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Bisphenolic compounds alter gene expression in MCF-7 cells through interaction with estrogen receptor α
Summary
Researchers used RNA sequencing and molecular binding assays to show that bisphenol A and three structural analogs (BPB, BPZ, 4MeBPA) released from plastics activate estrogen receptor alpha in human breast cancer cells, upregulating genes associated with cancer cell growth, invasion, and proliferation — providing evidence that BPA substitutes share similar endocrine-disrupting potential.
Plasticizers released from microplastic are increasingly viewed with concern. While adverse health effects induced by bisphenol A and its analogues on marine animals are well documented in the literature, the endocrine potential of bisphenolic compounds on human health remains elusive. We applied next generation sequencing (NGS) with the estrogen receptor α (ERα) positive human breast cancer cell line MCF-7 treated with 17-β-estradiol (E2), bisphenol A (BPA), bisphenol B (BPB), bisphenol Z (BPZ) and tetramethyl bisphenol A (4MeBPA). We used molecular docking, microscale thermophoresis, ERα activation assay, and cell cycle experiments on MCF-7 and ERα overexpressing HEK293 cells to verify the impact of the compounds on ERα. 14 genes were found upregulated (ADORA1, DDIT4, CELSR2, FOSL2, JUN, HSPA13, IER3, IGF1R, PGR, RUNX2, SLC7A11, SLC7A2, SLC7A5, STC2) and 3 genes were downregulated (BCAS3, PHF19, PRKCD) in almost all samples. These genes are associated with cell growth, invasion, migration, apoptosis and cancer development. We further confirmed the binding, activation and proliferative effect of BPA, BPB, BPZ, and 4MeBPA on ERα. We provide evidence for the endocrine potential of bisphenolic compounds and give insights into their molecular effects in MCF-7 cells.