Genome-wide toxicogenomic study of the lanthanides sheds light on the selective toxicity mechanisms associated with critical materials |
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Authors: | Roger M. Pallares,David Faulkner,Dahlia D. An,Solè ne Hé bert,Alex Loguinov,Michael Proctor,Jonathan A. Villalobos,Kathleen A. Bjornstad,Chris J. Rosen,Christopher Vulpe,Rebecca J. Abergel |
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Affiliation: | aChemical Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, 94720;bCenter for Environmental and Human Toxicology, Department of Physiological Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 32611;cDepartment of Nuclear Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720 |
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Abstract: | Lanthanides are a series of critical elements widely used in multiple industries, such as optoelectronics and healthcare. Although initially considered to be of low toxicity, concerns have emerged during the last few decades over their impact on human health. The toxicological profile of these metals, however, has been incompletely characterized, with most studies to date solely focusing on one or two elements within the group. In the current study, we assessed potential toxicity mechanisms in the lanthanide series using a functional toxicogenomics approach in baker’s yeast, which shares many cellular pathways and functions with humans. We screened the homozygous deletion pool of 4,291 Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains with the lanthanides and identified both common and unique functional effects of these metals. Three very different trends were observed within the lanthanide series, where deletions of certain proteins on membranes and organelles had no effect on the cellular response to early lanthanides while inducing yeast sensitivity and resistance to middle and late lanthanides, respectively. Vesicle-mediated transport (primarily endocytosis) was highlighted by both gene ontology and pathway enrichment analyses as one of the main functions disturbed by the majority of the metals. Protein–protein network analysis indicated that yeast response to lanthanides relied on proteins that participate in regulatory paths used for calcium (and other biologically relevant cations), and lanthanide toxicity included disruption of biosynthetic pathways by enzyme inhibition. Last, multiple genes and proteins identified in the network analysis have human orthologs, suggesting that those may also be targeted by lanthanides in humans.Since their discovery, lanthanides have presented both difficulty and opportunity for researchers. As a series, these elements behave rather similarly: most of them form +3 ions in aqueous solution (1), prefer highly electronegative anionic ligands (2), and form insoluble hydroxide precipitates at neutral pH if not otherwise complexed (3). Although the chemical similarities between these elements made their initial isolation and characterization a significant challenge, they now have unique applications in industry and medicine. Several lanthanides have become critical materials for many clean and sustainable energy technologies that will drive the future of our societies and are used, for example, in the production of batteries, magnets, motors, and other electronic components (4); low-concentration mixtures of lanthanides are used in Chinese agriculture to increase body weight gain among livestock (5, 6); lanthanum carbonate (sold under the commercial name of Fosrenol) is a noncalcium phosphate binder used to control hyperphosphataemia (7); and gadolinium is employed in diagnostic medicine, as an essential component of MRI contrast agents (8, 9).The growing use of lanthanides has increased the potential for human exposure to large concentrations of these metals, requiring more detailed investigations into their toxicological properties. For instance, administration of gadolinium-based contrast agents has been associated with the development of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis in patients with compromised renal function (10–12). Moreover, accumulation of gadolinium in the brains of patients who received repeated doses of gadolinium-based contrast agents has also been reported (13). Despite the current ubiquity of lanthanides, their toxicological profile has been incompletely characterized because until recently they were considered to be of low toxicological concern (14, 15). Previous toxicity studies primarily focused on lanthanum or cerium (and, to a lesser extent, neodymium and gadolinium), with the notion that these metals were representative of the series (14, 16–18). However, to our knowledge, no comprehensive mechanistic assay has been conducted to evaluate metal toxicity across the series, and little is known about what toxicological mechanisms may be shared by the different lanthanides.Saccharomyces cerevisiae is one of the best-characterized model organisms (19, 20), and there are many tools available for analyzing its genomic data (21–23). For example, yeast functional toxicogenomic screening is a powerful tool for investigating cellular mechanisms of cytotoxicity (24, 25). This method makes use of the yeast deletion libraries generated by the Yeast Deletion Project (26), a consortium of researchers across the United States and Canada, to establish relationships between genes and chemical exposures. Researchers used heterozygous and homozygous deletion pools of barcoded yeast strains to derive mechanistic toxicological information about a wide array of chemicals, pharmaceuticals, metals, and biological compounds (27, 28). As eukaryotes, yeast and humans share many cellular pathways and functions, and many components of cell biology identified in S. cerevisiae have homologs in human biology (29–31). Consequently, functional toxicogenomic screening offers unique opportunities to evaluate the mechanisms of cytotoxicity and general biological activity across the lanthanide series in yeast and explore potentially conserved mechanisms in humans.Here, we identify fundamental cellular functions disrupted by lanthanides using functional toxicogenomics in S. cerevisiae. The metals studied had distinct behaviors: early lanthanides showed limited unique functional effects, while middle and late lanthanides had prominent and distinct ones. Although the functional effects of each lanthanide were different and suggested some very efficient element discrimination by endogenous molecules, we observed a few common trends. In particular, vesicle-mediated transport (primarily endocytosis) was perturbed by the majority of the lanthanides tested. Moreover, protein–protein network analysis suggested that lanthanides mimic calcium ions, interacting with calcium-binding proteins and disrupting processes regulated by this cation. Finally, several of the highly interconnected proteins targeted by multiple lanthanides in the network analysis are conserved in humans, suggesting their roles in the origin of the human health issues associated with lanthanide exposure and opening many directions for the determination of mechanisms associated with toxicity. |
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Keywords: | toxicogenomics lanthanides endocytosis endosomes Saccharomyces cerevisiae |
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