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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Glyphosate-based herbicides are toxic and endocrine disruptors in human cell lines.

Gilles-eric SéraliniEmilie ClairCéline GasnierCoralie DumontMarie-christine ChagnonNora Benachour

subject

MaleTranscription GeneticEstrogen receptor010501 environmental sciencesEndocrine DisruptorsToxicologymedicine.disease_cause01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundGenes ReporterAromataseCytotoxicityendocrine disruptor0303 health sciencesroundupsexual steroidsEndocrine disruptorBiochemistryReceptors AndrogenComet Assaymedicine.medical_specialtyHepG2AdolescentGlycine[SDV.TOX.TCA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Toxicology/Toxicology and food chainBiology03 medical and health sciencesAromataseglyphosateInternal medicineCell Line TumorToxicity TestsmedicineEstrogen Receptor betaHumansRNA MessengerCarcinogen030304 developmental biology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesDose-Response Relationship DrugHerbicidesEstrogen Receptor alphaPesticide ResiduesComet assayEndocrinologychemistry13. Climate actionbiology.proteinXenobioticGenotoxicityDNA Damage

description

International audience; Glyphosate-based herbicides are the most widely used across the world; they are commercialized in different formulations. Their residues are frequent pollutants in the environment. In addition, these herbicides are spread on most eaten transgenic plants, modified to tolerate high levels of these compounds in their cells. Up to 400 ppm of their residues are accepted in some feed. We exposed human liver HepG2 cells, a well-known model to study xenobiotic toxicity, to four different formulations and to glyphosate, which is usually tested alone in chronic in vivo regulatory studies. We measured cytotoxicity with three assays (Alamar Blue (R), MTT ToxiLight (R)), plus genotoxicity (comet assay), anti-estrogenic (on ER alpha, ER beta) and anti-androgenic effects (on AR) using gene reporter tests. We also checked androgen to estrogen conversion by aromatase activity and mRNA. All parameters were disrupted at sub-agricultural doses with all formulations within 24 h. These effects were more dependent on the formulation than on the glyphosate concentration. First, we observed a human cell endocrine disruption from 0.5 ppm on the androgen receptor in MDA-MB453-kb2 cells for the most active formulation (11400), then from 2 ppm the transcriptional activities on both estrogen receptors were also inhibited on HepG2. Aromatase transcription and activity were disrupted from 10 ppm. Cytotoxic effects started at 10 ppm with Alamar Blue assay (the most sensitive), and DNA damages at 5 ppm. A real cell impact of glyphosate-based herbicides residues in food, feed or in the environment has thus to be considered, and their classifications as carcinogens/mutagens/reprotoxics is discussed.

10.1016/j.tox.2009.06.006https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19539684