaing, Mya Myintzu
Zhang, Xiaoyan
Yan, Chuan
Duan, Zhenghua
Zhu, Lin
Ung, Choong Yong
Mathavan, Sinnakaruppan
Ong, Choon Nam
Gong, Zhiyuan
Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish
title Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish
title_full Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish
title_fullStr Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish
title_full_unstemmed Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish
title_short Toxicogenomic and Phenotypic Analyses of Bisphenol-A Early-Life Exposure Toxicity in Zebrafish
title_sort toxicogenomic and phenotypic analyses of bisphenol-a early-life exposure toxicity in zebrafish
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3237442/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22194820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0028273
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