Fluoride-related changes in the fetal cord blood proteome; a pilot study

Author:

Tuomivaara Sami T.,Fisher Susan J.,Hall Steven C.,Goin Dana E.,Mattis Aras N.,Den Besten Pamela K.

Abstract

Abstract Background Fluoride exposure during pregnancy has been associated with various effects on offspring, including changes in behavior and IQ. To provide clues to possible mechanisms by which fluoride may affect human fetal development, we completed proteomic analyses of cord blood serum collected from second-trimester pregnant women residing in northern California, USA. Objective To identify changes in cord blood proteins associated with maternal serum fluoride concentration in pregnant women. Methods The proteomes of 19 archived second-trimester cord blood samples from women living in northern California, USA, and having varied serum fluoride concentrations, were analyzed by quantitative mass spectrometry. The 327 proteins that were quantified were characterized by their abundance relative to maternal serum fluoride concentration, and subjected to pathway analyses using PANTHER and Ingenuity Pathway Analysis processes. Results Pathway analyses showed significant increases in process related to reactive oxygen species and cellular oxidant detoxification, associated with increasing maternal serum fluoride concentrations. Pathways showing significant decreases included complement cascade, suggesting alterations in alterations in process associated with inflammation. Conclusion Maternal fluoride exposure, as measured by serum fluoride concentrations in a small, but representative sample of women from northern California, USA, showed significant changes in the second trimester cord blood proteome relative to maternal serum fluoride concentration.

Funder

National Institues of Health, USA

National Institutes of Health

Center for Children’s Oral Health Research, UCSF

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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