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Proteomic analysis of the hepatic response to a pollutant mixture in mice. The protective action of selenium

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Author
Huertas-Abril, Paula V
Jurado, Juan
Prieto-Álamo, M. José
García-Barrera, Tamara
Abril, Nieves
Publisher
Elsevier
Date
2023
Subject
Pollutant cocktail
Hepatotoxicity
Shot-gun proteomics
Oxidative stress
Reductive stress
Se-supplement
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Abstract
Metals and pharmaceuticals contaminate water and food worldwide, forming mixtures where they can interact to enhance their individual toxicity. Here we use a shotgun proteomic approach to evaluate the toxicity of a pollutant mixture (PM) of metals (As, Cd, Hg) and pharmaceuticals (diclofenac, flumequine) on mice liver proteostasis. These pollutants are abundant in the environment, accumulate in the food chain, and are toxic to humans primarily through oxidative damage. Thus, we also evaluated the putative antagonistic effect of low-dose dietary supplementation with the antioxidant trace element selenium. A total of 275 proteins were affected by PM treatment. Functional analyses revealed an increased abundance of proteins involved in the integrated stress response that promotes translation, the inflammatory response, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, and the sustained expression of the antioxidative response mediated by NRF2. As a consequence, a reductive stress situation arises in the cell that inhibits the RICTOR pathway, thus activating the early stage of autophagy, impairing xenobiotic metabolism, and potentiating lipid biosynthesis and steatosis. PM exposure-induced hepato-proteostatic alterations were significantly reduced in Se supplemented mice, suggesting that the use of this trace element as a dietary supplement may at least partially ameliorate liver damage caused by exposure to environmental mixtures.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10396/26701
Fuente
Huertas-Abril, P. V., Jurado, J., Prieto-Álamo, M. J., García-Barrera, T., & Abril, N. (2023). Proteomic analysis of the hepatic response to a pollutant mixture in mice. The protective action of selenium. The Science of the total environment, 903, 166558. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.166558
Versión del Editor
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.166558
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