DNA methylome-wide alterations associated with estrogen receptor-dependent effects of bisphenols in breast cancer

Abstract

Background: Bisphenol A (BPA), an estrogen-like endocrine disruptor used in plastics, has been associated with development and promotion of breast cancer, so plastic manufacturers shifted towards less-studied analogs, BPF and BPS. Studying the associated DNA methylome-wide mechanisms of these derivatives is timely, particularly in comparison with BPA. Methods: We assessed proliferation, cell cycle, and migration of breast cancer cells (estrogen receptor (ER)-positive: MCF-7 and ER-negative: MDA-MB-231) treated with BPF and BPS ± estrogen receptor inhibitor (ERI) in comparison to BPA ± ERI. RNA expression and activity of DNA (de)methylation enzymes and LINE-1 methylation were quantified. DNA methylome-wide analysis was evaluated in bisphenol-exposed cells and compared to clinical breast cancer data. Results: The three bisphenols caused ER-dependent increased proliferation and migration of MCF-7 but not MDA-MB-231 cells, with BPS being 10 times less potent than BPA and BPF. Although they have similar chemical structures, the three bisphenols induced differential DNA methylation alterations at several genomic clusters of or single CpG sites, with the majority of these being ER-dependent. At equipotent doses, BPA had the strongest effect on the methylome, followed by BPS then BPF. No pathways were enriched for BPF while BPA- A nd BPS-induced methylome alterations were enriched in focal adhesion, cGMP-PKG, and cancer pathways, which were also dysregulated in methylome-wide alterations comparing ER-positive breast cancer samples to adjacent normal tissues. Conclusions: The three bisphenols have important epigenetic effects in breast cell lines, with those of BPA and BPS overlapping with cancer-related pathways in clinical breast cancer models. Hence, further investigation of their safety is warranted. © 2019 The Author(s).

Description

Keywords

Bpa, Bpf, Bps, Breast cancer, Dna methylation, Endocrine disruptor, Benzhydryl compounds, Breast neoplasms, Cell cycle, Cell line, tumor, Cell movement, Cell proliferation, Cpg islands, Epigenesis, genetic, Female, Focal adhesions, Fulvestrant, Gene expression regulation, neoplastic, Gene regulatory networks, Humans, Long interspersed nucleotide elements, Mcf-7 cells, Phenols, Receptors, estrogen, 4,4' isopropylidenediphenol, Dna, Dna methyltransferase, Epoxy resin, Estrogen receptor, Benzhydryl derivative, Phenol derivative, Article, Cancer cell, Carcinogenicity, Cell migration, Cell structure, Cell viability, Chemical structure, Controlled study, Cpg island, Environmental exposure, Epigenetics, Flow cytometry, Human, Human cell, Human tissue, Mcf-7 cell line, Priority journal, Protein analysis, Protein isolation, Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, Breast tumor, Cell motion, Drug effect, Focal adhesion, Gene expression regulation, Gene regulatory network, Genetic epigenesis, Genetics, Long interspersed nuclear element, Metabolism, Tumor cell line

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By