Kisspeptin as potential biomarker of environmental chemical mixture effect on reproductive hormone profile: A pilot study in adolescent males
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Rodríguez Carrillo, Andrea; Remy, Sylvie; Salamanca Fernández, Elena; Gil Hernández, Fernando; Olmedo Palma, Pablo; Mustieles Miralles, Vicente; Vela Soria, Fernando; Olea Serrano, Nicolás; Fernández Cabrera, Mariana Fátima; Freire, CarmenEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Kisspeptin Effect biomarker Xenobiotic mixtures Endocrine disrupting chemicals HBM4EU
Date
2023-01-16Referencia bibliográfica
Andrea Rodriguez-Carrillo... [et al.]. Kisspeptin as potential biomarker of environmental chemical mixture effect on reproductive hormone profile: A pilot study in adolescent males, Science of The Total Environment, Volume 868, 2023, 161668, ISSN 0048-9697, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161668]
Sponsorship
European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program 733032 CP16/00085; Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI 17/01526 PT17/0019; Human Genotyping Laboratory at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre UCE-PP2017-06; Instituto de Salud Carlos III European Commission European Commission; Biomedical Research Networking Center-CIBER de Epidemiologia y Salud Publica (CIBERESP); University of Granada CPII21/00014; Ramon Areces Foundation; Miguel Servet Type II program of the ISCIII; European Commission; Spanish GovernmentAbstract
Background: Kisspeptin has been proposed as an effect biomarker to understand the mechanisms by which some environmental
chemicals adversely affect the human reproductive system.
Objective: To ascertain whether kisspeptin serum protein and DNA methylation levels are associated with exposure to
several environmental chemicals (individually and as a mixture) and serum reproductive hormone levels in adolescent
males.
Methods: Three phenols (bisphenol A [BPA], methyl-paraben [MPB], and benzophenone-3 [BP3]); two toxic metals
(arsenic and cadmium); and four metabolites of non-persistent pesticides, including insecticides (2-isopropyl-6-
methyl-4-pyrimidinol [IMPy], malathion diacid [MDA], and dimethylcyclopropane carboxylic acid [DCCA]) and fungicides
(ethylene thiourea [ETU]) were measured in first-morning urine samples of 133 adolescent males aged 15–17
years from the INMA-Granada cohort. In blood samples collected on the same day, KISS1 gene DNA methylation was
measured at four CpGs from the Exon IV, as well as serumlevels of kiss54 protein, total testosterone (T), estradiol (E2), sex hormone binding-globulin, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, luteinizing hormone (LH), and follicle-stimulating
hormone (FSH). Multiple linear regression and mixture (quantile g-computation) models were fit.
Results: UrinaryMDA and DCCA concentrations were associatedwith higher kiss54 levels [%change (95%CI) for each
log-unit increase in concentration = 2.90 (0.32;5.56), and 1.93 (0.45,3.43), respectively]; IMPy with lower DNA
methylation percentage at CpG1 and total CpGs [% change (95%CI) = −1.15 (−1.96;-0.33): −0.89 (−1.73;-
0.01), respectively]; and BP3 and DCCA with lower total CpGs methylation [−0.53 (−1.04;-0.01) and − 0.69
(−1.37;-0.01), respectively]. The pesticide mixture and the whole chemical mixture were associated with higher
kiss54 [% change (95%CI) = 9.09 (3.29;15.21) and 11.61 (3.96;19.82), respectively] and lower methylation levels
at several CpGs. Additionally, serum kiss54 in the third tertile was associated with higher LH levels [% change
(95%CI) = 28.69 (3.75–59.63)], and third-tertile CpG1, CpG2, and total CpG methylation percentages were associated
with lower FSH and E2.
Conclusion: The findings of the present study and the negative correlation between serumkiss54 levels and KISS1 DNA
methylation percentages suggested that kisspeptin may be a promising effect biomarker.