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Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse

Tartrazine is a food colour that activates the transcriptional function of the human oestrogen receptor alpha in an in vitro cell model. Since oestrogens are cholestatic, we hypothesised tartrazine will cause periportal injury to the liver in vivo. To test this hypothesis, tartrazine was initially a...

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Autores principales: Meyer, Stephanie K., Probert, Philip M.E., Lakey, Anne F., Axon, Andrew R., Leitch, Alistair C., Williams, Faith M., Jowsey, Paul A., Blain, Peter G., Kass, George E.N., Wright, Matthew C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5429395/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28356238
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxlet.2017.03.024
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author Meyer, Stephanie K.
Probert, Philip M.E.
Lakey, Anne F.
Axon, Andrew R.
Leitch, Alistair C.
Williams, Faith M.
Jowsey, Paul A.
Blain, Peter G.
Kass, George E.N.
Wright, Matthew C.
author_facet Meyer, Stephanie K.
Probert, Philip M.E.
Lakey, Anne F.
Axon, Andrew R.
Leitch, Alistair C.
Williams, Faith M.
Jowsey, Paul A.
Blain, Peter G.
Kass, George E.N.
Wright, Matthew C.
author_sort Meyer, Stephanie K.
collection PubMed
description Tartrazine is a food colour that activates the transcriptional function of the human oestrogen receptor alpha in an in vitro cell model. Since oestrogens are cholestatic, we hypothesised tartrazine will cause periportal injury to the liver in vivo. To test this hypothesis, tartrazine was initially administered systemically to mice resulting in a periportal recruitment of inflammatory cells, increased serum alkaline phosphatase activity and mild periportal fibrosis. To determine whether an oestrogenic effect may be a key event in this response, tartrazine, sulphonated metabolites and a food additive contaminant were screened for their ability to interact with murine oestrogen receptors. In all cases, there were no interactions as agonists or antagonists and further, no oestrogenicity was observed with tartrazine in an in vivo uterine growth assay. To examine the relevance of the hepatic effects of tartrazine to its use as a food additive, tartrazine was orally administered to transgenic NF-κB-Luc mice. Pre- and concurrent oral treatment with alcohol was incorporated given its potential to promote gut permeability and hepatic inflammation. Tartrazine alone induced NF- κB activities in the colon and liver but there was no periportal recruitment of inflammatory cells or fibrosis. Tartrazine, its sulphonated metabolites and the contaminant inhibited sulphotransferase activities in murine hepatic S9 extracts. Given the role of sulfotransferases in bile acid excretion, the initiating event giving rise to periportal inflammation and subsequent hepatic pathology through systemic tartrazine exposure is therefore potentially associated an inhibition of bile acid sulphation and excretion and not on oestrogen receptor-mediated transcriptional function. However, these effects were restricted to systemic exposures to tartrazine and did not occur to any significant effect after oral exposure.
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spelling pubmed-54293952017-05-19 Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse Meyer, Stephanie K. Probert, Philip M.E. Lakey, Anne F. Axon, Andrew R. Leitch, Alistair C. Williams, Faith M. Jowsey, Paul A. Blain, Peter G. Kass, George E.N. Wright, Matthew C. Toxicol Lett Article Tartrazine is a food colour that activates the transcriptional function of the human oestrogen receptor alpha in an in vitro cell model. Since oestrogens are cholestatic, we hypothesised tartrazine will cause periportal injury to the liver in vivo. To test this hypothesis, tartrazine was initially administered systemically to mice resulting in a periportal recruitment of inflammatory cells, increased serum alkaline phosphatase activity and mild periportal fibrosis. To determine whether an oestrogenic effect may be a key event in this response, tartrazine, sulphonated metabolites and a food additive contaminant were screened for their ability to interact with murine oestrogen receptors. In all cases, there were no interactions as agonists or antagonists and further, no oestrogenicity was observed with tartrazine in an in vivo uterine growth assay. To examine the relevance of the hepatic effects of tartrazine to its use as a food additive, tartrazine was orally administered to transgenic NF-κB-Luc mice. Pre- and concurrent oral treatment with alcohol was incorporated given its potential to promote gut permeability and hepatic inflammation. Tartrazine alone induced NF- κB activities in the colon and liver but there was no periportal recruitment of inflammatory cells or fibrosis. Tartrazine, its sulphonated metabolites and the contaminant inhibited sulphotransferase activities in murine hepatic S9 extracts. Given the role of sulfotransferases in bile acid excretion, the initiating event giving rise to periportal inflammation and subsequent hepatic pathology through systemic tartrazine exposure is therefore potentially associated an inhibition of bile acid sulphation and excretion and not on oestrogen receptor-mediated transcriptional function. However, these effects were restricted to systemic exposures to tartrazine and did not occur to any significant effect after oral exposure. Elsevier 2017-05-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5429395/ /pubmed/28356238 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxlet.2017.03.024 Text en © 2017 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Meyer, Stephanie K.
Probert, Philip M.E.
Lakey, Anne F.
Axon, Andrew R.
Leitch, Alistair C.
Williams, Faith M.
Jowsey, Paul A.
Blain, Peter G.
Kass, George E.N.
Wright, Matthew C.
Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
title Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
title_full Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
title_fullStr Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
title_full_unstemmed Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
title_short Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
title_sort hepatic effects of tartrazine (e 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5429395/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28356238
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxlet.2017.03.024
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