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Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone

Authors :
Dana M. Freeman
Alexandra Maertens
Marcel Leist
Alfredo Kirkwood
Sebastian Perez Orozco
Melanie Eschment
Daniel Severin
Lena Smirnova
David Pamies
Richard Maclennan
Andre Kleensang
J. Michael McCaffery
Helena T. Hogberg
Thomas Hartung
Georgina Harris
Source :
Archives of Toxicology
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

To date, most in vitro toxicity testing has focused on acute effects of compounds at high concentrations. This testing strategy does not reflect real-life exposures, which might contribute to long-term disease outcome. We used a 3D-human dopaminergic in vitro LUHMES cell line model to determine whether effects of short-term rotenone exposure (100 nM, 24 h) are permanent or reversible. A decrease in complex I activity, ATP, mitochondrial diameter, and neurite outgrowth were observed acutely. After compound removal, complex I activity was still inhibited; however, ATP levels were increased, cells were electrically active and aggregates restored neurite outgrowth integrity and mitochondrial morphology. We identified significant transcriptomic changes after 24 h which were not present 7 days after wash-out. Our results suggest that testing short-term exposures in vitro may capture many acute effects which cells can overcome, missing adaptive processes, and long-term mechanisms. In addition, to study cellular resilience, cells were re-exposed to rotenone after wash-out and recovery period. Pre-exposed cells maintained higher metabolic activity than controls and presented a different expression pattern in genes previously shown to be altered by rotenone. NEF2L2, ATF4, and EAAC1 were downregulated upon single hit on day 14, but unchanged in pre-exposed aggregates. DAT and CASP3 were only altered after re-exposure to rotenone, while TYMS and MLF1IP were downregulated in both single-exposed and pre-exposed aggregates. In summary, our study shows that a human cell-based 3D model can be used to assess cellular adaptation, resilience, and long-term mechanisms relevant to neurodegenerative research. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s00204-018-2250-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Details

ISSN :
14320738
Volume :
92
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of toxicology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....44895f3261c1090006788893382b67eb