Effects of acute insecticide exposure on neuronal activity in vitro in rat cortical cultures

Publication date

2024-05

Authors

van Melis, Lennart V.J.ISNI 0000000507774356
Peerdeman, Anneloes M.
Huiberts, Eva H.W.
van Kleef, Regina G. D. M.ISNI 0000000492896579
de Groot, Aart
Westerink, Remco H. S.ISNI 0000000080720470

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Exposure to pesticides, such as carbamates, organophosphates, organochlorines and pyrethroids, has been linked to various health problems, including neurotoxicity. Although most in vivo studies use only male rodents, some studies have shown in vivo sex-specific effects after acute exposure. Since in vivo studies are costly and require a large number of animals, in vitro assays that take sex-specific effects into account are urgently needed. We therefore assessed the acute effects of exposure to different carbamates (methomyl, aldicarb and carbaryl), organophosphates (chlorpyrifos (CPF), chlorpyrifos-oxon (CPO) and 3,5,6-trichloropyridinol), organochlorines (endosulfan, dieldrin and lindane) and pyrethroids (permethrin, alpha-cypermethrin and 3-phenoxy-benzoic acid (3-PBA)) on neuronal network function in sex-separated rat primary cortical cultures using micro-electrode array (MEA) recordings. Our results indicate that exposure to the carbamate carbaryl and the organophosphates CPF and CPO decreased neuronal activity, with CPO being the most potent. Notably, (network) burst patterns differed between CPF and CPO, with CPO inducing fewer, but more intense (network) bursts. Exposure to low micromolar levels of endosulfan induced a hyperexcitation, most likely due to the antagonistic effects on GABA receptors. Interestingly, females were more sensitive to endosulfan than males. Exposure to dieldrin and lindane also increased neuronal activity, albeit less than endosulfan and without sex-specific effects. Exposure to type I pyrethroid permethrin increased neuronal activity, while exposure to type II pyrethroid alpha-cypermethrin strongly decreased neuronal activity. The increase seen after permethrin exposure was more pronounced in males than in females. Together, these results show that acute exposure to different classes of pesticides exerts differential effects on neuronal activity. Moreover, it shows that MEA recordings are suited to detect sex-specific neurotoxic effects in vitro.

Keywords

Acute neurotoxicity, Micro-Electrode Array (MEA), Neuronal network activity, Pesticides, Sex-specific effects, General Neuroscience, Toxicology

Citation

van Melis, L V J, Peerdeman, A M, Huiberts, E H W, van Kleef, R G D M, de Groot, A & Westerink, R H S 2024, 'Effects of acute insecticide exposure on neuronal activity in vitro in rat cortical cultures', NeuroToxicology, vol. 102, pp. 58-67. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuro.2024.04.004