Publication
Title
Exposure of HepaRG cells to sodium saccharin underpins the importance of including non-hepatotoxic compounds when investigating toxicological modes of action using metabolomics
Author
Abstract
Metabolites represent the most downstream information of the cellular organisation. Hence, metabolomics experiments are extremely valuable to unravel the endogenous pathways involved in a toxicological mode of action. However, every external stimulus can introduce alterations in the cell homeostasis, thereby obscuring the involved endogenous pathways, biasing the interpretation of the results. Here we report on sodium saccharin, which is considered to be not hepatotoxic and therefore can serve as a reference compound to detect metabolic alterations that are not related to liver toxicity. Exposure of HepaRG cells to high levels of sodium saccharin (>10 mM) induced cell death, probably due to an increase in the osmotic pressure. Yet, a low number (n = 15) of significantly altered metabolites were also observed in the lipidome, including a slight decrease in phospholipids and an increase in triacylglycerols, upon daily exposure to 5 mM sodium saccharin for 72 h. The observation that a non-hepatotoxic compound can affect the metabolome underpins the importance of correct experimental design and data interpretation when investigating toxicological modes of action via metabolomics.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Metabolites
Publication
2019
ISSN
2218-1989
DOI
10.3390/METABO9110265
Volume/pages
9 :11 (2019) , 10 p.
Article Reference
265
ISI
000501174700001
Pubmed ID
31689907
Medium
E-only publicatie
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
The development of a metabolomics-based in vitro model for human hepatotoxicity
Development of an integrated strategy to characterize new lead compounds based on natural pro-drugs and their metabolites.
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 03.12.2019
Last edited 02.10.2024
To cite this reference