Protein Information

ID 30
Name estrogen receptor
Synonyms ER; ERA; ER alpha; ERalpha; ESR; ESR 1; ESR1; ESRA…

Compound Information

ID 1474
Name chlordane
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
10667634 Arcaro KF, Yang Y, Vakharia DD, Gierthy JF: Toxaphene is antiestrogenic in a human breast-cancer cell assay. J Toxicol Environ Health A. 2000 Feb 11;59(3):197-210.
Toxaphene is a complex mixture of chlorinated bornanes, bornenes, and bornadienes and was a heavily used insecticide in the United States until its use was restricted in 1982. There are conflicting reports regarding the potential for toxaphene to induce estrogenic responses in human and nonhuman animals. Due to the public concern over environmental estrogens, the estrogenicity of toxaphene was examined in a human breast-cancer cell assay, the MCF-7 focus assay, which is based on in vitro postconfluent cell proliferation and tissue restructuring. In this assay, 0.1-1 nM 17beta-estradiol (E2) produces maximum postconfluent proliferation and formation of multicellular nodules or foci. Toxaphene was also tested for its ability (1) to bind the estrogen receptor (ER) in a competitive binding assay using recombinant human ERalpha (rhER) and in a whole-cell competitive ER binding assay, and (2) to alter the catabolism of E2 in MCF-7 cell cultures. Results from the MCF-7 focus assay showed: (1) Toxaphene alone was not estrogenic between the concentrations of 0.5 nM and 10 microM, (2) toxaphene in binary combinations with chlordane, dieldrin, or endosulfan (alpha or beta) was not estrogenic, and (3) toxaphene was weakly antiestrogenic (it reduced the number of foci induced by 0.1 nM and 0.01 nM E2). Results from the competitive binding assays showed that (1) toxaphene alone did not bind rhER or ER in MCF-7 cells, and (2) toxaphene in binary combinations with other pesticides did not bind rhER. Results from the growth assay and radiometric analysis of E2 catabolism showed that (1) toxaphene did not alter the growth rate of MCF-7 cell cultures over 13 d, and (2) toxaphene did not alter the catabolism of E2. In conclusion, results from the MCF-7 focus assay demonstrate that toxaphene is weakly antiestrogenic rather than estrogenic.
1(0,0,0,1)