Toxicogenomics of the Flame Retardant tris(2-butoxyethyl)Phosphate in HepG2 Cells using RNA-seq
Boris V. Krivoshiev, Gerrit T.S. Beemster, Katrien Sprangers, Bart Cuypers, Kris Laukens, Ronny Blust and Steven J. Husson.
Toxicology in Vitro (2018)
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tiv.2017.10.011
PMID: 29024780
Publication
Abstract
Tris (2-butoxyethyl) phosphate (TBOEP) is a compound produced at high volume that is used as both a flame retardant and a plasticizer. It is persistent and bioaccumulative, yet little is known of its toxicological modes of action. Such insight may aid risk assessment in a weight-of-evidence approach supplementing current testing strategies. We used an RNA sequencing approach as an unbiased and sensitive tool to explore potential negative health effects of sub-cytotoxic concentrations of TBOEP on the transcriptome of the human liver hepatocellular carcinoma cell line, HepG2, with the lowest concentration used potentially holding relevance to human physiological levels. Over-representation and gene set enrichment analysis corresponded well and revealed that TBOEP treatments resulted in an upregulation of genes involved in protein and energy metabolism, along with DNA replication. Such increases in cell and macromolecule metabolism could explain the increase in mitochondrial activity at lower TBOEP concentrations. In addition, TBOEP affected a wide variety of biological processes, the most notable one being the general stress response, wound healing. Finally, TBOEP showed effects on steroid hormone biosynthesis and activation, regulation, and potentiation of immune responses, in agreement with other studies. As such, this study is the first study investigating genome-wide changes in gene transcription in response to TBOEP in human cells.
Toxicogenomics
RNA-Seq Data
Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) Series: GSE109072