4.5 Article

A Gene Expression Biomarker Predicts Heat Shock Factor 1 Activation in a Gene Expression Compendium

Journal

CHEMICAL RESEARCH IN TOXICOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 7, Pages 1721-1737

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.0c00510

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Funding

  1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

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The US EPA developed a tiered testing strategy utilizing high-throughput transcriptomics to identify molecular targets of environmental chemicals. A gene expression biomarker was used to predict chemical activation of HSF1, showing promising results in accurately identifying HSF1 activators. This approach could potentially be used to identify environmentally relevant chemical HSF1 activators in large data sets.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) recently developed a tiered testing strategy to use advances in high-throughput transcriptomics (HTTr) testing to identify molecular targets of thousands of environmental chemicals that can be linked to adverse outcomes. Here, we describe a method that uses a gene expression biomarker to predict chemical activation of heat shock factor 1 (HSF1), a transcription factor critical for proteome maintenance. The HSF1 biomarker was built from transcript profiles derived from A375 cells exposed to a HSF1-activating heat shock protein (HSP) 90 inhibitor in the presence or absence of HSF1 expression. The resultant 44 identified genes included those that (1) are dependent on HSF1 for regulation, (2) have direct interactions with HSF1 assessed by ChIP-Seq, and (3) are in the molecular chaperone family. To test for accuracy, the biomarker was compared in a pairwise manner to gene lists derived from treatments with known HSF1 activity (HSP and proteasomal inhibitors) using the correlation-based Running Fisher test; the balanced accuracy for prediction was 96%. A microarray compendium consisting of 12,092 microarray comparisons from human cells exposed to 2670 individual chemicals was screened using our approach; 112 and 19 chemicals were identified as putative HSF1 activators or suppressors, respectively, and most appear to be novel modulators. A large percentage of the chemical treatments that induced HSF1 also induced oxidant-activated NRF2 (similar to 46%). For five compounds or mixtures, we found that NRF2 activation occurred at lower concentrations or at earlier times than HSF1 activation, supporting the concept of a tiered cellular protection system dependent on the level of chemical-induced stress. The approach described here could be used to identify environmentally relevant chemical HSF1 activators in HTTr data sets.

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