4.7 Article

Toxicity pathways of lipid metabolic disorders induced by typical replacement flame retardants via data-driven analysis, in silico and in vitro approaches

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 287, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.132419

Keywords

Toxicity pathways; Lipid metabolism disorder; Bibliometric analysis; Computational toxicology; Data-driven analysis

Funding

  1. Yantai Science and Technology Development Plan [2020MSGY060]
  2. National Natural Science Founda-tion of China [21677173, 41530642]
  3. Youth Innovation Pro-motion Association CAS [2017255]

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Endocrine-disrupting chemicals, such as organophosphorus ester (OPEs) flame retardants, can impact lipid metabolism and induce chronic health issues. Triphenyl phosphate (TPP) in OPEs is particularly concerning for causing lipid metabolism abnormalities by damaging cell membrane structures and activating the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor 1 (GPER) pathway.
Endocrine-disrupting chemicals can interfere with hormone action via various pathways, thereby increasing the risk of adverse health outcomes. Organophosphorus ester (OPEs) retardants, a group of new emerging endocrine disruption chemicals, have been referred to as metabolism disruptors and reported to induce chronic health problems. However, the toxicity pathways were mainly focused on nuclear receptor signaling pathways. Significantly, the membrane receptor pathway (such as G protein-coupled estrogen receptor 1 (GPER) signaling pathway) had been gradually realized as the important role in respond more effective to lipid metabolism disorder than traditional nuclear receptors, whereas the detailed mechanism was unclear yet. Therefore, this study innovatively integrated the bibliometric analysis, in silico and in vitro approach to develop toxicity pathways for the mechanism interpretation. Bibliometric analysis found that the typical OPEs -triphenyl phosphate was a major concern of lipid metabolism abnormality. Results verified that TPP could damage the structures of cell membranes and exert an agonistic effect of GPER as the molecular initiating event. Then, the activated GPER could trigger the PI3K-Akt/NCOR1 and mTOR/S6K2/PPAR alpha transduction pathways as key event 1 (KE1) and affect the process of lipid metabolism and synthesis (CPT1A, CPT2, SREBF2 and SCD) as KE2. As a result, these alterations led to lipid accumulation as adverse effect at cellular-levels. Furthermore, the potential outcomes (such as immunity damage, weight change and steatohepatitis) at high biological levels were expanded. These findings improved knowledge to deeply understand toxicity pathways of phosphorus flame retardants and then provided a theoretical basis for risk assessments.

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