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Halogenated bisphenol a analogues induce PPARγ-independent toxicity within human hepatocellular carcinoma cells

Abstract

Tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA) and tetrachlorobisphenol A (TCBPA) - both halogenated bisphenol (BPA) analogues - are suspected ligands of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ). While previous studies have shown that TBBPA and TCBPA activate PPARγ within cell-free assays, the downstream effects of TBBPA- and TCBPA-induced PPARγ activation on cellular transcription and physiology have not been thoroughly investigated. Therefore, the objective of this study was to determine whether exposure to TBBPA or TCBPA (either alone or in combination) alters levels of neutral lipids and fatty acid synthase (FASN) - an enzyme that catalyzes synthesis of long-chain saturated fatty acids - within intact cells in a PPARγ-dependent manner. For this study, we relied on human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) cells as a model since these liver cells express basal levels of PPARγ and have been used to study lipoprotein metabolism and regulation of drug metabolizing enzymes. Although exposure to TBBPA and TCBPA alone did not affect cell viability nor neutral lipid and FASN levels in a concentration-dependent manner, exposure to binary mixtures of TBBPA and TCBPA resulted in a concentration-dependent decrease in cell viability in the absence of concentration-dependent effects on neutral lipid and FASN levels. Interestingly, exposure to TBBPA or TCBPA alone or as a mixture enhanced the effects of a reference PPARγ agonist (ciglitazone) and antagonist (GW 9662) on cell viability (but not neutral lipid levels), suggesting that these two halogenated BPA analogues may interact synergistically with ciglitazone and GW 9662 to induce cytotoxicity. However, overexpression of PPARγ did not mitigate nor enhance the effects of TBBPA - a potent PPARγ ligand predicted by ToxCast's cell-free competitive binding assays - on cell viability, neutral lipid levels, nor the cellular transcriptome. Overall, our findings suggest that halogenated BPA analogues such as TCBPA and TBBPA induce toxicity within HepG2 cells in a PPARγ-independent manner.

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