bis(tri-n-butyltin)oxide and deoxynivalenol

bis(tri-n-butyltin)oxide has been researched along with deoxynivalenol* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for bis(tri-n-butyltin)oxide and deoxynivalenol

ArticleYear
DON shares a similar mode of action as the ribotoxic stress inducer anisomycin while TBTO shares ER stress patterns with the ER stress inducer thapsigargin based on comparative gene expression profiling in Jurkat T cells.
    Toxicology letters, 2014, Jan-30, Volume: 224, Issue:3

    Previously, we studied the effects of deoxynivalenol (DON) and tributyltin oxide (TBTO) on whole genome mRNA expression profiles of human T lymphocyte Jurkat cells. These studies indicated that DON induces ribotoxic stress and both DON and TBTO induced ER stress which resulted into T-cell activation and apoptosis. The first goal of the present study was to provide final proof for these mode of actions by comparing the effects of 6 h exposure to DON and TBTO on mRNA expression to those of positive controls of ribotoxic stress (anisomycin), ER stress (thapsigargin) and T cell activation (ionomycin). Genes affected by anisomycin and the majority of genes affected by thapsigargin were affected in the same direction by DON and TBTO, respectively, confirming the expected modes of action. Pathway analysis further sustained that DON induces ribotoxic stress and both DON and TBTO induce unfolded protein response (UPR), ER stress, T cell activation and apoptosis. The second goal was to assess whether DON and/or TBTO affect other pathways above those detected before. TBTO induced groups of genes that are involved in DNA packaging and heat shock response that were not affected by thapsigargin. DON did not affect other genes than anisomycin indicating the effect of DON to be restricted to ribotoxic stress. This study also demonstrates that comparative gene expression analysis is a very promising tool for the identification of modes of action of immunotoxic compounds.

    Topics: Anisomycin; Apoptosis; Carcinogens; Cell Survival; Chromosome Mapping; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress; Gene Expression Profiling; Heat-Shock Proteins; Humans; Ionomycin; Jurkat Cells; Microarray Analysis; Mitochondrial Proteins; NF-E2-Related Factor 2; Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors; RNA, Neoplasm; T-Lymphocytes; Thapsigargin; Trialkyltin Compounds; Trichothecenes

2014
Assessment of the usefulness of the murine cytotoxic T cell line CTLL-2 for immunotoxicity screening by transcriptomics.
    Toxicology letters, 2013, Feb-13, Volume: 217, Issue:1

    A toxicogenomics approach was applied to assess the usefulness of the mouse cytotoxic T cell line CTLL-2 for in vitro immunotoxicity testing. CTLL-2 cells were exposed for 6 h to two model immunotoxic compounds: (1) the mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON, 1 and 2 μM), a ribotoxic stress inducer, and (2) the organotin compound tributyltin oxide (TBTO, 100 and 200 nM), an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress inducer. Effects on whole-genome mRNA expression were assessed by microarray analysis. The biological interpretation of the microarray data indicated that TBTO (200 nM) induced genes involved in T cell activation, ER stress, NFκB activation and apoptosis, which agreed very well with results obtained before on TBTO exposed Jurkat cells and mouse primary thymocytes. Remarkably, DON (2 μM) downregulated genes involved in T cell activation, ER stress and apoptosis, which is opposite to results obtained before for DON-exposed Jurkat cells and mouse primary thymocytes. Furthermore, the results for DON in CTLL-2 cells are also opposite to the results obtained for TBTO in CTLL-2 cells. In agreement with the lack of induction of ER stress and apoptosis, viability assays showed that CTLL-2 cells are much more resistant to the toxicity of DON than Jurkat cells and primary thymocytes. We propose that CTLL-2 cells lack the signal transduction that induces ER stress and apoptosis in response to ribotoxic stress. Based on the results for TBTO and DON, the CTLL-2 cell line does not yield an added value for immunotoxicity compared to the human Jurkat T cell line.

    Topics: Animals; Apoptosis; Cell Line; Cell Survival; Down-Regulation; Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress; Gene Expression Profiling; Humans; Immunologic Factors; Immunosuppressive Agents; Jurkat Cells; Lymphocyte Activation; Mice; Signal Transduction; T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic; Technology, Pharmaceutical; Toxicogenetics; Transcriptome; Trialkyltin Compounds; Trichothecenes

2013