Effect of cadmium on cortisol production and 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 2 expression by cultured human choriocarcinoma cells (JEG-3).

Toxicol In Vitro

Laboratory of Nutrition and Metabolic Regulation, Institute of Nutrition and Food Technology (INTA), University of Chile, Santiago, Chile.

Published: September 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cadmium is a toxic substance that can cause cancer and disrupt endocrine functions, especially when exposure happens during pregnancy, leading to low birth weight and potentially affecting fetal glucocorticoid levels.
  • Researchers studied how low doses of cadmium (0.5 and 1 microM) impact cortisol production and the expression and activity of the 11beta-HSD2 gene in human choriocarcinoma cells.
  • Findings revealed that cadmium exposure resulted in lower cortisol levels, increased expression and activity of 11beta-HSD2, and changes in the methylation status of the HSD11B2 gene, suggesting that cadmium may disrupt endocrine functions through epigenetic mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Cadmium is a toxicant with known carcinogenic and endocrine disruptor effects. We have previously reported that prenatal exposure to cadmium may induce low birth weight which is associated to increased foetal exposure to glucocorticoids; both signals constitute "hallmarks" of developmental programming. Since the effect of cadmium on the glucocorticoid system of placental carcinogenic cells is unknown, in the present work, we studied the effect of acute low dose of cadmium on cortisol production and 11beta-HSD2 expression and activity by cultured human choriocarcinoma cells (JEG-3). In addition, it was also evaluated whether those effects were related to the methylation index of the HSD11B2 gene, which can be regulated by epigenetic mechanisms. Cells were incubated with low cadmium dose (0.5 and 1 microM) for 24h and viability (MTT), cortisol production (EIA), 11beta-HSD2 expression (qRT-PCR) and activity (radioassay), and methylation index of the HSD11B2 gene were determined. Results show lower cortisol concentrations in the incubation media of exposed cells, which were associated to increased 11beta-HSD2 expression and activity and to a lower methylation index of the gene. These results suggest that cadmium-induced endocrine disruptor effects on JEG-3 cells could be mediated by changes in the methylation status of some target genes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tiv.2010.07.003DOI Listing

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