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Title: Hydroxylated and sulfated metabolites of commonly occurring airborne polychlorinated biphenyls inhibit human steroid sulfotransferases SULT1E1 and SULT2A1.

Authors: Parker, Victoria S; Squirewell, Edwin J; Lehmler, Hans-Joachim; Robertson, Larry W; Duffel, Michael W

Published In Environ Toxicol Pharmacol, (2018 Mar)

Abstract: Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are ubiquitous environmental contaminants that are associated with varied adverse health effects. Lower chlorinated PCBs are prevalent in indoor and outdoor air and can be metabolized to their hydroxylated derivatives (OH-PCBs) followed by sulfation to form PCB sulfates. Sulfation is also a means of signal termination for steroid hormones. The human estrogen sulfotransferase (SULT1E1) and alcohol/hydroxysteroid sulfotransferase (SULT2A1) catalyze the formation of steroid sulfates that are inactive at steroid hormone receptors. We investigated the inhibition of SULT1E1 (IC50s ranging from 7.2 nM to greater than 10 μM) and SULT2A1 (IC50s from 1.3 μM to over 100 μM) by five lower-chlorinated OH-PCBs and their corresponding PCB sulfates relevant to airborne PCB-exposure. Several congeners of lower chlorinated OH-PCBs relevant to airborne PCB exposures were potent inhibitors of SULT1E1 and SULT2A1 and thus have the potential to disrupt regulation of intracellular concentrations of the receptor-active steroid substrates for these enzymes.

PubMed ID: 29408762 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: Air Pollutants/pharmacology*; Estradiol/metabolism; Humans; Hydroxylation; Polychlorinated Biphenyls/pharmacology*; Recombinant Proteins/metabolism; Sulfates/pharmacology*; Sulfotransferases/antagonists & inhibitors*; Sulfotransferases/metabolism

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