Kozul Courtney D, Nomikos Athena P, Hampton Thomas H, Warnke Linda A, Gosse Julie A, Davey Jennifer C, Thorpe Jessica E, Jackson Brian P, Ihnat Michael A, Hamilton Joshua W
Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology, Dartmouth Medical School, 7650 Remsen Building, Hanover, NH 03755-3835, United States; Center for Environmental Health Sciences, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755, United States.
Chem Biol Interact. 2008 May 28;173(2):129-40. doi: 10.1016/j.cbi.2008.02.008. Epub 2008 Mar 4.
Nutritional studies in laboratory animals have long shown that various dietary components can contribute to altered gene expression and metabolism, but diet alone has not been considered in whole animal genomic studies. In this study, global gene expression changes in mice fed either a non-purified chow or a purified diet were investigated and background metal levels in the two diets were measured by ICP-MS. C57BL/6J mice were raised for 5 weeks on either the cereal-based, non-purified LRD-5001 diet or the purified, casein-based AIN-76A diet, as part of a larger study examining the effects of low dose arsenic (As) in the diet or drinking water. Affymetrix Mouse Whole Genome 430 2.0 microarrays were used to assess gene expression changes in the liver and lung. Microarray analysis revealed that animals fed the LRD-5001 diet displayed a significantly higher hepatic expression of Phase I and II metabolism genes as well as other metabolic genes. The LRD-5001 diet masked the As-induced gene expression changes that were clearly seen in the animals fed the AIN-76A diet when each dietary group was exposed to 100 ppb As in drinking water. Trace metal analysis revealed that the LRD-5001 diet contained a mixture of inorganic and organic As at a total concentration of 390 ppb, while the AIN-76A diet contained approximately 20 ppb. These findings indicate that the use of non-purified diets may profoundly alter observable patterns of change induced by arsenic and, likely, by other experimental treatments, particularly, altering gene and protein expression.
长期以来,针对实验动物的营养研究表明,各种饮食成分会导致基因表达和新陈代谢发生改变,但在全动物基因组研究中,尚未单独考虑饮食因素。在本研究中,我们调查了喂食非纯化食物或纯化饮食的小鼠的全基因组表达变化,并通过电感耦合等离子体质谱法测量了两种饮食中的背景金属含量。作为一项关于饮食或饮用水中低剂量砷(As)影响的更大规模研究的一部分,C57BL/6J小鼠分别在以谷物为基础的非纯化LRD - 5001饮食或纯化的、以酪蛋白为基础的AIN - 76A饮食中饲养5周。使用Affymetrix小鼠全基因组430 2.0微阵列评估肝脏和肺中的基因表达变化。微阵列分析显示,喂食LRD - 5001饮食的动物,其I相和II相代谢基因以及其他代谢基因的肝脏表达显著更高。当每个饮食组在饮用水中接触100 ppb的砷时,LRD - 5001饮食掩盖了砷诱导的基因表达变化,而这种变化在喂食AIN - 76A饮食的动物中清晰可见。痕量金属分析表明,LRD - 5001饮食含有无机砷和有机砷的混合物,总浓度为390 ppb,而AIN - 76A饮食中的砷含量约为20 ppb。这些发现表明,使用非纯化饮食可能会深刻改变由砷以及可能由其他实验处理诱导的可观察到的变化模式,特别是改变基因和蛋白质表达。