4.5 Article

Screening the ToxCast Phase 1 Chemical Library for Inhibition of Deiodinase Type 1 Activity

Journal

TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 162, Issue 2, Pages 570-581

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kfx279

Keywords

screening; throughput; thyroid; deiodinase; inhibition; in vitro

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

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Thyroid hormone (TH) homeostasis is dependent upon coordination of multiple key events including iodide uptake, hormone synthesis, metabolism, and elimination, to maintain proper TH signaling. Deiodinase enzymes catalyze iodide release from THs to interconvert THs between active and inactive forms, and are integral to hormone metabolism. The activity of deiodinases has been identified as an important endpoint to include in the context of screening chemicals for TH disruption. To begin to address the potential for chemicals to inhibit these enzymes an adenovirus expression system was used to produce human deiodinase type 1 (DIO1) enzyme, established robust assay parameters for nonradioactive determination of iodide release by the Sandell-Kolthoff method, and employed a 96-well plate format for screening chemical libraries. An initial set of 18 chemicals was used to establish the assay, along with the known DIO1 inhibitor 6-propylthiouracil as a positive control. An additional 292 unique chemicals from the EPA's ToxCast phase 1_v2 chemical library were screened. Chemicals were initially screened at a single high concentration of 200 mu M to identify potential DIO1 inhibitors. There were 50 chemicals, or 17% of the TCp1_v2 chemicals tested, that produced > 20% inhibition of DIO1 activity. Eighteen of these inhibited DIO1 activity > 50% and were further tested in concentration-response mode to determine IC50s. This work presents an initial effort toward identifying chemicals with potential for affecting THs via inhibition of deiodinases and sets the foundation for further testing of large chemical libraries against DIO1 and the other deiodinase enzymes involved in TH function.

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