1. Improving Estrogenic Compound Screening Efficiency by Using Self-Modulating, Continuously Bioluminescent Human Cell Bioreporters Expressing a Synthetic Luciferase.
- Author
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Xu, Tingting, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Toperzer, Jody, Ripp, Steven, and Close, Dan
- Subjects
LUCIFERASES ,ENDOCRINE disruptors ,ESTROGEN receptors ,ENDOCRINE glands ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
A synthetic bacterial luciferase-based autobioluminescent bioreporter, HEK293
ERE/Gal4-Lux , was developed in a human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cell line for the surveillance of chemicals displaying endocrine disrupting activity. Unlike alternative luminescent reporters, this bioreporter generates bioluminescence autonomously without requiring an external light-activating chemical substrate or cellular destruction. The bioreporter's performance was validated against a library of 76 agonistic and antagonistic estrogenic endocrine disruptor chemicals and demonstrated reproducible half maximal effective concentration (EC50 ) values meeting the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) guidelines for Tier 1 endocrine disrupting chemical screening assays. For model compounds, such as the estrogen receptor (ER) agonist 17β-estradiol, HEK293ERE/Gal4-Lux demonstrated an EC50 value (7.9 × 10−12 M) comparable to that of the current EPA-approved HeLa-9903 firefly luciferase-based estrogen receptor transcription assay (4.6 × 10−12 M). Screening against an expanded array of common ER agonists likewise produced similar relative effect potencies as compared with existing assays. The self-initiated autobioluminescent signal of the bioreporter permitted facile monitoring of the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals, which decreased the cost and hands-on time required to perform these assays. These characteristics make the HEK293ERE/Gal4-Lux bioreporter potentially suitable as a high-throughput human cell-based assay for screening estrogenic activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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