Endosulfan is an extensively used organochlorine pesticide
around
the world, which was classified as a persistent organic pollutant
(POP) in 2009. Although previous studies have documented the reproductive
toxicity of endosulfan in a variety of organisms, little is known
about the influence of endosulfan on the genome stability of germ
cells and nonexposed progeny. Here we applied whole-genome sequencing
to explore the germ cell mutagenicity of α-endosulfan in Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans). We
found that, although low doses of α-endosulfan exhibited a minor
effect on the reproductive capacity of C. elegans, chronic exposure to 1 μM α-endosulfan significantly
increased the mutation frequencies of nonexposed progeny. Further
analysis of genome-wide mutation spectra demonstrated that α-endosulfan
preferentially elicited A:T → G:C substitutions and clustered
mutations. By using worms deficient in DNA damage response genes,
our results suggest the involvement of translesion synthesis polymerase
η in modulating α-endosulfan-induced mutations in germ
cells. Together, these observations reveal the germ cell mutagenicity
of α-endosulfan in C. elegans and the possible
underlying mechanism. In addition, our findings implicate that germ
cell mutagenicity might be a necessary consideration for the health
risk assessment of environmental chemicals such as POPs.
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