Published July 11, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Adverse Outcome Pathway-Driven Analysis of Liver Steatosis in Vitro: A Case Study with Cyproconazole

  • 1. Department Food Safety, German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, 10589 Berlin, Germany
  • 2. INRA Unit 1331, TOXALIM, French National Institute for Agricultural Research, 180 chemin de Tournefeuille - BP.93173 F-31027 TOULOUSE cedex 3, France
  • 3. Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Department of Food Technology, Food Safety and Health, Ghent University, 9000 Ghent, Belgium
  • 4. Benaki Phytopathological Institute, Athens 14561, Greece
  • 5. BioMedical Proteomics Platform and Institute of Molecular Systems Biology, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
  • 6. RIKILT Wageningen University and Research, 6708 WB Wageningen, The Netherlands
  • 7. Department of Health Sciences and Technology, BioMedical Proteomics Platform and Institute of Molecular Systems Biology, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
  • 8. Department of Health Sciences and Technology

Description

Adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) describe causal relationships between molecular perturbation and adverse cellular effects and are being increasingly adopted for linking in vitro mechanistic toxicology to in vivo data from regulatory toxicity studies. In this work, a case study was performed by developing a bioassay toolbox to assess key events in the recently proposed AOP for chemically induced liver steatosis. The toolbox is comprised of in vitro assays to measure nuclear receptor activation, gene and protein expression, lipid accumulation, mitochondrial respiration, and formation of fatty liver cells. Assay evaluation was performed in human HepaRG hepatocarcinoma cells exposed to the model compound cyproconazole, a fungicide inducing steatosis in rodents. Cyproconazole dose-dependently activated RARα and PXR, two molecular initiating events in the steatosis AOP. Moreover, cyproconazole provoked a disruption of mitochondrial functions and induced triglyceride accumulation and the formation of fatty liver cells as described in the AOP. Gene and protein expression analysis, however, showed expression changes different from those proposed in the AOP, thus suggesting that the current version of the AOP might not fully reflect the complex mechanisms linking nuclear receptor activation and liver steatosis. Our study shows that cyproconazole induces steatosis in human liver cells in vitro and demonstrates the utility of systems-based approaches in the mechanistic assessment of molecular and cellular key events in an AOP. AOP-driven in vitro testing as demonstrated can further improve existing AOPs, provide insight regarding molecular mechanisms of toxicity, and inform predictive risk assessment

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Funding

EuroMix – EuroMix 633172
European Commission