Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
6775198 
Journal Article 
8:8 Perfluoroalkyl phosphinic acid affects neurobehavioral development, thyroid disruption, and DNA methylation in developing zebrafish 
Kim, S; Stroski, KM; Killeen, G; Smitherman, C; Simcik, MF; Brooks, BW 
2020 
Science of the Total Environment
ISSN: 0048-9697
EISSN: 1879-1026 
736 
139600 
English 
Recent studies have reported potential neurotoxicity and epigenetic alteration associated with exposure to several per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs). However, such information is limited to a few compounds (e.g., perfluorooctane sulfonate), primarily based on rodent experiments, and the underlying toxicological mechanism(s) for many PFAS in the environment remain poorly understood. In the present study, we investigated 8:8 perfluoroalkyl phosphinic acid (8:8 PFPiA), an under-studied PFAS with high persistency in the environment and biota, using the zebrafish model. We exposed zebrafish embryos (<4 hpf) to various concentrations of 8:8 PFPiA (0, 0.0116, 0.112, 0.343, 1.34, 5.79 μM) for 144 h. Although there was no significant change in survival, hatchability and malformations, zebrafish locomotor speed at 120 h significantly decreased in dark photoperiod. At 144 h, several genes related to thyroid hormones that are essential for neurodevelopment, including corticotropin releasing hormone b (crhb), iodothyronine deiodinase 3a (dio3a), thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor (tshr) and nkx2 homeobox1 (nkx 2.1), were up-regulated by 8:8 PFPiA at 5.79 μM. 8:8 PFPiA also significantly down-regulated a neurodevelopmental gene, elav like neuron-specific RNA binding protein (elavl3), at 1.34 and 5.79 μM; in addition, one oxidative stress gene was slightly but significantly up-regulated. Further, global DNA methylation was significantly decreased at higher treatment levels, identifying effects of 8:8 PFPiA on epigenetic regulation. However, promoter DNA methylation of selected genes (dio3, tshr, nkx2.1) were not statistically altered, though dio3 methylation showed a decreasing trend with 8:8 PFPiA exposure. Our results specifically advance an understanding of molecular toxicology of PFPiA and more broadly present an approach to define diverse responses during animal alternative assessments of PFASs. 
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs); Perfluoroalkyl phosphinic acids (PFPiA); Behavior; Neurodevelopment; Epigenetics; Thyroid disruption 
PFAS
• Expanded PFAS SEM (formerly PFAS 430)
     Litsearch Update: November 2021
          PubMed
          Web of Science
     Perfluorooctane
• PFAS 150
     Literature Search Update December 2021
          WOS
     Missing 2021 searches
     Literature Search Update December 2020
          PubMed
     Literature Search August 2019
          PubMed
     Perfluorooctane
• PFOA (335-67-1) and PFOS (1763-23-1)
     Literature Search Update (Apr 2019 - Sep 2020)
          PubMed
          WOS
     LitSearch Update (Sept 2020 - Feb 2022)
          PubMed
          WOS