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Metabolomic and sphingolipidomic profiling of human hepatoma cells exposed to widely used pharmaceuticals

Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis 2024 Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Miriam Pérez-Cova, Joaquim Jaumot Joaquim Jaumot Miriam Pérez-Cova, Romá Tauler, Joaquim Jaumot Carmen Bedia, Carmen Bedia, Joaquim Jaumot Joaquim Jaumot Carmen Bedia, Joaquim Jaumot Joaquim Jaumot Carmen Bedia, Antonio Checa, Isabel Meister, Romá Tauler, Romá Tauler, Craig E. Wheelock, Joaquim Jaumot Joaquim Jaumot

Summary

This study used metabolomic and sphingolipidomic profiling of human hepatoma cells exposed to wine bottle-associated microplastics, identifying disrupted lipid metabolism pathways and stress responses that may be relevant to human health risk assessment.

Body Systems
Study Type In vitro

Pharmaceutical compounds have become one of the main contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) due to their high usage and increased release into the environment. This study aims to assess the effects caused by three widely consumed hepatotoxic pharmaceutical compounds: an antibiotic (amoxicillin), an antiepileptic (carbamazepine), and an antidepressant (trazodone), on human health when indirectly exposed to toxicologically relevant concentrations (30, 15, and 7.5 μM for amoxicillin and carbamazepine, and 4, 2, and 1 μM for trazodone). A combination of semi-targeted metabolomic and targeted sphingolipid analyses was chosen to unravel the metabolic alterations in human hepatic cells exposed to these CECs at three concentrations for 24 h. HepG2 hepatoma cells were encapsulated in sodium alginate spheroids to improve the physiological relevance of this in vitro approach. Statistical analysis was used to identify the most affected metabolites and sphingolipids for each drug exposure. The results revealed small but significant changes in response to carbamazepine and trazodone exposures, affecting sphingolipid, glycerophospholipid precursors, and amino acid metabolism. Under both drug treatments, a decrease in various ceramide species (related to cell signaling) was observed, along with reduced taurine levels (related to the biosynthesis of bile acid conjugates) and carnitine levels (suggesting an impact on energy production). These and other drug-specific changes indicate that cellular functions in liver cells might be altered under low doses of these CECs, potentially affecting the health of other organs.

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