We have identified and characterized a new zebrafish gene, southpaw, that is required for visceral and diencephalic left-right asymmetry. southpaw encodes a new member of the nodal-related class of proteins, a subfamily within the transforming growth factor β superfamily of secreted factors. southpaw is expressed bilaterally in paraxial mesoderm precursors and then within the left lateral plate mesoderm. At late somite stages, left-sided southpaw expression transiently overlaps the left-sided expression domains of other genes that mark the developing heart, such as lefty2. We have injected morpholinos to block the translation of the southpaw mRNA or to block splicing of the southpaw pre-mRNA. These morpholinos cause a severe disruption of early (cardiac jogging) and late (cardiac looping) aspects of cardiac left-right asymmetry. As the left-right asymmetry of the pancreas is also affected, southpaw appears to regulate left-right asymmetry throughout a large part of the embryo. Consistent with the morphological changes, the left-sided expression domains of downstream genes (cyclops, pitx2, lefty1 and lefty2) are severely downregulated or abolished within the lateral plate mesoderm of Southpaw-deficient embryos. Surprisingly, despite the absence of southpaw expression in the brain, we find that early diencephalic left-right asymmetry also requires Southpaw activity. These observations lead to a model of how visceral organ and brain left-right asymmetry are coordinated during embryogenesis.
Trenbolone acetate (TBA) is a high-value steroidal growth promoter often administered to beef cattle, whose metabolites are potent endocrine-disrupting compounds. We performed laboratory and field phototransformation experiments to assess the fate of TBA metabolites and their photoproducts. Unexpectedly, we observed that the rapid photohydration of TBA metabolites is reversible under conditions representative of those in surface waters (pH 7, 25°C). This product-to-parent reversion mechanism results in diurnal cycling and substantial regeneration of TBA metabolites at rates that are strongly temperature- and pH-dependent. Photoproducts can also react to produce structural analogs of TBA metabolites. These reactions also occur in structurally similar steroids, including human pharmaceuticals, which suggests that predictive fate models and regulatory risk assessment paradigms must account for transformation products of high-risk environmental contaminants such as endocrine-disrupting steroids.
Despite the widespread use of the anabolic androgen trenbolone acetate (TBA) in animal agriculture, evidence demonstrating the occurrence of TBA metabolites such as 17β-trenbolone (17β-TBOH), 17α-trenbolone (17α-TBOH), and trendione (TBO) is relatively scarce, potentially due to rapid transformation processes such as direct photolysis. Therefore, we investigated the phototransformation of TBA metabolites and associated ecological implications by characterizing the photoproducts arising from the direct photolysis of 17β-TBOH, 17α-TBOH, and TBO and their associated ecotoxicity. LC-HRMS/MS analysis identified a range of hydroxylated products that were no longer photoactive, with primary photoproducts consisting of monohydroxy species and presumptive diastereomers. Also observed were higher-order hydroxylated products probably formed via subsequent reaction of primary photoproducts. NMR analysis confirmed the formation of 12,17-dihydroxy-estra-5(10),9(11),dien-3-one (12-hydroxy-TBOH; 2.2 mg), 10,12,17-trihydroxy-estra-4,9(11),dien-3-one (10,12-dihydroxy-TBOH; 0.7 mg), and a ring-opened 11,12-dialdehyde oxidation product (TBOH-11,12-dialdehyde; 1.0 mg) after irradiation of ∼14 mg of 17β-trenbolone. Though unconfirmed by NMR, our data suggest that the formation of additional isomeric products may occur, likely due to the reactivity of the unique 4,9,11 conjugated triene structure of trenbolone. In vivo exposure studies employing Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) indicate that low concentrations of 17α-TBOH photoproduct mixtures can alter ovarian follicular development, and photoproducts alter whole-body 17β-estradiol levels. Therefore, direct photolysis yields photoproducts with strong structural similarity to parent steroids, and these photoproducts still retain enough biological activity to elicit observable changes to endocrine function at trace concentrations. These data indicate that environmental transformation processes do not necessarily reduce steroid hormone ecotoxicity.
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