PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Occupational styrene exposure induces stress-responsive genes involved in cytoprotective and cytotoxic activities.

  • Elisabetta Strafella,
  • Massimo Bracci,
  • Sara Staffolani,
  • Nicola Manzella,
  • Daniele Giantomasi,
  • Matteo Valentino,
  • Monica Amati,
  • Marco Tomasetti,
  • Lory Santarelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075401
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e75401

Abstract

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ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to evaluate the expression of a panel of genes involved in toxicology in response to styrene exposure at levels below the occupational standard setting.MethodsWorkers in a fiber glass boat industry were evaluated for a panel of stress- and toxicity-related genes and associated with biochemical parameters related to hepatic injury. Urinary styrene metabolites (MA+PGA) of subjects and environmental sampling data collected for air at workplace were used to estimate styrene exposure.ResultsExpression array analysis revealed massive upregulation of genes encoding stress-responsive proteins (HSPA1L, EGR1, IL-6, IL-1β, TNSF10 and TNFα) in the styrene-exposed group; the levels of cytokines released were further confirmed in serum. The exposed workers were then stratified by styrene exposure levels. EGR1 gene upregulation paralleled the expression and transcriptional protein levels of IL-6, TNSF10 and TNFα in styrene exposed workers, even at low level. The activation of the EGR1 pathway observed at low-styrene exposure was associated with a slight increase of hepatic markers found in highly exposed subjects, even though they were within normal range. The ALT and AST levels were not affected by alcohol consumption, and positively correlated with urinary styrene metabolites as evaluated by multiple regression analysis.ConclusionThe pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and TNFα are the primary mediators of processes involved in the hepatic injury response and regeneration. Here, we show that styrene induced stress responsive genes involved in cytoprotection and cytotoxicity at low-exposure, that proceed to a mild subclinical hepatic toxicity at high-styrene exposure.