In Vitro Toxicity of Tetrabromobisphenol-A on Cerebellar Granule Cells: Cell Death, Free Radical Formation, Calcium Influx and Extracellular Glutamate.

Bibliographic Details
Title: In Vitro Toxicity of Tetrabromobisphenol-A on Cerebellar Granule Cells: Cell Death, Free Radical Formation, Calcium Influx and Extracellular Glutamate.
Authors: Trine Reistad1, Espen Mariussen2, Avi Ring1, Frode Fonnum3
Source: Toxicological Sciences. Apr2007, Vol. 96 Issue 2, p268-278. 11p.
Subject Terms: *GLUTAMIC acid, *FREE radical reactions, *CELL death, *REACTIVE oxygen species
Abstract: Tetrabromobisphenol-A (TBBPA) is one of the worlds most widely used brominated flame retardant. The present study reports effects of TBBPA on primary cultures of cerebellar granule cells (CGC). Using the trypan blue exclusion assay, we show that TBBPA induces death of CGC at low micro molar concentrations. Cell death was reduced by the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 (3μM), the antioxidant vitamin E (50μM), and in calcium-free buffer. We further demonstrate that TBBPA's toxicity was accompanied by apoptosis-like nuclear shrinkage, chromatin condensation, and DNA fragmentation. Other hallmarks of apoptosis such as caspase activity were, however, absent, indicating an atypical form of apoptosis. TBBPA increased intracellular free calcium in a concentration-dependent manner. TBBPA also induced an increase in extracellular glutamate in a time-dependent manner. TBBPA gave a concentration-dependent increase information reactive oxygen species (ROS) of measured with 2,7-dichlorofluorescein diacetate. The ROS formation was inhibited by the extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK) inhibitor U0126 (10μM), the tyrosine kinase inhibitor erbstatin-A (25μM), eliminating calcium from the buffer and by the superoxide dismutase inhibitor diethyldithio-carbamic acid (DDC, 100μM). Further analysis with Western blot confirmed phosphorylation of ERK1/2 after exposure to TBBPA. We found that TBBPA induces ROS formation, increases intracellular calcium, extracellular glutamate, and death of CGC in vitro at concentrations comparable to those of polychlorinated biphenyl. These findings implicate TBBPA as a predicted environmental toxin and bring out the importance of awareness of its hazardous effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Academic Search Complete
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ISSN:10966080
Published in:Toxicological Sciences
Language:English