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1.
Environ Health Perspect ; 132(4): 47002, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38568856

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: There is a suite of chemicals, including metals, pesticides, and personal care product compounds, which are commonly detected at high levels in US Center for Disease Control's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) chemical biomarker screens. Whether these chemicals influence development of breast cancer is not well understood. OBJECTIVES: The objectives were to perform an unbiased concentration-dependent assessment of these chemicals, to quantify differences in cancer-specific genes and pathways, to describe if these differences occur at human population-relevant concentrations, and to specifically test for differences in markers of stemness and cellular plasticity. METHODS: We treated nontumorigenic mammary epithelial cells, MCF10A, with 21 chemicals at four concentrations (25 nM, 250 nM, 2.5µM, and 25µM) for 48 h. We conducted RNA-sequencing for these 408 samples, adapting the plexWell plate-based RNA-sequencing method to analyze differences in gene expression. We calculated gene and biological pathway-specific benchmark concentrations (BMCs) using BMDExpress3, identifying differentially expressed genes and generating the best fit benchmark concentration models for each chemical across all genes. We identified enriched biological processes and pathways for each chemical and tested whether chemical exposures change predicted cell type distributions. We contextualized benchmark concentrations relative to human population biomarker concentrations in NHANES. RESULTS: We detected chemical concentration-dependent differences in gene expression for thousands of genes. Enrichment and cell type distribution analyses showed benchmark concentration responses correlated with differences in breast cancer-related pathways, including induction of basal-like characteristics for some chemicals, including arsenic, lead, copper, and methyl paraben. Comparison of benchmark data to NHANES chemical biomarker (urine or blood) concentrations indicated an overlap between exposure levels and levels sufficient to cause a gene expression response. DISCUSSION: These analyses revealed that many of these 21 chemicals resulted in differences in genes and pathways involved in breast cancer in vitro at human exposure-relevant concentrations. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP12886.


Assuntos
Neoplasias da Mama , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Feminino , Inquéritos Nutricionais , Neoplasias da Mama/induzido quimicamente , Biomarcadores , RNA
2.
Front Oncol ; 14: 1411295, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38915368

RESUMO

Introduction: Breast cancer is the second most diagnosed cancer, as well as the primary cause of cancer death in women worldwide. Of the different breast cancer subtypes, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is particularly aggressive and is associated with poor prognosis. Black women are two to three times more likely to be diagnosed with TNBCs than white women. Recent experimental evidence suggests that basal-like TNBCs may derive from luminal cells which acquire basal characteristics through phenotypic plasticity, a newly recognized hallmark of cancer. Whether chemical exposures can promote phenotypic plasticity in breast cells is poorly understood. Methods: To investigate further, we developed a high-content immunocytochemistry assay using normal human breast cells to test whether chemical exposures can impact luminal/basal plasticity by unbiased quantification of keratin 14 (KRT14), a basal-myoepithelial marker; keratin 8 (KRT8), a luminal-epithelial marker; and Hoechst 33342, a DNA marker. Six cell lines established from healthy tissue from donors to the Susan G. Komen Normal Tissue Bank were exposed for 48 hours to three different concentrations (0.1µM, 1µM, and 10µM) of eight ubiquitous chemicals (arsenic, BPA, BPS, cadmium, copper, DDE, lead, and PFNA), with documented exposure disparities in US Black women, in triplicate. Automated fluorescence image quantification was performed using Cell Profiler software, and a random-forest classifier was trained to classify individual cells as KRT8 positive, KRT14 positive, or hybrid (both KRT8 and KRT14 positive) using Cell Profiler Analyst. Results and discussion: Results demonstrated significant concentration-dependent increases in hybrid populations in response to BPA, BPS, DDE, and PFNA. The increase in hybrid populations expressing both KRT14 and KRT8 is indicative of a phenotypically plastic progenitor-like population in line with known theories of carcinogenesis. Furthermore, BPA, BPS, DDE, and copper produced significant increases in cell proliferation, which could be indicative of a more malignant phenotype. These results further elucidate the relationship between chemical exposure and breast phenotypic plasticity and highlight potential environmental factors that may impact TNBC risk.

3.
bioRxiv ; 2024 May 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38746407

RESUMO

There are a substantial number of chemicals to which individuals in the general population are exposed which have putative, but still poorly understood, links to breast cancer. Cell Painting is a high-content imaging-based in vitro assay that allows for rapid and unbiased measurements of the concentration-dependent effects of chemical exposures on cellular morphology. We optimized the Cell Painting assay and measured the effect of exposure to 16 human exposure relevant chemicals, along with 21 small molecules with known mechanisms of action, for 48 hours in non-tumorigenic mammary epithelial cells, the MCF10A cell line. Through unbiased imaging analyses using CellProfiler, we quantified 3042 morphological features across approximately 1.2 million cells. We used benchmark concentration modeling to quantify significance and dose-dependent directionality to identify morphological features conserved across chemicals and find features that differentiate the effects of toxicants from one another. Benchmark concentrations were compared to chemical exposure biomarker concentration measurements from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey to assess which chemicals induce morphological alterations at human-relevant concentrations. Morphometric fingerprint analysis revealed similar phenotypes between small molecules and prioritized NHANES-toxicants guiding further investigation. A comparison of feature fingerprints via hypergeometric analysis revealed significant feature overlaps between chemicals when stratified by compartment and stain. One such example was the similarities between a metabolite of the organochlorine pesticide DDT (p,p'-DDE) and an activator of canonical Wnt signaling CHIR99201. As CHIR99201 is a known Wnt pathway activator and its role in ß-catenin translocation is well studied, we studied the translocation of ß-catenin following p'-p' DDE exposure in an orthogonal high-content imaging assay. Consistent with activation of Wnt signaling, low dose p',p'-DDE (25nM) significantly enhances the nuclear translocation of ß-catenin. Overall, these findings highlight the ability of Cell Painting to enhance mode-of-action studies for toxicants which are common exposures in our environment but have previously been incompletely characterized with respect to breast cancer risk.

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