Neurotoxicology | 2021

Mitochondrial and transcriptome responses following exposure to the insecticide fipronil on rat dopaminergic neural cells.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The phenylpyrazole fipronil is an insecticide that inhibits γ -amino-butyric acid (GABA) ionotropic receptors in the central nervous system. Experimental evidence suggests that fipronil acts as a neurotoxin and it is implicated in neurodegenerative diseases; however, the mechanisms of neurotoxicity are not fully elucidated. The objective of this study was to quantify mechanisms of fipronil-induced neurotoxicity in dopamine cells. Rat primary immortalized mesencephalic dopaminergic cells (N27) were treated with fipronil (0.25 up to 500 µM depending on the assay). We measured endpoints related to mitochondrial bioenergetics, mitophagy, mitochondrial membrane potential, and ATP production in addition to discerning transcriptome responses to the pesticide. Fipronil reduced cell viability at 500 µM after 24\u2009-h exposure and caspase 3/7 activity was significant increased after 6 and 12\u2009hours by 250 and 500 µM fipronil. Subsequent endpoints were thus assessed at concentrations that were below cytotoxicity. We measured oxidative respiration of N27 cells following a 24\u2009-h exposure to one dose of either 0.25, 2.5, 25, or 50 µM fipronil. Oxygen consumption rates (OCR) were not different between vehicle-control and 0.25 or 2.5 µM fipronil treatments, but there was a ∼40 to 60% reduction in basal respiration, as well as reduced oligomycin-induced ATP production at 50 µM. The reduction in OCR is hypothesized to be related to lower mitochondrial mass due to mitophagy. Mitochondrial membrane potential was also sensitive to fipronil, and it was compromised at concentrations of 2.5 µM and above. To further elucidate the mechanisms linked to neurotoxicity, we conducted transcriptomics in dopamine cells following treatment with 25 µM fipronil. Fipronil suppressed transcriptional networks associated with mitochondria (damage, depolarization, permeability, and fission), consistent with its effects on mitochondrial membrane potential. Altered gene networks also included those related to Alzheimer disease, inflammatory disease, nerve fiber degeneration, and neurofibrillary tangles. This study clarifies molecular targets of fipronil-induced neurotoxicity and supports, through multiple lines of evidence, that fipronil acts as a mitochondrial toxicant in dopamine cells. This is important as exposure to fipronil is associated with the progressive loss of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons in rodents.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.neuro.2021.05.011
Language English
Journal Neurotoxicology

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