Frontiers in Toxicology (Jul 2024)

Diverse PFAS produce unique transcriptomic changes linked to developmental toxicity in zebrafish

  • Yvonne Rericha,
  • Yvonne Rericha,
  • Lindsey St. Mary,
  • Lindsey St. Mary,
  • Lisa Truong,
  • Lisa Truong,
  • Ryan McClure,
  • J. Kainalu Martin,
  • Scott W. Leonard,
  • Preethi Thunga,
  • Michael T. Simonich,
  • Katrina M. Waters,
  • Katrina M. Waters,
  • Jennifer A. Field,
  • Robyn L. Tanguay,
  • Robyn L. Tanguay

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ftox.2024.1425537
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a widespread and persistent class of contaminants posing significant environmental and human health concerns. Comprehensive understanding of the modes of action underlying toxicity among structurally diverse PFAS is mostly lacking. To address this need, we recently reported on our application of developing zebrafish to evaluate a large library of PFAS for developmental toxicity. In the present study, we prioritized 15 bioactive PFAS that induced significant morphological effects and performed RNA-sequencing to characterize early transcriptional responses at a single timepoint (48 h post fertilization) after early developmental exposures (8 h post fertilization). Internal concentrations of 5 of the 15 PFAS were measured from pooled whole fish samples across multiple timepoints between 24–120 h post fertilization, and additional temporal transcriptomics at several timepoints (48–96 h post fertilization) were conducted for Nafion byproduct 2. A broad range of differentially expressed gene counts were identified across the PFAS exposures. Most PFAS that elicited robust transcriptomic changes affected biological processes of the brain and nervous system development. While PFAS disrupted unique processes, we also found that similarities in some functional head groups of PFAS were associated with the disruption in expression of similar gene sets. Body burdens after early developmental exposures to select sulfonic acid PFAS, including Nafion byproduct 2, increased from the 24–96 h post fertilization sampling timepoints and were greater than those of sulfonamide PFAS of similar chain lengths. In parallel, the Nafion byproduct 2-induced transcriptional responses increased between 48 and 96 h post fertilization. PFAS characteristics based on toxicity, transcriptomic effects, and modes of action will contribute to further prioritization of PFAS structures for testing and informed hazard assessment.

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