Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Oct 2023)

Benzene ring bisphenol A substitutes potently inhibit human, rat, and mouse gonadal 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases: Structure-activity relationship and in silico docking analysis

  • Yang Yu,
  • Zheyuan Ren,
  • Hong Wang,
  • Jianmin Sang,
  • Ya Chen,
  • Minjie Zhang,
  • Yang Zhu,
  • Yiyan Wang,
  • Ren-shan Ge

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 264
p. 115461

Abstract

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Bisphenol A (BPA) is a chemical used in the production of certain plastics and resins. Recent research has found that BPA can inhibit the activity of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase/Δ5,4-isomerases (3β-HSDs). Whether benzene ring BPA substitutes can inhibit human, rat, and mouse gonadal 3β-HSDs, the structure-activity relationship and the underlying mechanism remain unclear. In this study, we compared 6 benzene ring BPA substitutes to BPA in the inhibition of human, rat, and mouse gonadal 3β-HSDs and conducted structure-activity relationship and in silico docking analysis. The inhibitory activity (IC50) of human 3β-HSD2 in KGN cells ranged from about 0.02 μM for bisphenol H to 8.75 μM for BPA, that of rat 3β-HSD1 in testicular microsomes ranged from 0.099 μM for bisphenol H to 31.32 μM for BPA, and that of mouse 3β-HSD6 ranged from 0.021 μM for BPH to ineffectiveness for 100 μM BPA. These compounds acted as mixed inhibitors with LogP inversely correlated with IC50 and ΔG positively correlated with IC50 value. Docking analysis showed that these compounds bind to the steroid active site of the 3β-HSD enzymes. In conclusion, some benzene ring BPA substitutes potently inhibit gonadal 3β-HSD in various species, and lipophilicity and binding affinity determine their inhibitory strength.

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