Toxicologic Pathology

 

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Toxicologic Pathology, Vol. 34, No. 7, 879-894 (2006)
DOI: 10.1080/01926230601047824


Articles

Transcriptional Profiles in Liver from Rats Treated with Tumorigenic and Non-tumorigenic Triazole Conazole Fungicides: Propiconazole, Triadimefon, and Myclobutanil

Susan D. Hester, Douglas C. Wolf, Stephen Nesnow and Sheau-Fung Thai

Environmental Carcinogenesis Division, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711, USA

Correspondence: Address correspondence to: Dr. Susan D. Hester, Cancer Biology Branch, Environmental Carcinogenesis Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, B143-06, 109 T.W. Alexander Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711; e-mail:hester.susan{at}epa.gov

Conazoles are a class of fungicides used as pharmaceutical and agricultural agents. In chronic bioassays in rats, triadimefon was hepatotoxic and induced follicular cell adenomas in the thyroid gland, whereas, propiconazole and myclobutanil were hepatotoxic but had no effect on the thyroid gland. These conazoles administered in the feed to male Wistar/Han rats were found to induce hepatomegaly, induce high levels of pentoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase, increase cell proliferation in the liver, increase serum cholesterol, decrease serum T3 and T4, and increase hepatic uridine diphospho-glucuronosyl transferase activity. The goal of the present study was to define pathways that explain the biologic outcomes. Male Wistar/Han rats (3 per group), were exposed to the 3 conazoles in the feed for 4, 30, or 90 days of treatment at tumorigenic and nontumorigenic doses. Hepatic gene expression was determined using high-density Affymetrix GeneChips (Rat 230_2). Differential gene expression was assessed at the probe level using Robust Multichip Average analysis. Principal component analysis by treatment and time showed within group sample similarity and that the treatment groups were distinct from each other. The number of altered genes varied by treatment, dose, and time. The greatest number of altered genes was induced by triadimefon and propiconazole after 90 days of treatment, while myclobutanil had minimal effects at that time point. Pathway level analyses revealed that after 90 days of treatment the most significant numbers of altered pathways were related to cell signaling, growth, and metabolism. Pathway level analysis for triadimefon and propiconazole resulted in 71 altered pathways common to both chemicals. These pathways controlled cholesterol metabolism, activation of nuclear receptors, and N-ras and K-ras signaling. There were 37 pathways uniquely changed by propiconazole, and triadimefon uniquely altered 34 pathways. Pathway level analysis of altered gene expression resulted in a more complete description of the associated toxicological effects that can distinguish triadimefon from propiconazole and myclobutanil.

Key Words: Conazoles • triadimefon • propiconazole • myclobutanil • rat • liver • thyroid • genomic profiles • tumorigenesis

Abbreviations: EROD, ethoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase • FDA, false discovery rate • MROD, methoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase • PCA, principal components analyses • PROD, pentoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase • PKC, protein kinase C • RMA, Robust Multichip Average Analyses • TPO, thyroperoxidase • UGT, UDP-glucuronosyltransferase


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D. C. Wolf, J. W. Allen, M. H. George, S. D. Hester, G. Sun, T. Moore, S.-F. Thai, D. Delker, E. Winkfield, S. Leavitt, et al.
Toxicity Profiles in Rats Treated with Tumorigenic and Nontumorigenic Triazole Conazole Fungicides: Propiconazole, Triadimefon, and Myclobutanil
Toxicol Pathol, December 1, 2006; 34(7): 895 - 902.
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