Pesticide toxicogenomics across scales: in vitro transcriptome predicts mechanisms and outcomes of exposure in vivo
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
In vitro Omics analysis (i.e. transcriptome) is suggested to predict in vivo toxicity and adverse effects in humans, although the causal link between high-throughput data and effects in vivo is not easily established. Indeed, the chemical-organism interaction can involve processes, such as adaptation, not established in cell cultures. Starting from this consideration we investigate the transcriptomic response of immortalized thyrocytes to ethylenthiourea and chlorpyrifos. In vitro data revealed specific and common genes/mechanisms of toxicity, controlling the proliferation/survival of the thyrocytes and unrelated hematopoietic cell lineages. These results were phenotypically confirmed in vivo by the reduction of circulating T4 hormone and the development of pancytopenia after long exposure. Our data imply that in vitro toxicogenomics is a powerful tool in predicting adverse effects in vivo, experimentally confirming the vision described as Tox21c (Toxicity Testing in the 21st century) although not fully recapitulating the biocomplexity of a living animal.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
In vitro Omics analysis (i.e. transcriptome)
Elenco autori:
Porreca Immacolata; D'Angelo Fulvio; De Franceschi Lucia; Mattè Alessandro; Ceccarelli Michele; Iolascon Achille; Zamò Alberto; Russo Filomena; Ravo Maria; Tarallo Roberta; Scarfò Marzia; Weisz Alessandro; De Felice Mario; Mallardo Massimo; Ambrosino Concetta
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