19 research outputs found

    Combined Low-Dose Zearalenone and Aflatoxin B1 on Cell Growth and Cell-Cycle Progression in Breast Cancer MCF-7 Cells

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    Zearalenone (ZEA) has long been recognized as a xenoestrogen, while the endocrine disrupting effects of aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) have been identified recently. Due to co-occurrence and endocrine disrupting potentials of ZEA and AFB1, it was hypothesized that co-exposure to ZEA and AFB1 might affect breast cancer cell growth. Consequently, the aim of this study was to evaluate the combined effects of ZEA and AFB1 (1 nM–100 nM) on cell growth and cell cycle progression, using a human breast cancer cell line MCF-7. Our results showed that ZEA and AFB1 produced significant interactive effects on cell growth, DNA synthesis and cell cycle progression. While ZEA promoted growth, DNA synthesis and cell cycle progression, AFB1 was cytotoxic and counteracted the effects of ZEA. ZEA altered the expression of several breast cancer related genes, whereas AFB1 had minimal effects on gene expression. With the use of specific inhibitors, ERα, GPER and MAPK pathways were found to be responsible for ZEA's effects on cell growth; while MAPK pathways might be involved in cytotoxic effects by AFB1. This study is first to report the effects of co-exposure of ZEA and AFB1 on breast cancer cell growth, possibly through ER dependent pathway. This suggested that endocrine-disrupting mycotoxins that co-occur in human food can interact and influence human health. Future work on interactive effects of endocrine-disrupting mycotoxins or other xenoestrogens is warranted, which will contribute to improved risk assessments. © 2017 Elsevier B.V

    Modulation of the spleen transcriptome in domestic turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) in response to aflatoxin B1 and probiotics

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    Poultry are highly susceptible to the immunotoxic effects of the food-borne mycotoxin aflatoxin B1 (AFB1). Exposure impairs cell-mediated and humoral immunity, limits vaccine efficacy, and increases the incidence of costly secondary infections. We investigated the molecular mechanisms of AFB1 immunotoxicity and the ability of a Lactobacillus-based probiotic to protect against aflatoxicosis in the domestic turkey (Meleagris gallopavo). The spleen transcriptome was examined by RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) of 12 individuals representing four treatment groups. Sequences (6.9 Gb) were de novo assembled to produce over 270,000 predicted transcripts and transcript fragments. Differential expression analysis identified 982 transcripts with statistical significance in at least one comparison between treatment groups. Transcripts with known immune functions comprised 27.6 % of significant expression changes in the AFB1-exposed group. Short exposure to AFB1 suppressed innate immune transcripts, especially from antimicrobial genes, but increased the expression of transcripts from E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase CBL-B and multiple interleukin-2 response genes. Up-regulation of transcripts from lymphotactin, granzyme A, and perforin 1 could indicate either increased cytotoxic potential or activation-induced cell death in the spleen during aflatoxicosis. Supplementation with probiotics was found to ameliorate AFB1-induced expression changes for multiple transcripts from antimicrobial and IL-2-response genes. However, probiotics had an overall suppressive effect on immune-related transcripts
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