AI Article Synopsis

  • - Current assessments of petroleum risks focus mainly on narcosis, but research has shown that oil contains chemicals that can disrupt endocrine functions, including estrogenic and antiestrogenic activities.
  • - This study, part of a series, tested 11 different crude oils and refined products using modified mammalian cells to evaluate their estrogenic effects; most oils exhibited significant estrogenic responses, though much weaker than the hormone 17β-estradiol (E2).
  • - Notably, one type of nautical fuel oil was found to significantly promote cell growth in cancer cells and trigger the expression of estrogen-sensitive genes, suggesting that oils could have broader biological effects beyond just receptor interactions.

Article Abstract

Current petroleum risk assessment considers only narcosis as the mode of action, but several studies have demonstrated that oils contain compounds with dioxin-like, estrogenic or antiestrogenic, and androgenic or antiandrogenic activities. The present study is the third in a series investigating the specific toxic effects of 11 crude oils and refined products. By employing recombinant mammalian cells stably transfected with the human estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) or beta (ERβ), and expressing the luciferase protein (ERα-U2OS-Luc and ERβ-U2OS-Luc assay), the estrogenicity or antiestrogenicity of oils was studied. All oils, except for two refined oils and one crude oil, induced estrogenic responses. The calculated estrogenic potencies of the oils were six to nine orders of magnitude lower than the potency of 17β-estradiol (E2). Upon coexposure to a fixed concentration of E2 and increasing concentrations of oils, additive, antagonistic, and synergistic effects were revealed. One nautical fuel oil was tested in the human breast carcinoma cell line MCF-7, in which it induced cell proliferation up to 70% relative to the maximal induction by E2. At its minimum effect concentration of 25 mg/L, the oil was also capable of inducing mRNA expression of the estrogen-dependent protein pS2 by a factor of two. The present results indicate that oils naturally contain potentially endocrine-disrupting compounds that are able to influence the estrogenicity of other compounds and may cause biological responses beyond receptor binding.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/etc.463DOI Listing

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