Hydroxylated metabolites of the polybrominated diphenyl ether mixture DE-71 are weak estrogen receptor-alpha ligands.

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TítuloHydroxylated metabolites of the polybrominated diphenyl ether mixture DE-71 are weak estrogen receptor-alpha ligands.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AutoresMercado-Feliciano, M, Bigsby, RM
JournalEnviron Health Perspect
Volume116
Issue10
Pagination1315-21
Date Published2008 Oct
ISSN0091-6765
Palabras claveAnimals, Biotransformation, Estrogen Receptor alpha, Genes, Reporter, Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers, Hydroxylation, Ligands, Microsomes, Liver, Phenyl Ethers, Polybrominated Biphenyls, Rats, Recombinant Proteins
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are widely found in the environment and are suspected endocrine disruptors. We previously identified six hydroxylated metabolites of PBDE (OH-PBDEs) in treated mice.

OBJECTIVE: We tested the hypothesis that OH-PBDEs would interact with and alter activity of estrogen receptor-alpha (ER-alpha).

METHODS: We tested estrogenicity using two assays: 3H-estradiol (3H-E2) displacement from recombinant ER-alpha and induction of reporter gene (ERE-luciferase) in cultured cells. We incubated the PBDE mixture DE-71 with rat liver microsomes and tested the resultant metabolite mixture for estrogenic activity. We also determined relative estrogenic potential of individual hydroxylated PBDE congeners.

RESULTS: Reporter gene activity was increased by DE-71 that had been subjected to microsomal metabolism. DE-71 did not displace E2 from ER-alpha, but all six of the OH-PBDE metabolites did. para-Hydroxylated metabolites displayed a 10- to 30-fold higher affinity for ER-alpha compared with ortho-hydroxylated PBDEs, and one produced a maximal effect 30% higher than that produced by E2. Coadministration of E2 and DE-71, or certain of its metabolites, yielded reporter activity greater than either chemical alone. Two ortho-OH-PBDEs were antiestrogenic in the reporter assay.

CONCLUSIONS: The observations--that the DE-71 mixture did not displace 3H-E2 from ER-alpha while the hydroxylated metabolites did-suggest that the weak estrogenic effects of DE-71 are due to metabolic activation of individual congeners. However, the behavior of DE-71 and its metabolites, when co-administered with E2, suggest a secondary, undetermined mechanism from classical ER-alpha activation.

DOI10.1289/ehp.11343
Alternate JournalEnviron. Health Perspect.
PubMed ID18941571
PubMed Central IDPMC2569088
Grant ListES013341 / ES / NIEHS NIH HHS / United States
ES014367 / ES / NIEHS NIH HHS / United States