Two thyroperoxidase-inhibiting chemicals induce shared transcriptional changes in hippocampus of developing rats

Louise Ramhøj*, Terje Svingen, Bertrand Evrard, Frédéric Chalmel, Marta Axelstad

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Thyroid hormone (TH) system disrupting compounds can impair brain development by perturbing TH action during critical life stages. Human exposure to TH system disrupting chemicals is therefore of great concern. To better protect humans against such chemicals, sensitive test methods that can detect effects on the developing brain are critical. Worryingly, however, current test methods are not sensitive and specific towards TH-mediated effects. To address this shortcoming, we performed RNA-sequencing of rat brains developmentally exposed to two different thyroperoxidase (TPO) inhibiting compounds, the medical drug methimazole (MMI) or the pesticide amitrole. Pregnant and lactating rats were exposed to 8 and 16 mg/kg/day(d) MMI or 25 and 50 mg/kg/d amitrole from gestational day 7 until postnatal day 16. Bulk-RNA-seq was performed on hippocampus from the 16-days old male pups. MMI and amitrole caused pronounced changes to the transcriptomes; 816 genes were differentially expressed, and 425 gene transcripts were similarly affected by both chemicals. Functional terms indicate effects from key cellular functions to changes in cell development, migration and differentiation of several cell populations. Of the total DEGs, 106 DEGs appeared to form a consistent transcriptional fingerprint of developmental hypothyroidism as they were similarly and dose-dependently expressed across all treatment groups. Using a filtering system, we identified 20 genes that appeared to represent the most sensitive, robust and dose-dependent markers of altered TH-mediated brain development. These markers provide inputs to the adverse outcome pathway (AOP) framework where they, in the context of linking TPO inhibiting compounds to adverse cognitive function, can be used to assess altered gene expression in the hippocampus in rat toxicity studies.
Original languageEnglish
Article number153822
JournalToxicology
Volume505
Number of pages9
ISSN0300-483X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Endocrine disruption
  • Thyroid hormone
  • Developmental neurotoxicity
  • Brain
  • Gene expression
  • AOP

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