Transcriptomic
and Network Analyses Reveal Mechanistic-Based
Biomarkers of Endocrine Disruption in the Marine Mussel, <i>Mytilus
edulis</i>
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Abstract
Transcriptomics,
high-throughput assays, and adverse outcome pathways
(AOP) are promising approaches applied to toxicity monitoring in the
21st century, but development of these methods is challenging for
nonmodel organisms and emerging contaminants. For example, Endocrine
Disrupting Compounds (EDCs) may cause reproductive impairments and
feminization of male bivalves; however, the mechanism linked to this
adverse outcome is unknown. To develop mechanism-based biomarkers
that may be linked through an AOP, we exposed <i>Mytilus edulis</i> to 17-alpha-ethinylestradiol (5 and 50 ng/L) and 4-nonylphenol (1
and 100 μg/L) for 32 and 39 days. When mussels were exposed
to these EDCs, we found elevated female specific transcripts and significant
female-skewed sex ratios using a RT-qPCR assay. We performed gene
expression analysis on digestive gland tissue using an <i>M.
edulis</i> microarray and through network and targeted analyses
identified the nongenomic estrogen signaling pathway and steroidogenesis
pathway as the likely mechanisms of action for a putative AOP. We
also identified several homologues to genes within the vertebrate
steroidogenesis pathway including the cholesterol side chain cleavage
complex. From this AOP, we designed the Coastal Biosensor for Endocrine
Disruption (C-BED) assay which was confirmed in the laboratory and
tested in the field