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Ecotoxicology and Human Environmental Health
Polychlorinated Diphenylsulfides Activate Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor 2 in Zebrafish Embryos: Potential Mechanism of Developmental Toxicity Rui Zhang, Xiaoxiang Wang, Xuesheng Zhang, Chao Song, Robert J. Letcher, and Chunsheng Liu Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b00366 • Publication Date (Web): 09 Mar 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 9, 2018
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Polychlorinated Diphenylsulfides Activate Aryl
2
Hydrocarbon Receptor 2 in Zebrafish Embryos: Potential
3
Mechanism of Developmental Toxicity
4 5
Rui Zhang,†,ǁ Xiaoxiang Wang,‡,§,ǁ Xuesheng Zhang,⊥ Chao Song,⎕,# Robert J.
6
Letcher,¶ Chunsheng Liu*,∇
7 8
†
9
China
School of Resources and Environment, University of Jinan, Jinan 250022, P. R.
10
‡
11
Environment, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, P. R. China
12
§
13
Limburgerhof 67117, Germany
14
⊥School
15
230601, P. R. China
16
⎕Freshwater
17
214081, P. R. China
18
#
19
Environmental Factors (Wuxi), Ministry of Agriculture, Wuxi 214081, P. R. China
20
¶
21
5B6, Canada
22
∇College
23
ǁ
State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse, School of the
Association of Chinese Chemists and Chemical Engineers in Germany,
of Resources and Environmental Engineering, Anhui University, Hefei
Fisheries Research Center, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, Wuxi
Laboratory of Quality & Safety Risk Assessment for Aquatic Products on
Departments of Chemistry and Biology, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario K1S
of Fisheries, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, P. R. China
The authors contribute equally.
24 25
*
26
College of Fisheries, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, China
27
Tel: 86 27 87282113, Fax: 86 27 87282114, E-mail:
[email protected] Author for correspondence:
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Environmental Science & Technology
28
ABSTRACT
29
It is hypothesized that polychlorinated diphenyl sulfides (PCDPSs) induce lethal
30
toxicity in zebrafish which is mediated by aryl hydrocarbon receptor 2 (Ahr2)
31
activation. In this study an assay was developed based on in vivo exposure of
32
wild-type and Tg(cyp1a:gfp) transgenic zebrafish embryos/larvae to PCDPS
33
congeners (i.e. six dichloro- to heptachloro-diphenyl sulfides) coupled with a
34
zebrafish Ahr2-luciferase reporter gene (LRG) expression. Waterborne PCDPSs were
35
found to be accumulated in zebrafish larvae and exposure to PCDPSs led to a
36
significant increase in mortality and cyp1s mRNA expression. Furthermore, treatment
37
with PCDPSs caused a significant induction of Ahr2-LRG activity in COS-7 cells,
38
and extremely significant correlations were observed between the in vivo median
39
lethal concentrations and the levels of cyp1s mRNA expression and Ahr2 activation.
40
Molecular dynamics simulations indicated the interaction between dioxins/dioxin-like
41
compounds (DLCs) and six key amino acid residues in the ligand-binding domain of
42
Ahr2 probably determined the susceptibility to dioxins/DLCs in zebrafish. These
43
results strongly support the hypothesis that early life-stage mortality of zebrafish is
44
initiated and mediated by Ahr2 activation.
45 46 47
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INTRODUCTION
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Polychlorinated diphenyl sulfides (PCDPSs) are a group of chlorinated aromatic
50
compounds comprising 209 theoretical congeners like polychlorinated biphenyls
51
(PCBs). They have been extensively employed as high-temperature resistant
52
lubricants,1 additives in flame retardants and insulating media,2 as well as being
53
widely used as acaricides on fruit and tea crops (known as Tetrasul, mainly
54
2,4,4’,5-TCDPS) in many countries like China and the USA.3-7 Due to their
55
considerable persistence and environmental mobility properties,8, 9 PCDPSs have been
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frequently found in various environmental matrices, such as dust from metal recycling
57
plants,10 gas and fly ash from waste incineration (tri- and tetra-CDPSs),11 wastewater
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from pulp and paper mill (tri-CDPS isomers),11 fruits (2,4,4’,5-TCDPS),5 tea leaves
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(2,4,4’,5-TCDPS),6 and water and sediment samples from the Elbe river in Germany
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(4,4’-DCDPS)12 and the Yangtze river in China (mono- to hepta-CDPSs, total
61
concentrations ranging from 0.18 to 2.03 ng/L and 0.10 to 6.90 ng/g in surface water
62
and sediment, respectively).13 The bioconcentration and bioaccumulation potentials of
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PCDPSs were also revealed by modeling calculations.8, 9 These findings have raised
64
concerns about their potential adverse effects on human and ecosystem health.
65
Increasing evidence has shown that exposure to PCDPSs can elicit a number of
66
adverse effects in various vertebrates like rat, pig, rabbit, fish and chicken, including
67
mortality,14-16 growth retardation,14 hepatic oxidative stress15,
68
reproductive performance.14
17, 18
and diminished
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Several PCDPS congeners can be categorized as dioxin-like compounds (DLCs),
70
as our previous studies have demonstrated they are active via binding to mammalian19
71
and avian20 aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) with subsequent gene expression in
72
vitro. This raises the question of whether the adverse biological outcomes in
73
vertebrates are elicited due to the activation via the AHR by PCDPSs. Addressing this
74
question can obviously promote understanding about the mechanisms of toxicity of
75
PCDPSs.
76
The zebrafish (Danio rerio) represents a superb model for vertebrate
77
development, disease processes and toxicological mechanism research.21-23 Therefore,
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the primary goal of the present study is to test the hypothesis that some PCDPS
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congeners are DLCs and induce lethal toxicity in vertebrates that is initiated and
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mediated by the activation of AHR using zebrafish as a representative species. The
81
specific objectives were four-fold: (1) characterize the concentration-dependent lethal
82
effect and bioconcentration potential of six PCDPS congeners ranging from dichloro-
83
to heptachloro- diphenyl sulfides in early life stages of zebrafish; (2) develop a
84
luciferase reporter gene (LRG) assay to verify Ahr2, which is the dominant isoform
85
responsible for dioxin-like toxicity in zebrafish,24 was activated to different extent in
86
zebrafish embryos/larvae following in vivo congener-specific exposure to PCDPSs; (3)
87
compare in vivo median lethal concentration (LC50) values with LRG assay-derived
88
Ahr2 activation levels to demonstrate that PCDPS-induced lethality in vivo is initiated
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and mediated by Ahr2 activation in zebrafish; (4) gain a further understanding of the
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mechanism underlying the level differences of Ahr2 activation by different
91
dioxins/DLCs at the atomic level using homology modeling and molecular dynamics
92
(MD) simulations. The results provide new information regarding the mechanisms of
93
the PCDPS congener-specific toxicity, and support our understanding of the
94
mechanism underlying the differences in the level of Ahr2 activation by different
95
dioxins/DLCs in zebrafish at molecular and atomic levels.
96 97
MATERIALS AND METHODS
98
Chemicals and Reagents. The six PCDPS congeners, including 4,4’-DCDPS,
99
2,2’,4-Tris-CDPS, 2,4,4’,5-TCDPS, 2,2’,3’,4,5-Penta-CDPS, 2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS
100
and
2,2’,3,3’,4,5,6-Hepta-CDPS,
101
palladium-catalyzed carbon-sulfur bond formation method.25 The purities were more
102
than 99% with no detectable dioxin-like PCDDs/Fs present as described previously.20
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2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD, CAS number 1746-01-6; >98% purity),
104
1,2,3,7,8-pentachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin
105
40321-76-4;
106
(1,2,3,7,8,9-HxCDD,
107
2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzofuran (2,3,7,8-TCDF, CAS number 51207-31-9; >98%
>98%
were
(1,2,3,7,8-PeCDD,
purity), CAS
synthesized
number
previously
CAS
by
the
number
1,2,3,7,8,9-hexachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin 19408-74-3;
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>98%
purity),
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purity),
1,2,3,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran
(1,2,3,7,8-PeCDF,
CAS
number
109
57117-41-6; >98% purity), 2,3,4,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran (2,3,4,7,8-PeCDF, CAS
110
number 57117-31-4; >98% purity) and 3,3’,4,4’,5-pentachlorobiphenyl (PCB126,
111
CAS number 57465-28-8; >99% purity) were purchased from AccuStandard (New
112
Haven, CT, USA). All chemical stock solutions and serial dilutions were prepared in
113
dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO, CAS number 67-68-5; >99.7% purity; Sigma-Aldrich,
114
St. Louis, MO, USA). MS-222 (3-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester, methane sulfonate
115
salt, CAS number 886-86-2; >98% purity) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St.
116
Louis, MO, USA). The actual concentrations of PCDDs/Fs and PCB126 were
117
determined using isotope dilution following US EPA method 1613 by high-resolution
118
gas chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRGC/HRMS).26 For in vivo
119
waterborne exposure, the serially diluted solutions of the PCDPSs were diluted again
120
with embryonic rearing water (60 mg/L instant ocean salt in aerated distilled water) to
121
the desired test concentrations immediately before use. The final concentration of
122
DMSO in the exposure solutions was 0.5% (v/v). For in vitro reporter gene assays,
123
test solutions of PCDPSs, PCDDs/Fs and PCB126 were prepared by dissolving
124
serially diluted solutions with cell culture medium. The final in-well concentration of
125
DMSO in 96-well plates was 0.5%.
126
Animals and Waterborne Exposure Experiment. Adult wild-type zebrafish (AB
127
strain, 7-month old) and Tg(cyp1a:gfp) transgenic zebrafish (9-month old)27 were
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maintained based on the standard zebrafish protocols.28 All fertilized eggs used in the
129
present study were obtained by artificial fertilization to ensure consistency in
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developmental stages.29 The eggs were examined under a stereomicroscope (M205FA,
131
Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany) and only normally developed embryos were
132
selected for subsequent experiments. All work was approved by the Institutional
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Animal Care and Use Committee of the Huazhong Agricultural University. All
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animals were treated humanely and with regard for the alleviation of suffering.
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The exposure experiment included two parts. First, wild-type zebrafish embryos
136
were randomly distributed into glass beakers and exposed to each of the 6 individual
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PCDPS congeners (4, 20, 100, 500, 2500 or 5000 nM) or DMSO from 2 h ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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post-fertilization (hpf) to 120 hpf to study the early life-stage mortality induced by
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PCDPSs. These exposure concentrations were set to be distributed as evenly as
140
possible across a range, which is from non-observed lethal concentration to median or
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even 100% lethal concentration based on the results of preliminary experiments and
142
the requirements of acute lethal toxicity. Three replicate beakers per dilution of the
143
PCDPSs or DMSO were included, each containing 100 mL of exposure solution and
144
100 embryos. For each treatment, 50% of the exposure solution was replaced by
145
freshly prepared exposure solution on a daily basis. The embryos/larvae were kept
146
under 28 ± 0.5 °C with a 12:12 light/dark cycle. Hatching rates were monitored at 48,
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54, 60 and 72 hpf. Mortalities were recorded at 24, 48, 72, 96 and 120 hpf. Mortality
148
was identified by embryonic coagulation and missing heartbeat (Leica M205FA, 8×).
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At 120 hpf, larvae were anesthetized with 0.03% MS-222 (Sigma-Aldrich) and 25
150
individuals from each beaker (20, 100 and 500 nM) were randomly sampled,
151
immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at -80 °C until subsequent
152
quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) assays. In the second part
153
of the experiment, based on the results of acute lethal toxicity from the first part,
154
Tg(cyp1a:gfp) transgenic zebrafish embryos were exposed to each of the six
155
individual PCDPS congeners (20, 100 or 500 nM) or DMSO with 50% exposure
156
solution renewed each day from 2 to 120 hpf to visually characterize and confirm the
157
overexpression of cyp1a gene in live zebrafish induced by congener-specific PCDPS
158
exposure. The fertilized eggs in this part experiment were produced by in vitro
159
artificial fertilization using eggs from three 7-month-old female Tg(cyp1a:gfp)
160
transgenic zebrafish and semen from three male wild-type adult zebrafish. Each
161
treatment contained 10 mL exposure solution and 10 embryos. After exposure for
162
about 120 hpf, Tg(cyp1a:gfp) larvae were first anaesthetized with 0.03% MS-222
163
(Sigma-Aldrich)
164
stereomicroscope with the same setting at a magnification of 2.76× (Leica M205FA).
165
The images of Tg(cyp1a:gfp) larvae were converted to 8-bit grayscale images using
166
ImageJ30 (developed by Wayne Rasband; available at https://imagej.nih.gov/ij/), an
167
open code Java-based image processing software. A threshold range was set to 33-255
and
then
observed
and
imaged
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a
fluorescence
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in gray values to distinguish the regions of interest (ROI, namely specific organ
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regions with strong fluorescence signals, such as kidney, liver and gut indicated in a
170
previous publication27) from the background. Then the “Analyze Particles” feature of
171
ImageJ was used to determine the maximum gray value of pixels and total area of
172
ROI. The data was transferred into SPSS 12.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) for
173
statistical analysis.
174
Quantification of PCDPS congeners and QA/QC. In the acute toxicity test, 1 mL of
175
exposure solution of the individual PCDPS congeners from each of 3 replicate
176
beakers were collected in 4-nM (the lowest exposure concentration) treatment groups
177
at 96 hpf (after renewing of exposure solutions), and 120 hpf to check if degradation
178
had occurred during exposure. Three replicate 20-, 100- and 500-nM exposure
179
solutions were also sampled at 120 hpf for determination of the actual waterborne
180
concentrations. In addition, 25 larvae from each replicate in 20-, 100- and 500-nM
181
treatment groups were collected at 120 hpf to analyze congener-specific PCDPS
182
bioconcentration in the early life stages of zebrafish. Twenty larvae from each
183
replicate of the 500 nM, 2,2’,3’,4,5-Penta-CDPS treatment group were also collected
184
at 72 and 96 hpf to determine the time-course of accumulation. Detailed protocols for
185
extraction, clean up, GC-MS quantification, and quality assurance and quality control
186
(QA/QC) were provided in Supporting Information (Supplementary Methods and
187
Tables S1 and S2).
188
Quantitative Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (qRT-PCR) Assay. PCR
189
primer sets for a select group of genes involved in dioxin-like toxicity in zebrafish,
190
including cyp1a1, cyp1b1, ahr2, ahrra, ahrrb and arnt1, are shown in Table S3. The
191
primer sequences for arnt1 were designed using NCBI/Primer-BLAST software. The
192
other primer sequences were obtained in our previous publications.31, 32 The mRNA
193
expression of each selected gene was normalized to the geometric mean of that of the
194
housekeeping gene ribosomal protein l8 (rpl8) whose expression was unaffected by
195
any exposure condition in the present study. Detailed methods for total RNA isolation,
196
reverse transcription and qRT-PCR analysis are presented in Supporting Information.
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COS-7 Cell Culture, Transfection, and Zebrafish Ahr2-LRG Assay. The culturing ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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of COS-7 cells, transfection of constructs, and the LRG assay were performed in
199
96-well plates according to methods described previously31,
200
modifications. A firefly luciferase reporter vector (pGudLuc6.1) under the control of a
201
mouse mammary tumor virus promoter that is regulated by four aryl hydrocarbon
202
response elements (AHREs) from the murine cyp1a1 promoter, was a generous gift
203
from Dr. Michael S. Denison (University of California, Davis, CA, USA).35,
204
Zebrafish pBKCMV-zfAhr2 and pBKCMV-zfARNT1c expression constructs were
205
generously donated by Dr. Richard E. Peterson (University of Wisconsin-Madison
206
Madison, WI, USA).37 The optimized amounts of transfected DNA per 6 µL of
207
transfection mixture were 8 ng of pBKCMV-zfAhr2, 1.5 ng of pBKCMV-zfARNT1c,
208
8 ng of pGudLuc6.1, 0.75 ng of Renilla luciferase vector (Promega, Madison, WI,
209
USA), and 31.75 ng of salmon sperm DNA (Invitrogen, Burlington, ON, Canada).
210
COS-7 cells were dosed 5 h after transfection with DMSO (solvent control) or DMSO
211
solutions of the five DLCs (namely 1,2,3,7,8-PeCDD, 1,2,3,7,8,9-HxCDD,
212
2,3,7,8-TCDF, 1,2,3,7,8-PeCDF and PCB126) or PCDPS congeners with nominal
213
concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 6000 nM (no cytotoxic effect could be observed by
214
MTS cytotoxicity assay). A positive control (300 nM TCDD) was also included when
215
cells were dosed with other tested chemicals and DMSO. LRG activity was measured
216
20 h after dosing using Dual-Glo luciferase assay kits (Promega) in a Synergy H4
217
Hybrid Multi-Mode Microplate reader (BioTek Instruments, Winooski, VT, USA).
218
Triplicate concentration−response curves were obtained from three independent
219
experiments for each chemical treatment, with four technical replicates per dilution of
220
tested chemicals. The normalization of luciferase ratio (firefly to Renilla) was
221
performed according to the protocol described in OECD guideline 455.38
33, 34
with minor
36
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The data were fitted to a four-parameter logistic model using GraphPad Prism
223
5.0 software (GraphPad Prism Software Inc., San Diego, CA, USA).39 When
224
concentration-response curves did not reach a plateau or a plateau could not be
225
estimated accurately by curve fitting, EC50 values could not be calculated and were
226
therefore not presented. In addition, the highest observed response was reported as the
227
maximal response in these instances. The concentrations of chemicals tested that ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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elicited a response equal to 10%, 20%, 50%, and 80% of the positive control response
229
were referred to as PC10, PC20, PC50 and PC80 values. These PCs, EC50, and maximal
230
response values were determined for each replicate concentration-response curve
231
using the logistic curve fitting, and were presented as the mean ± standard error (SE).
232
Relative potency (ReP) values were calculated as follows: EC50, PC10, PC20, PC50, or
233
PC80 of TCDD ÷ EC50, PC10, PC20, PC50, or PC80 of chemicals tested.
234
Molecular Dynamics Simulations. The MD simulations were carried out with the
235
GROMACS 5 package40 on an International Business Machines (IBM) blade cluster
236
system. Prior to simulation, initial structures for simulation needed to be prepared,
237
and the process of preparation is presented in the Supporting Information. The
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CHARMM 27 force field41 was applied to all structural models. Parameters of the
239
force field for ligands were obtained from SwissParam42 (http://www.swissparam.ch/).
240
The protein-ligand complex was solvated in a box with TIP4P water molecules,43
241
keeping the boundary of the box at least 1 nm away from all protein atoms. Three
242
sodium ions were subsequently added for charge neutralization. The whole system
243
was then energetically minimized by the steepest-descent method.44 The minimized
244
systems were then gradually heated from 0 to 310.15 K at a constant volume. The
245
heated systems at 310.15 K were equilibrated for 200 ps with position restraints for
246
ligands and for 1 ns without restraints at 1 bar and 310.15 K. The MD simulations
247
were then performed in the NPT ensemble with periodic boundary conditions. Both of
248
electrostatic interactions and van der Waals interactions were calculated using the
249
particle mesh Ewald (PME) algorithm.45 All simulations were carried out for at least
250
50 ns using a 2 fs time step, and snapshots for analysis were saved every 2 ps. The
251
trajectories obtained from MD simulations were used for binding free energy
252
calculations by molecular mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA)
253
method.46, 47 In brief, the binding free energy ∆G can be defined (Equation 1).
254
∆G = G − (G + G )
(1)
255
where G , G and G are total free energies of the receptor-ligand
256
complex, receptor and ligand in solvent, respectively. The G value for each term (G ) ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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can be calculated (Equation 2). G = E − TS + G
258
(2)
259
where E is the molecular mechanics energy; TS denotes the entropic contribution
260
where T and S refer to the temperature and entropy, respectively; G is the
261
solvation free energy. More details about this method were given in our previous
262
study.48 The E values between compounds tested and each amino acid residue in
263
Ahr2-ligand binding domain (LBD), which indicates the strength of interaction
264
between the compounds and corresponding residue, were recorded for further
265
analysis.
266
Statistical Analysis. Data normality and homogeneity were examined by
267
Kolmogorov-Smirnov and Levene’s test respectively using SPSS 12.0 (SPSS Inc.,
268
Chicago, IL, USA) before statistical procedures were applied. If normality and equal
269
variance were achieved, significant differences between mortality percentage,
270
maximal response, EC50, PC10, PC20, PC50, and PC80 values for different compounds
271
tested, actual and nominal exposure concentrations, and gene expression difference
272
and fluorescence signal difference between different treatments were examined by a t
273
test or a one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s multiple comparison test. A value of p
274
< 0.05 was considered statistically significant. When one of these assumptions was
275
violated, the non-parametric Kruskal–Wallis test was used followed by Dunn’s
276
multiple comparison test. For mortality, data were presented as proportions, but they
277
were square root arcsine-transformed for analysis of variance. Classification and
278
visualization of the PCDPSs based on similarities of differentially expressed genes
279
involved in dioxin-like toxicity in zebrafish was accomplished by use of ToxClust49 in
280
R software version 3.4.2 (R Core Team, Vienna, Austria).
281 282
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
283
Time- and Concentration-Dependent Accumulation in Larvae of Waterborne
284
PCDPSs. As shown in Figure S1, no significant concentration change of any of the
285
six PCDPS congeners was observed in the 4-nM exposure solutions (the lowest
286
exposure concentration) at 120 hpf compared with those at 96 hpf (after renewing the ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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exposure solutions). This indicated that no significant congener-specific degradation
288
of PCDPSs occurred in the exposure solutions that were renewed on a daily basis. A
289
time-dependent concentration increase was observed in larvae exposed to 500-nM
290
2,2’,3’,4,5-Penta-CDPS during 72 to 120 hpf (Table S4), suggesting that waterborne
291
PCDPSs could be accumulated in zebrafish larvae in a time-dependent manner. In
292
addition, the measured concentrations for all the PCDPSs tested in zebrafish larvae
293
increased with increasing concentrations of waterborne PCDPSs solution at 120 hpf
294
(Table S4), suggesting that waterborne PCDPSs could be accumulated in zebrafish
295
larvae in a concentration-dependent manner. Bioconcentration factors (BCFs) for each
296
of the PCDPS tested were also calculated as the ratio of measured concentration in
297
zebrafish larvae (µg/g, ww) to that in exposure medium (µg/mL) at 120 hpf. As
298
shown in Table S4, the BCF values ranged from 169 to 1513 among the PCDPS
299
congeners. Moreover, a higher BCF value seemed to be always followed by a lower
300
waterborne exposure concentration for a given PCDPS congener. These results
301
indicated that the potential health and ecological risk of PCDPSs cannot be ignored
302
even at low environmental concentrations.
303
Early Life-Stage Mortality of Zebrafish Exposed to PCDPSs. As shown in the
304
concentration-response curves (Figure 1A), mortality percentages of zebrafish
305
embryos/larvae were increased significantly upon exposure to 1000 nM of
306
2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS, 2,2’,3’,4,5-Penta-CDPS or 4,4’-DCDPS at 120 hpf. This
307
was especially evident for 2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS, where the 1000 nM exposure
308
concentration caused almost 100% mortality.
309
(2,2’,3,3’,4,5,6-Hepta-CDPS, 2,2’,4-Tris-CDPS and 2,4,4’,5-TCDPS), no significant
310
effects on the mortality were observed following exposure to 1000 nM or lower
311
exposure concentrations at 120 hpf. In contrast, the mortality percentages reached or
312
approached 100% by 120 hpf exposure to only a 5 times greater concentration (5000
313
nM), indicating a relatively narrow lethal concentration range. Moreover, the lethality
314
occurred mainly (81-99%) during 72 to 120 hpf at each exposure concentration,
315
which significantly increased the mortality (Figure S2). This was probably related to
316
the sustained toxic effects along with continuous accumulation of PCDPSs. Besides
For
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the
other 3
PCDPSs
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mortality, the classical dioxin-like effects, such as spinal curvature, tail malformation,
318
yolk sac edema and pericardial edema, following exposure to PCDPSs were also
319
observed for all the PCDPSs tested (Table S5).
320
Significant Relationships between CYP1s mRNA Expression and Lethal Toxicity.
321
The mRNA expressions of 6 genes involved in dioxin-like toxicity in zebrafish were
322
examined after exposure to 20, 100 or 500 nM of each PCDPS tested. The mRNA
323
expressions were altered significantly in a concentration-dependent manner (Figure
324
1B). Clustering of PCDPSs on the basis of the concentration-dependent mRNA
325
expression indicated that highly chlorinated PCDPS congeners tended to cause a
326
greater change of mRNA expression level involved in dioxin-like toxicity in zebrafish.
327
Moreover, cyp1a1, cyp1b1 and ahrra were the most significant up-regulated genes,
328
with the maximum fold-change of 109 for cyp1a1 in 500 nM 2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS
329
exposure group. The induction of cyp1a expression is an associative event and
330
common marker of AHR activation.50 Thus, it indicated that Ahr2 might be activated
331
by congener-specific PCDPS exposure. In addition, extremely significant linear
332
relationships (P < 0.0001) were observed between PCDPS-induced cyp1s mRNA
333
expression and the median lethal concentration (LC50) values at 120 hpf (Figure 1C
334
and Table S6) with R2 higher than 0.900, indicating PCDPS-induced lethal toxicity
335
might be mediated by Ahr2 activation, while no significant change of Ahr2 expression
336
was observed. To further confirm that the lethal toxicity is indeed mediated by the
337
Ahr2 activation, a zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assay, which was developed in the present
338
study, was then performed.
339
Induction of Ahr2-LRG Activity in COS-7 Cells. The concentration-dependent
340
effects of TCDD, the five DLCs and the six PCDPSs on LRG activity in COS-7 cells
341
transfected with zebrafish Ahr2 construct were shown in Figure 2A. LRG activity
342
induced by TCDD reached a plateau, indicating that the 300 nM of TCDD was an
343
appropriate positive control for the normalization of LRG activity data in the
344
zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assay. All of the tested chemicals including the six PCDPSs
345
induced significant LRG activity in zebrafish Ahr2-transfected cells with different
346
EC50, PCx, maximal responses and ReP (Tables 1 and S7). Only the ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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concentration-response curves of 2,3,7,8-TCDF, 1,2,3,7,8,9-HxCDD, PCB126 and
348
2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS achieved a plateau besides TCDD. In addition, the efficacies
349
(or the maximal response) induced by 1,2,3,7,8-PeCDD and 2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS
350
were greater than or equal to that of TCDD, which resembles that of
351
2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS in avian Ahr2-LRG assays.20 In the Ahr2-LRG assay,
352
reporter controls which were COS-7 cells transfected with all the expression vectors
353
except the zebrafish Ahr2 expression construct, were also included for each PCDPS.
354
No significant induction of LRG activity was observed after exposure to TCDD,
355
DLCs or the PCDPSs tested (data no shown). Overall, these results indicated that
356
zebrafish Ahr2 was activated by PCDPS exposure, and PCDPS-induced cyp1s
357
expression was mediated indeed by Ahr2.
358
Relative Potency (ReP) of PCDPS Congeners in the Zebrafish Ahr2 Construct. It
359
was demonstrated that the developed zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assay could be used to
360
predict dioxin-like potencies of compounds which are mediated by Ahr2 activation in
361
early life stages of zebrafish, and the extent of Ahr2 activation is reflected by the
362
induction of LRG activity by use of five DLCs. More details are presented in the
363
section of “ReP Values of the Five DLCs Tested” and Table S8 in Supporting
364
Information. Based on the ReP values (Tables 1 and S7), visual inspection of the
365
concentration-response curves (Figure 1A), and the results of statistical analyses
366
between endpoints in the LRG assays (Table 1), the rank order of PCDPS potency
367
was
368
2,2’,3’,4,5-Penta-CDPS > 2,4,4’,5-TCDPS ≥ 2,2’,4-Tris-CDPS ≥ 4,4’-DCDPS in
369
the zebrafish Ahr2 construct. The rank order of congener-specific PCDPS potency
370
was generally consistent with that of RePLC50 values observed in zebrafish embryos
371
exposed to PCDPSs in vivo until 120 hpf (Tables 1 and S7). Furthermore, the
372
differences between the in vitro and in vivo assays-derived ReP values for the
373
PCDPSs were within 1 order of magnitude (2- to 4-fold difference between
374
LRG-RePavg and RePLC50 values). These results demonstrated that the ReP values
375
derived from zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assays could give reasonable ReP estimates for the
376
early life-stage mortality of PCDPS exposed zebrafish.
2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS
>
2,2’,3,3’,4,5,6-Hepta-CDPS
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The data gap of fish-specific ReP values of PCDPSs was filled by including the
378
LRG-RePavg values for zebrafish, which is the least sensitive fish tested to date, to
379
TCDD-induced early life-stage toxicity.54 The LRG-RePavg values of the PCDPSs
380
tested were equal to or higher than the WHO-TEFs of 1,2,3,6,7,8-HexaCDD,
381
1,2,3,7,8,9-HexaCDD, 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDD, OctaCDD, 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDF,
382
1,2,3,4,7,8,9-HeptaCDF, OctaCDF, and most PCBs for fish,51 which highlights the
383
potential high dioxin-like toxicity might be caused by PCDPSs. Moreover, there is an
384
upward trend for their dioxin-like potencies with an increase in the number of
385
substituted Cl atoms on PCDPSs for zebrafish Ahr2 construct (Tables 1 and S7),
386
which is consistent with that for avian AHR1 constructs20 and rat hepatoma H4IIE-luc
387
cell line.19 ReP values of some PCDPSs for three major vertebrate groups including
388
mammals,16 birds17 and fish are now available. The relatively high ReP values
389
highlight the potential health and ecological risk induced by PCDPSs, especially the
390
ecological risk for fish because it seems to be more responsive to PCDPSs based on
391
the higher ReP values than mammals and birds.
392
Correlations between Results of In Vivo (Early Life-Stage Mortality) and In Vitro
393
(Dioxin-Like Activity) Studies of PCDPSs. The LC50 values of PCDPSs derived
394
from the in vivo experiment were compared to the PC10, PC20, PC50 and PC80 values
395
of PCDPSs determined in zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assays. As shown in Figures 2B and
396
S3, there were extremely significant correlations between in vivo LC50 values and in
397
vitro PC10, PC20, PC50 and PC80 values. A significant correlation was also observed
398
between in vivo RePLC50 values and in vitro LRG RePavg values of PCDPSs either
399
including or excluding 2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS (Figure 2C). These results suggested
400
the lethal toxicity of PCDPSs increased with the increasing level of Ahr2 activation in
401
zebrafish larvae, thereby further supporting the hypothesis that most, if not all,
402
PCDPS-induced lethal toxicity in early life stages of zebrafish was initiated and
403
mediated by the activation of Ahr2. It has been demonstrated that the zebrafish Ahr2
404
morpholino did not protect embryos from TCDD-induced mortality,24 although the
405
early life-stage mortality caused by TCDD is initiated and mediated by AHR
406
activation in vertebrates.55 This may be due to the high efficiency of Ahr2 in binding ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ligands and mediating toxicity probably resulting from fast signaling transduction and
408
protein biosynthesis in zebrafish, as observed in the present study that ahr2 was only
409
upregulated about 2-fold even though cyp1a1 was upregulated more than 100-fold
410
(Figure 1B). Thus, we can reasonably speculate that Ahr2 knockdown would also be
411
ineffective in protecting embryos from TCDD-induced mortality in zebrafish, thereby
412
indicating that developing a knockout model is needed to fully support our conclusion.
413
Thus, developing an Ahr2-homozygous (Ahr2−/−) mutant may be a more reliable
414
method to determine the relationship between early life-stage mortality of zebrafish
415
induced by PCDPS exposure and Ahr2 activation. However, it is time- and
416
labor-consuming. Given that COS-7 cells express no endogenous AHR and very little
417
ARNT,56, 57 and four expression plasmids are just needed to transiently transfected in
418
COS-7 cells, the zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assay thus may be a basically equally reliable,
419
and more cost-effective, time- and labor-saving alternative method to Ahr2 knockout.
420
There is certainly a possibility that the mortality is mediated by some other
421
mechanism or combination of mechanisms.
422
Dose-Dependent GFP Induction in Tg(cyp1a:gfp) Zebrafish Larvae. To visually
423
characterize the dioxin-like activity induced by PCDPS exposure in live zebrafish
424
larvae, we carried out dosage-dependent tests in Tg(cyp1a:gfp) zebrafish larvae with 4
425
to 500 nM PCDPSs. An apparent dosage-dependent increase of GFP expression was
426
observed in the treated larvae after about 120 h of exposure from 2 hpf (Figures 3 and
427
S4) for all PCDPSs tested, which was consistent with that of the total fluorescent area
428
and the maximum fluorescent value represented by the maximum gray value and total
429
area of ROI respectively (Table S9). In addition, GFP was induced mainly in the
430
kidney, intestine and liver and weakly in several other tissues such as olfactory, gills
431
and skin in Tg(cyp1a:gfp) zebrafish larvae. These results further demonstrated the
432
dioxin-like activity of PCDPSs induced in live zebrafish larvae intuitively.
433
MD Simulations: Level of Ahr2 Activation May be Determined by Interactions
434
between the Ligand and Six Key Amino Acid Residues in Ahr2-LBD. MD
435
simulations were performed to understand what factors affect the ability of
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compounds to activate Ahr2 in zebrafish at atomic level. The ∆G between the
437
biological macromolecule and small ligands is an index describes the binding affinity
438
between ligands and receptors.58 In principle, there is a significantly positive
439
relationship between ln (−∆G ) and RePavg from LRG assay if the potency is
440
determined by the free energy.59 We calculated ∆G between each compound
441
tested and zebrafish Ahr2-LBD. The values of ln (−∆G ) for the compounds
442
tested here were plotted against RePavg in Figure 4A. No significant relationship was
443
observed between these two parameters, which suggested ∆G is not the
444
determinant factor of ReP.
445
Previously, various molecular docking and MD simulation studies on different
446
proteins showed that some specific amino acid residues are particularly important for
447
the biological functions of proteins.60-62 Accordingly, we conjecture that ReP values
448
are determined by the interaction between the compounds tested (ligands) and some
449
specific amino acid residues in Ahr2-LBD. The E between TCDD and all amino
450
acid residues were calculated and shown in Figure 4B. The average values of each
451
E is about -0.8 kJ/mol. The amino acid residues whose E with TCDD are
452
lower than -4 kJ/mol (5 times of the average value) were identified as the key amino
453
acid residues for TCDD, namly Phe300, Tyr327, Ile330, Cys338, His342 and Leu353.
454
Especially, Phe300 has the highest value of E (= -13.04 kJ/mol). As observed in
455
the structure of the complex of compounds tested and zebrafish Ahr2-LBD (Figure
456
4C), all of the ligands locate in the central part of the pocket of Ahr2-LBD. This
457
structural information implies all chemicals share a similar mechanism of activating
458
Ahr2. Binding to the Ahr2 in zebrafish is the common molecular initiating event of
459
dioxin/DLC-induced toxicity that triggers subsequent effects at higher levels of
460
biological organization.51 Thus, the six amino acid residues were reasonably assumed
461
to be also important for other DLCs. The E values between other compounds
462
tested and these residues were then calculated. The total value of E between each
463
compound and the six key amino acid residues (E# ) was shown in Table S10, and
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plotted against the ln$LRG ReP ) in Figure 4D. A note is that a lower value of
465
E# represents a stronger interaction (e.g. the interaction for -32.13 kJ/mol is larger
466
than the interaction for -7.81 kJ/mol). A linear fitting formula was obtained as
467
followed.
468
ln$LRG ReP ) = -0.29×E# -10
(3)
469
The corresponding R* and P value were 0.79 and 0.0001, respectively. The
470
result suggested the ReP may be mainly determined by the interaction between
471
chemicals and the six key amino acid residues mentioned above. A stronger
472
interaction between ligand and the key residues leads to a higher ReP value.
473
Obviously, this finding from MD simulations should be further examined by
474
experiments. Fraccalvieri et al. have used site-directed mutagenesis and functional
475
analysis to reveal that 3 residues (Tyr296, Thr386, and His388) in zebrafish Ahra1
476
reduce the amount of internal space available to TCDD in cavity and lead to that
477
zebrafish Ahra1 does not bind to TCDD.63 The significant role of Leu 302, Leu309
478
and Leu 347 in mouse AHR has also been proved by site-directed mutagenesis and
479
AHR functional analysis.64 Based on sequence alignment, site-directed mutagenesis
480
and LRG assays, Manning et al. found that amino acid residues 324 and 380 in the
481
AHR1-LBD are the major determinants of avian species sensitivity to PCBs.65 Thus,
482
site-directed mutagenesis and functional analysis would be helpful to examine and
483
determine whether the several specific amino acids in zebrafish Ahr2-LBD are
484
important in ligand binding and ligand-dependent Ahr2 activation, and the studies
485
mentioned above provided paradigms for our future research. Overall, our simulations
486
promote the understanding of the mechanism underlying differences in the level of
487
Ahr2 activation among different dioxins/DLCs in zebrafish at atomic level, and can
488
also help people to predict the ReP value of compounds when experimental data are
489
unavailable or prior to performing experiments. Moreover, the results of MD
490
simulations also supported the hypothesis that PCDPS can bind Ahr2 to trigger the
491
expression of downstream genes.
492
This study strongly supports the hypothesis that the early life-stage mortality of
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493
zebrafish induced by waterborne exposure to PCDPSs was mediated by Ahr2
494
activation. Furthermore, the level of Ahr2 activation by the different dioxins/DLCs
495
appear to be due to the differences of interaction between dioxins/DLCs and six key
496
amino acid residues (Phe300, Tyr327, Ile330, Cys338, His342 and Leu353) in
497
Ahr2-LBD based on homology modeling and MD simulations. In addition, the
498
present study fills the data gap of fish-specific ReP of PCDPSs, which seems to
499
increase with an increasing number of substituted Cl atoms. To our knowledge, this is
500
a first report revealing PCDPS-induced lethal toxicity in early life stages of
501
vertebrates is mediated by AHR activation, thereby supporting that PCDPSs should be
502
considered to be DLCs. Furthermore, our findings from MD simulations support the
503
understanding of the mechanism underlying differences in the level of Ahr2 activation
504
among different dioxins/DLCs in zebrafish at atomic level. In addition, from a
505
methodological point of view, the zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assay developed here and the
506
linear model found in MD calculations provide novel useful tools for determination of
507
the ReP of DLCs on activation of Ahr2 in zebrafish.
508 509
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
510
Supporting Information includes further details on preparation of models for
511
simulation, analytical methods, results and discussion on ReP values of the five DLCs
512
tested, Figures S1-S4 and Tables S1−S10 as noted in the text. This material is
513
available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
514 515
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
516
This research is financially supported by the Natural Science Foundation of
517
Shandong Province (No. ZR2016BB19), Natural Science Foundation of University of
518
Jinan (No. XKY1628), National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.
519
21607001), Anhui Provincial Natural Science Foundation (No. 1608085QB45),
520
Science Research Project of Anhui Education Department (No. KJ2015A090),
521
Central Public-interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund, CAFS (No.
522
2017HY-ZD0208). Xiaoxiang Wang acknowledges the support from China ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Scholarship Council (CSC, 201406190170).
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van Leeuwen, F. X.; Liem, A. K.; Nolt, C.; Peterson, R. E.; Poellinger, L.; Safe, S.;
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FIGURE LEGENDS
742 743 744
Figure 1. (A): Concentration-dependent mortality of zebrafish embryos/larvae
745
following waterborne exposure to different concentrations of PCDPS congeners from
746
2 to 120 hpf. Points represent the mean percent mortality of three replicates. Bars
747
represent standard error. (B): Clustering of the concentration-dependent expression of
748
the 6 genes involved in dioxin-like toxicity in zebrafish following exposure to PCDPS
749
congeners from 2 to 120 hpf. Classification and visualization of the gene expression
750
were derived by use of ToxClust.49 The dissimilarity between genes was calculated by
751
the Manhattan distance between the mRNA expression at every concentration. The
752
fold change of gene expression was indicated by color gradient. Gene expression was
753
determined at three exposure concentrations (20, 100 and 500 nM), and displayed
754
from left to right in the rectangle area labeled by each PCDPS tested. (C): Linear
755
regression analyses comparing mRNA expressions of cyp1a1/cyp1b1 with the in vivo
756
log-transformed LC50 values of PCDPSs in zebrafish embryos/larvae following
757
exposure to PCDPSs. Points represent the average of mRNA expression of three
758
biological replicates with the mean LC50 value for each PCDPS tested. Bars represent
759
standard error.
760 761
Figure 2. (A): Concentration-dependent effects of TCDD, the five DLCs and the six
762
PCDPS congeners on Ahr2-mediated LRG activity in COS-7 cells transfected with
763
zebrafish Ahr2 construct. Data are presented as percent response values relative to
764
that of a 300 nM TCDD positive control. Points represent mean, positive
765
control-normalized luciferase ratios obtained from 3 independent experiments, each
766
with 4 technical replicates per concentration. Bars represent standard error. (B):
767
Linear regression analysis comparing in vivo LC50 values of PCDPSs in zebrafish
768
embryos/larvae with PC50 values determined in zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assays. Points
769
represent the average of three replicates. Bars represent standard error. (C): Linear
770
regression analysis comparing ReP values derived from in vivo LC50 values of
771
PCDPSs in zebrafish embryos/larvae with the average ReP values determined in ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
772
zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assays.
773 774
Figure 3. Dose-dependent green fluorescent protein (GFP) induction in Tg(cyp1a:gfp)
775
transgenic zebrafish larvae by 2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS at 120 hpf. GFP expression
776
was photographed under a fluorescent microscope. Scale bar: 1 mm in
777
27.6×magnification.
778 779
Figure 4. The energetic and structural information from MD simulations. (A) The
780
relationship between RePavg values of the compounds tested (namely TCDD, the five
781
DLCs and the six PCDPS congeners) derived from zebrafish Ahr2-LRG assays and
782
ln (−∆G ). Points represent the average ReP value calculated from EC50-, PC10-,
783
PC20-, PC50- and PC80-based ReP values with the average ln (−∆G )
784
determined in MD simulations. Bars represent standard error. (B) The molecular
785
mechanics energy between TCDD and different amino acid residues in the
786
ligand-binding domain (LBD) of Ahr2 in zebrafish. (C) The structure of
787
ligands-Ahr2-LBD complex. α-helixes are shown in salmon, β-sheets in light orange,
788
loops in white, and ligands (namely TCDD, the five DLCs and the six PCDPSs) in
789
grey. Six key residues are shown in purple (Phe300), cyan (Tyr327), yellow (Ile330),
790
blue (Cys338), green (His342) and red (Leu353), respectively. (D) Linear regression
791
analysis between ln (LRG ReP ) and E# . Points represent the average ReP value
792
calculated from EC50-, PC10-, PC20-, PC50- and PC80-based ReP values. Bars represent
793
standard error.
794
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Figure 1
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Figure 2
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Figure 3
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Figure 4
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TABLE LEGENDS
804 805 806
Table 1. Endpoints determined for Ahr2-mediated LRG Activity in COS-7 cells
807
transfected with the zebrafish Ahr2 construct and LC50 values determined in zebrafish
808
embryos/larvae
809
2,3,7,8-TCDF, 1,2,3,7,8-PeCDF, PCB126 or each PCDPS congener. EC50, PC10, PC20,
810
PC50, PC80 and maximal response values represent the average of three replicates ±
811
standard error (SE) obtained from three 96-well plates for each compound. LRG
812
activity values were normalized to responses of 300 nM TCDD positive control (PC).
813
Maximal response values were obtained from the curve fit, unless otherwise indicated.
814
LC50 values of TCDD and PCDPSs represent the average of three replicates ± SE
815
obtained from three beakers per treatment. The average relative potency (RePavg)
816
values were calculated from EC50-, PC10-, PC20-, PC50- and PC80-based ReP values
817
(Table S7, Supporting Information). The RePLC50 values were calculated based on
818
LC50 values from in vivo bioassays.
exposed
to
TCDD,
1,2,3,7,8-PeCDD,
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1,2,3,7,8,9-HxCDD,
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819
820 821 822 823 824 825
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Table 1 Compound
EC50±SE (nM)
PC10±SE (nM)
PC20±SE (nM)
PC50±SE (nM)
PC80±SE (nM)
Max. response±SE (% PC)
LC50±SE (nM)
RePavg
RePLC50
1,2,3,7,8-PeCDD 1,2,3,7,8,9-HxCDD 2,3,7,8-TCDF 1,2,3,7,8-PeCDF PCB126 TCDD 2,3,3’,4,5,6-Hexa-CDPS 2,2’,3,3’,4,5,6-Hepta-CDPS 2,2’,3’,4,5-Penta-CDPS 2,4,4’,5-TCDPS 2,2’,4-Tris-CDPS 4,4’-DCDPS
NC 74.4±4.4 10.9±0.66 NC 266±35 6.76±0.53a 158±2.1b NC NC NC NC NC
0.297±0.011 2.30±0.33 1.83±0.097 3.41±0.75 10.5±7.7 1.02±0.26a 41.1±2.1a 191±10b 203±35b 330±14c 435±8.0d 462±9.4d
0.723±0.0075 7.19±0.59 3.94±0.10 6.27±1.1 33.1±22 1.94±0.34a 64.0±2.2b 401±16c 443±38c 617±6.1d 719±9.0e 825±3.0f
2.70±0.075 45.0±2.0 16.8±1.1 16.9±1.7 225±184 5.55±0.48a 131±1.4a 1229±163b 1391±32b 1673±81c 1628±30c 2213±33d
6.30±0.11 197±14 564±2.8 38.5±2.4 1305±64 13.6±1.7a 234±6.9a 2613±364b 2852±111bc 3633±77d 3186±94cd NE
139±11† 108±1.5 81.0±0.59 106±5.1† 106±18 114±14a 120±1.8a 107±5.7†ab 107±0.95†ab 90.9±2.8†bc 95.5±4.2†b 76.4±2.5†c
NA NA NA NA NA 38.9±13‡a 475±14a 2226±55b 2287±665bc 2973±98c 2862±57bc 4029±159d
2.6 0.20 0.41 0.32 0.043 1.0 0.040 5.0×10-3 4.5×10-3 3.3×10-3 3.2×10-3 2.4×10-3
NA NA NA NA NA 1.0 0.082 0.017 0.017 0.013 0.014 0.010
Superscript letters indicate significant differences among TCDD and PCDPSs treatments (p < 0.05). NC: Not calculated because a plateau was not reached. NA: No published data available. NE: Not estimated because the maximum observed response was below 80% of positive control response. † A plateau was not reached. Values represent the highest observed response. ‡ It was estimated based on two published data.52, 53
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