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Forskningsartikel2013Vetenskapligt granskad

Metabolic Activation of Nonpolar Sediment Extracts Results in Enhanced Thyroid Hormone Disrupting Potency

Montano, Mauricio; Weiss, Jana; Hoffmann, Lucien; Gutleb, Arno Christian; Murk, AlberTinka Jacoba

Sammanfattning

Traditional sediment risk assessment predominantly considers the hazard derived from legacy contaminants that are present in nonpolar sediment extracts, such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dioxins, furans (PCDD/Fs), and polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Although in vivo experiments with these compounds have shown to be thyroid hormone disrupting (THD), in vitro their THD potency is not observed in nonpolar sediment extracts. This is hypothesized to be due to the absence of in vitro biotransformation which will result in bioactivation of the lipophilic compounds into THD hydroxyl metabolites. This study reveals that indeed metabolically activated nonpolar contaminants in sediments can competitively bind to thyroid hormone transport proteins. Sediment fractions were incubated with S9 rat microsomes, and the metabolites were. extracted with a newly developed method that excludes most of the lipids to avoid interference in the applied nonradioactive 96-well plate TTR competitive binding assay. Metabolic activation increased the TTR binding potency of nonpolar fractions of POP-polluted sediments up to 100 times, resulting in potencies up to 240 nmol T-4 equivalents/g sediment equivalent (nmol T-4-Eq/g SEQ). This demonstrates that a more realistic in vitro sediment THD risk characterization should also include testing of both polar and medium polar sediment extracts for THD, as well as bioactivated nonpolar sediment fractions to prevent underestimation of its toxic potency.

Publicerad i

Environmental Science and Technology
2013, Volym: 47, nummer: 15, sidor: 8878-8886 Utgivare: AMER CHEMICAL SOC

    UKÄ forskningsämne

    Analytisk kemi

    Publikationens identifierare

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/es4011898

    Permanent länk till denna sida (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/86597