posted on 2023-03-20, 06:13authored byHaochun Shi, Meng Li, Haoyu Meng, Xuehan Zheng, Kun Zhang, Karl Fent, Jiayin Dai, Yanbin Zhao
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of premature
death
in humans and remain a global public health challenge. While age,
sex, family history, and false nutrition make a contribution, our
understanding of compounds acting as cardiovascular disruptors is
far from complete. Here, we aim to identify cardiovascular disruptors
via a reduced transcriptome atlas (RTA) approach, which integrates
large-scale transcriptome data sets of zebrafish and compiles a specific
gene panel related to cardiovascular diseases. Among 767 gene expression
profiles covering 81 environmental compounds, 11 priority compounds
are identified with the greatest effects on the cardiovascular system
at the transcriptional level. Among them, metals (AgNO3, Ag nanoparticles, arsenic) and pesticides/biocides (linuron, methylparaben,
triclosan, and trimethylchlorotin) are identified with the most significant
effects. Distinct transcriptional signatures are further identified
by the percentage values, indicating that different physiological
endpoints exist among prioritized compounds. In addition, cardiovascular
dysregulations are experimentally confirmed for the prioritized compounds
via alterations of cardiovascular physiology and lipid profiles of
zebrafish. The accuracy rate of experimental verification reaches
up to 62.9%. The web-based RTA analysis tool, Cardionet, for rapid
cardiovascular disruptor discovery was further provided at http://www.envh.sjtu.edu.cn/cardionet.jsp. Our integrative approach yields an efficient platform to discover
novel cardiovascular-disrupting chemicals in the environment.