Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).

BACKGROUND: The use of pesticides and the related environmental contaminations can lead to human exposure to various molecules. In early-life, such exposures could be responsible for adverse developmental effects. However, human health risks associated with exposure to complex mixtures are currently...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nathalie Bonvallot, Marie Tremblay-Franco, Cécile Chevrier, Cécile Canlet, Charline Warembourg, Jean-Pierre Cravedi, Sylvaine Cordier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3660334?pdf=render
id doaj-a642119e1f1a4ddfa1d9be46e7fdc677
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a642119e1f1a4ddfa1d9be46e7fdc6772020-11-25T01:51:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0185e6443310.1371/journal.pone.0064433Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).Nathalie BonvallotMarie Tremblay-FrancoCécile ChevrierCécile CanletCharline WarembourgJean-Pierre CravediSylvaine CordierBACKGROUND: The use of pesticides and the related environmental contaminations can lead to human exposure to various molecules. In early-life, such exposures could be responsible for adverse developmental effects. However, human health risks associated with exposure to complex mixtures are currently under-explored. OBJECTIVE: THIS PROJECT AIMS AT ANSWERING THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS: What is the influence of exposures to multiple pesticides on the metabolome? What mechanistic pathways could be involved in the metabolic changes observed? METHODS: Based on the PELAGIE cohort (Brittany, France), 83 pregnant women who provided a urine sample in early pregnancy, were classified in 3 groups according to the surface of land dedicated to agricultural cereal activities in their town of residence. Nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolomics analyses were performed on urine samples. Partial Least Squares Regression-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) and polytomous regressions were used to separate the urinary metabolic profiles from the 3 exposure groups after adjusting for potential confounders. RESULTS: The 3 groups of exposure were correctly separated with a PLS-DA model after implementing an orthogonal signal correction with pareto standardizations (R2 = 90.7% and Q2 = 0.53). After adjusting for maternal age, parity, body mass index and smoking habits, the most statistically significant changes were observed for glycine, threonine, lactate and glycerophosphocholine (upward trend), and for citrate (downward trend). CONCLUSION: This work suggests that an exposure to complex pesticide mixtures induces modifications of metabolic fingerprints. It can be hypothesized from identified discriminating metabolites that the pesticide mixtures could increase oxidative stress and disturb energy metabolism.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3660334?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nathalie Bonvallot
Marie Tremblay-Franco
Cécile Chevrier
Cécile Canlet
Charline Warembourg
Jean-Pierre Cravedi
Sylvaine Cordier
spellingShingle Nathalie Bonvallot
Marie Tremblay-Franco
Cécile Chevrier
Cécile Canlet
Charline Warembourg
Jean-Pierre Cravedi
Sylvaine Cordier
Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nathalie Bonvallot
Marie Tremblay-Franco
Cécile Chevrier
Cécile Canlet
Charline Warembourg
Jean-Pierre Cravedi
Sylvaine Cordier
author_sort Nathalie Bonvallot
title Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).
title_short Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).
title_full Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).
title_fullStr Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).
title_full_unstemmed Metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in Brittany (France).
title_sort metabolomics tools for describing complex pesticide exposure in pregnant women in brittany (france).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description BACKGROUND: The use of pesticides and the related environmental contaminations can lead to human exposure to various molecules. In early-life, such exposures could be responsible for adverse developmental effects. However, human health risks associated with exposure to complex mixtures are currently under-explored. OBJECTIVE: THIS PROJECT AIMS AT ANSWERING THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS: What is the influence of exposures to multiple pesticides on the metabolome? What mechanistic pathways could be involved in the metabolic changes observed? METHODS: Based on the PELAGIE cohort (Brittany, France), 83 pregnant women who provided a urine sample in early pregnancy, were classified in 3 groups according to the surface of land dedicated to agricultural cereal activities in their town of residence. Nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolomics analyses were performed on urine samples. Partial Least Squares Regression-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) and polytomous regressions were used to separate the urinary metabolic profiles from the 3 exposure groups after adjusting for potential confounders. RESULTS: The 3 groups of exposure were correctly separated with a PLS-DA model after implementing an orthogonal signal correction with pareto standardizations (R2 = 90.7% and Q2 = 0.53). After adjusting for maternal age, parity, body mass index and smoking habits, the most statistically significant changes were observed for glycine, threonine, lactate and glycerophosphocholine (upward trend), and for citrate (downward trend). CONCLUSION: This work suggests that an exposure to complex pesticide mixtures induces modifications of metabolic fingerprints. It can be hypothesized from identified discriminating metabolites that the pesticide mixtures could increase oxidative stress and disturb energy metabolism.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3660334?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT nathaliebonvallot metabolomicstoolsfordescribingcomplexpesticideexposureinpregnantwomeninbrittanyfrance
AT marietremblayfranco metabolomicstoolsfordescribingcomplexpesticideexposureinpregnantwomeninbrittanyfrance
AT cecilechevrier metabolomicstoolsfordescribingcomplexpesticideexposureinpregnantwomeninbrittanyfrance
AT cecilecanlet metabolomicstoolsfordescribingcomplexpesticideexposureinpregnantwomeninbrittanyfrance
AT charlinewarembourg metabolomicstoolsfordescribingcomplexpesticideexposureinpregnantwomeninbrittanyfrance
AT jeanpierrecravedi metabolomicstoolsfordescribingcomplexpesticideexposureinpregnantwomeninbrittanyfrance
AT sylvainecordier metabolomicstoolsfordescribingcomplexpesticideexposureinpregnantwomeninbrittanyfrance
_version_ 1724997280376815616