AI Article Synopsis

  • Human exposure to perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) can lead to ulcerative colitis, but the mechanisms of its toxicity in intestinal cells remain unclear.
  • Researchers studied the effects of PFOA on human colorectal cancer cells (HCT116) by examining cell viability, mitochondrial activity, and gene expression related to metabolism.
  • They found that 300 μmol/L of PFOA significantly reduced the viability of HCT116 cells and altered metabolic gene expression, while lower concentrations (50 μmol/L) increased mitochondrial respiratory activity.
  • The study suggests that mitochondrial activity could indicate PFOA's effects, and specific genes could play a role in the development of ulcerative colitis linked to PFOA exposure

Article Abstract

While human exposure to perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) can lead to ulcerative colitis, the molecular mechanisms responsible for PFOA-induced intestinal toxicity are unclear. Herein, we examined the toxicity of PFOA toward human colorectal cancer cells (HCT116) from three dimensions: the cytotoxic phenotype, cell respiration, and transcription levels of metabolism-related genes. Formazan was used to assess how PFOA exposure affects HCT116-cell relative viability, after which the mitochondrial respiratory activities of these cells were determined by analyzing extracellular flux. The quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) method was used to detect metabolism-related gene expression levels. The cytotoxicity assay revealed that the HCT116 showed significantly inhibited relative activities compared to those of the control when exposed to 300 μmol/L PFOA for 48 h (<0.01), with most cells retained at the G0/G1 stage. In contrast, the mitochondrial respiratory activities of the HCT116 were promoted by concentrations of PFOA as low as 50 μmol/L. Two genes related to cellular metabolism (dipeptidase 1 () and sphingosine kinase 1 ()) were found to be related to the PFOA-promoted formation of ulcerative colitis using our self-developed Metabolic Gene and Pathway Query software and Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD). The qPCR studies revealed that and expression levels were enhanced by 8-10 times in HCT116 exposed to 300 μmol/L PFOA relative to the control, whereas this trend was not observed for HCT116 exposed to 50 μmol/L PFOA. Collectively, these results suggest that the respiratory activity of cellular mitochondria may serve as an index for determining the interference effects associated with PFOA and that metabolic pathways mediated by and may be involved in the development of PFOA-induced ulcerative colitis. Future studies should investigate the relationships between changes in metabolism-related genes ( and ) and the mitochondrial respiratory activities of intestinal cells, and verify the roles played by the and genes in PFOA-induced intestinal inflammation using in-vivo models.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3724/SP.J.1123.2024.05022DOI Listing

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