Issue 12, 2024

Cytotoxic and molecular effects of soil extracts from the Agbogbloshie electronic-waste site on fish and human cell lines

Abstract

Effect-based methods (EBM) are of growing interest in environmental monitoring programs. Few EBM have incorporated transcriptomics even though these provide a wealth of biological information and can be modeled to yield transcriptomic points of departure (tPODs). The study objectives were to: (A) characterize cytotoxic effects of soil extracts on the rainbow trout RTgill-W1 and the human Caco-2 cell lines; (B) measure gene expression changes and calculate tPODs; and (C) compare in vitro responses to available measures of plastic-related compounds and metals. Extracts were prepared from 35 soil samples collected at the Agbogbloshie E-waste site (Accra, Ghana). Cells were exposed to six soil concentrations (0.3 to 9.4 mg dry weight of extract (eQsed) per mL). Many samples caused cytotoxicity with RTgill cells being more sensitive than Caco-2 cells. Eleven samples were analyzed for transcriptomics in both cell lines, with responses measured in all samples (52 to 5925 differentially expressed genes) even in the absence of cytotoxicity. In RTgill cells there was concordance between cytotoxic measures in tPOD values (spearman = 0.85). Though trends between in vitro measures and contaminant data were observed, more work is needed in this area before definitive conclusions are drawn. Nonetheless, this study helps support ongoing efforts in establishing alternative testing strategies (e.g., alternative to animal methods; toxicogenomics) for the assessment of complex environmental samples.

Graphical abstract: Cytotoxic and molecular effects of soil extracts from the Agbogbloshie electronic-waste site on fish and human cell lines

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 May 2024
Accepted
24 Oct 2024
First published
29 Oct 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Environ. Sci.: Adv., 2024,3, 1802-1813

Cytotoxic and molecular effects of soil extracts from the Agbogbloshie electronic-waste site on fish and human cell lines

K. Mittal, K. Xu, J. Zheng, S. Bayen, J. Fobil and N. Basu, Environ. Sci.: Adv., 2024, 3, 1802 DOI: 10.1039/D4VA00178H

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