Exposure to microcystin-LR promotes astrocyte proliferation both in vitro and in vivo via Hippo signaling pathway

Microcystins (MCs) are toxic to the central nervous system of mammals. However, the direct toxicity of MCs on mammalian brain cells and the involved molecular mechanisms are not fully elucidated. Here, we incubated primary astrocytes, the major glial cell-type in the brain, with 0–12.5 μM concentrat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecotoxicology and environmental safety 2024-07, Vol.279, p.116480-116480, Article 116480
Hauptverfasser: Xue, Qingju, Yan, Yunjun, Zhang, Kaiye, Zhang, Hui, Zhao, Yanyan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Microcystins (MCs) are toxic to the central nervous system of mammals. However, the direct toxicity of MCs on mammalian brain cells and the involved molecular mechanisms are not fully elucidated. Here, we incubated primary astrocytes, the major glial cell-type in the brain, with 0–12.5 μM concentrations of MC-LR for 48 h, and the impairment was evaluated. We found that MC-LR caused significant increases in the cell viability at the range of 0.05–1 μM concentrations with the highest density at 0.1 μM concentration. Treatment with 0.1 μM MC-LR induced YAP nuclear translocation and decreased the ratio of p-YAP to YAP. It also decreased mRNA levels of the upstream regulator (AMOT), and enhanced expressions of YAP interacted genes (Egfr, Tead1, and Ctgf) in primary astrocytes. Overexpression of AMOT significantly attenuated the increase of MC-LR-induced astrocyte proliferation and the expression of YAP downstream genes. These results indicate that Hippo signaling contributed to MC-LR-caused astrocyte proliferation. Further, reactive astrogliosis was observed in the mice brain after MC-LR exposure to environmentally relevant concentrations (20 or 100 μg/L) through drinking water for 16 weeks. Pathological observations revealed that 100 μg/L MC-LR exposure caused neuronal damages with characteristics of shrunken or vacuolation in the region of the cerebral cortex, striatum and cerebellum. These results were accompanied with increased oxidative stress and inflammatory response. Our data reveal the potential astrocytic mechanisms in MC-induced neurotoxicity and raise an alarm for neurodegenerative disease risk following daily exposure to MC-LR. [Display omitted] •MC-LR caused a significant increase in cell viability of primary astrocytes.•Hippo signaling is involved in MC-induced astrocyte proliferation.•AMOT is critical in regulation of Hippo signaling in MC-LR-induced astrocyte proliferation.•MC-LR induces extensive neuron impairment, astrocyte activation and proliferation in mice brain.
ISSN:0147-6513
1090-2414
DOI:10.1016/j.ecoenv.2024.116480