Investigating the mechanisms of action of thyroid disruptors: A multimodal approach that integrates in vitro and metabolomic analysis

The thyroid gland, a vital component of the endocrine system, plays a pivotal role in regulating metabolic processes, growth, and development. To better characterize thyroid system disrupting chemicals (TSDC), we followed the next-generation risk assessment approach, which further considers the mech...

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Veröffentlicht in:Toxicology in vitro 2024-10, Vol.100, p.105911, Article 105911
Hauptverfasser: Clavel Rolland, Naïs, Graslin, Fanny, Schorsch, Frédéric, Pourcher, Thierry, Blanck, Olivier
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The thyroid gland, a vital component of the endocrine system, plays a pivotal role in regulating metabolic processes, growth, and development. To better characterize thyroid system disrupting chemicals (TSDC), we followed the next-generation risk assessment approach, which further considers the mechanistic profile of xenobiotics. We combined targeted in vitro testing with untargeted metabolomics. Four known TSDC, propyl-thiouracil (PTU), sodium perchlorate, triclosan, and 5-pregnen-3β-ol-20-one-16α‑carbonitrile (PCN) were investigated using rat in vitro models, including primary hepatocytes, PCCL3 cells, thyroid microsomes, and three-dimensional thyroid follicles. We confirmed each compound's mode of action, PTU inhibited thyroperoxidase activity and thyroid hormones secretion in thyroid cells model, sodium perchlorate induced a NIS-mediated iodide uptake decrease as triclosan to a lesser extent, and PCN activated expression and activity of hepatic enzymes (CYPs and UGTs) involved in thyroid hormones metabolism. In parallel, we characterized intracellular metabolites of interest. We identified disrupted basal metabolic pathways, but also metabolites directly linked to the compound's mode of action as tyrosine derivates for sodium perchlorate and triclosan, bile acids involved in beta-oxidation, and precursors of cytochrome P450 synthesis for PCN. This pilot study has provided metabolomic fingerprinting of dedicated TSDC exposures, which could be used to screen and differentiate specific modes of action. •in vitro tests are a reliable means of characterizing TSDC mode of action but are time-consuming.•Metabolomics provides a comprehensive evaluation of a compound's metabolite signature.•The integration of new approach methodologies with omics offers a valuable approach for next-generation risk assessment.
ISSN:0887-2333
1879-3177
1879-3177
DOI:10.1016/j.tiv.2024.105911