4.5 Article

Evidence for triclosan-induced activation of human and rodent xenobiotic nuclear receptors

期刊

TOXICOLOGY IN VITRO
卷 27, 期 7, 页码 2049-2060

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tiv.2013.07.008

关键词

Triclosan; Pregnane-X receptor; Constitutive androstane receptor; Thyroid disruption; Hepatic catabolism

资金

  1. PhRMA Foundation Predoctoral Pharmacology/Toxicology Fellowship
  2. EPA/UNC Toxicology Research Program [CR833237]
  3. National Institute of Environmental Health Science Training Grant [T32-ES07126]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The bacteriostat triclosan (2,4,4'-trichloro-2'-hydroxydiphenylether) (TCS) decreases rat serum thyroxine via putative nuclear receptor (NR) interaction(s) and subsequent transcriptional up-regulation of hepatic catabolism and clearance. However, due to the evolutionary divergence of the constitutive androstane and pregnane-X receptors (CAR, PXR), TCS-mediated downstream effects may be species-dependent. To test the hypothesis that TCS activates xenobiotic NRs across species, cell-based NR reporter assays were employed to assess potential activation of rat, mouse, and human PXR, and rat, mouse, and three splice variants of human CAR. TCS activated hPXR, acted as an inverse agonist of hCAR1, and as a weak agonist of hCAR3. TCS failed to activate rPXR in full-length receptor reporter assays, and instead acted as a modest inverse agonist of rCAR. Consistent with the rat data, TCS also failed to activate mPXR and was a modest inverse agonist of mCAR. These data suggest that TCS may interact with multiple NRs, including hPXR, hCAR1, hCAR3, and rCAR in order to potentially affect hepatic catabolism. Overall these data support the conclusion that TCS may interact with NRs to regulate hepatic catabolism and downstream thyroid hormone homeostasis in both rat and human models, though perhaps by divergent mechanisms. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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