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Nanomolar levels of PAHs in extracts from urban air induce MAPK signaling in HepG2 cells.

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posted on 2024-10-24, 08:00 authored by IWH Jarvis, C Bergvall, DA Morales, F Kummrow, GA Umbuzeiro, R Westerholm, Ulla SteniusUlla Stenius, Kristian DreijKristian Dreij
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are common environmental pollutants that occur naturally in complex mixtures. Many of the adverse health effects of PAHs including cancer are linked to the activation of intracellular stress response signaling. This study has investigated intracellular MAPK signaling in response to PAHs in extracts from urban air collected in Stockholm, Sweden and Limeira, Brazil, in comparison to BP in HepG2 cells. Nanomolar concentrations of PAHs in the extracts induced activation of MEK4 signaling with down-stream increased gene expression of several important stress response mediators. Involvement of the MEK4/JNK pathway was confirmed using siRNA and an inhibitor of JNK signaling resulting in significantly reduced MAPK signaling transactivated by the AP-1 transcription factors ATF2 and c-Jun. ATF2 was also identified as a sensitive stress responsive protein with activation observed at extract concentrations equivalent to 0.1 nM BP. We show that exposure to low levels of environmental PAH mixtures more strongly activates these signaling pathways compared to BP alone suggesting effects due to interactions. Taken together, this is the first study showing the involvement of MEK4/JNK/AP-1 pathway in regulating the intracellular stress response after exposure to nanomolar levels of PAHs in environmental mixtures.

History

File version

  • Accepted manuscript

Publication status

Published

Sub type

Article

Journal

Toxicol Lett

ISSN

0378-4274

eISSN

1879-3169

Volume

229

Issue

1

Pagination

25-32

Language

  • eng

Original self archiving date

2017-07-07

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