Toxicology Research - Forensic Toxicology, Carcinogenicity, Assays

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The potential of ecotoxicoproteomics in environmental monitoring: biomarker profiling in mussel plasma using ProteinChip array technology.

Bjørnstad A, Larsen BK, Skadsheim A, Jones MB, Andersen OK

RF-Akvamiljø, Randaberg, Norway. anne.bjornstad@rf.no

New global technologies, allowing simultaneous analysis of thousands of genes, proteins, and metabolites (so-called "omics" technologies), are being adopted rapidly by industry, academia, and regulatory agencies. This study evaluated the potential of proteomics in ecotoxicological research (i.e., ecotoxicoproteomics). Filter-feeding mussels (Mytilus edulis) were exposed continuously for 3 wk to oil, or oil spiked with alkylphenols and extra polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. The influence of chronic exposure on mussel plasma protein expression was investigated utilizing ProteinChip array technology in combination with surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SELDI TOF MS). Results indicated that exposure to spiked oil had a more significant effect on protein expression in mussels than oil alone. In total, 83 mass peaks (intact or modified proteins/peptides) were significantly altered by spiked oil, while 49 were altered by oil. In exposed organisms, the majority of peaks were upregulated compared to controls (i.e., 69% in oil and 71% in spiked oil). Some peaks (32 in total) were affected by both treatments; however, the degree of response was higher in the spiked oil group for 25 of the 32 commonly affected features. Additionally, certain peaks revealed exposure- or gender-specific responses. Multivariate analysis with regression tree-based methods detected protein patterns associated with exposure that correctly classified masked samples with 90-95% accuracy. Similarly, 92% of females and 85% of males were correctly classified (independent of exposure). Results indicate that proteomics have the potential to make a valuable contribution to environmental monitoring and risk assessment.

Published 18 November 2005 in J Toxicol Environ Health A, 69(1): 77-96.
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