7 research outputs found
7-cysteine-pyrrole conjugate: A new potential DNA reactive metabolite of pyrrolizidine alkaloids
<p>Pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) require metabolic activation to exert cytotoxicity, genotoxicity, and tumorigenicity. We previously reported that (±)-6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP)-derived DNA adducts are responsible for PA-induced liver tumor formation in rats. In this study, we determined that metabolism of riddelliine and monocrotaline by human or rat liver microsomes produced 7-cysteine-DHP and DHP. The metabolism of 7-glutathionyl-DHP by human and rat liver microsomes also generated 7-cysteine-DHP. Further, reaction of 7-cysteine-DHP with calf thymus DNA in aqueous solution yielded the described DHP-derived DNA adducts. This study represents the first report that 7-cysteine-DHP is a new PA metabolite that can lead to DNA adduct formation.</p
Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid Secondary Pyrrolic Metabolites Construct Multiple Activation Pathways Leading to DNA Adduct Formation and Potential Liver Tumor Initiation
Pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) and
their <i>N</i>-oxide
derivatives are hepatotoxic, genotoxic, and carcinogenic phytochemicals.
PAs induce liver tumors through a general genotoxic mechanism mediated
by a set of four (±)-6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5<i>H</i>-pyrrolizine (DHP)-derived DNA adducts. To date, the primary
pyrrolic metabolites dehydro-PAs, their hydrolyzed metabolite DHP,
and two secondary pyrrolic metabolites 7-glutathione-DHP (7-GS-DHP)
and 7-cysteine-DHP are the known metabolites that can generate these
DHP-DNA adducts in vivo and/or in PA-treated cells. Secondary pyrrolic
metabolites are formed from the reaction of dehydro-PAs with glutathione,
amino acids, and proteins. In this investigation, we determined whether
or not more secondary pyrrolic metabolites can bind to calf thymus
DNA and to cellular DNA in HepG2 cells resulting in the formation
of DHP-DNA adducts using a series of secondary pyrrolic metabolites
(including 7-methoxy-DHP, 9-ethoxy-DHP, 9-valine-DHP, 7-GS-DHP, 7-cysteine-DHP,
and 7,9-diglutathione-DHP) and synthetic pyrroles for study. We found
that (i) many secondary pyrrolic metabolites are DNA reactive and
can form DHP-DNA adducts and (ii) multiple activation pathways are
involved in producing DHP-DNA adducts associated with PA-induced liver
tumor initiation. These results suggest that secondary pyrrolic metabolites
play a vital role in the initiation of PA-induced liver tumors
7‑Glutathione Pyrrole Adduct: A Potential DNA Reactive Metabolite of Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids
Pyrrolizidine alkaloid
(PA)-containing plants are the most common
poisonous plants affecting livestock, wildlife, and humans. PAs require
metabolic activation to form pyrrolic metabolites to exert cytotoxicity
and tumorigenicity. We previously determined that metabolism of tumorigenic
PAs produced four DNA adducts, designated as DHP-dG-3, DHP-dG-4, DHP-dA-3,
and DHP-dA-4, that are responsible for liver tumor initiation. 7-Glutathione-(±)-6,7-dihydro-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine
(7-GS-DHP), formed <i>in vivo</i> and <i>in vitro</i>, and 7,9-di-GS-DHP, formed <i>in vitro</i>, are both considered
detoxified metabolites. However, in this study we determined that
incubation of 7-GS-DHP with 2′-deoxyguanosine (dG) and 2′-deoxyadenosine
(dA) yields DHP-dG-3, DHP-dG-4, DHP-dA-3, and DHP-dA-4 adducts as
well as the reactive metabolite DHP. Furthermore, reaction of 7-GS-DHP
with calf thymus DNA in aqueous solution at 37 °C for 4, 8, 16,
24, 48, or 72 h, followed by enzymatic hydrolysis yielded DHP-dG-3,
DHP-dG-4, DHP-dA-3, and DHP-dA-4 adducts. Under our current experimental
conditions, DHP-dA-3 and DHP-dA-4 adducts were formed in a trace amount
from the reaction of 7,9-di-GS-DHP with dA. No DHP-dG-3 or DHP-dG-4
adducts were detected from the reaction of 7,9-di-GS-DHP with dG.
This study represents the first report that the 7-GS-DHP adduct can
be a potential reactive metabolite of PAs leading to DNA adduct formation
Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid-Protein Adducts: Potential Non-invasive Biomarkers of Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid-Induced Liver Toxicity and Exposure
Pyrrolizidine alkaloids
(PAs) are phytochemicals present in hundreds
of plant species from different families widely distributed in many
geographical regions around the world. PA-containing plants are probably
the most common type of poisonous plants affecting livestock, wildlife,
and humans. There have been many large-scale human poisonings caused
by the consumption of food contaminated with toxic PAs. PAs require
metabolic activation to generate pyrrolic metabolites to exert their
toxicity. In this study, we developed a novel method to quantify pyrrole-protein
adducts present in the blood. This method involves the use of AgNO<sub>3</sub> in acidic ethanol to cleave the thiol linkage of pyrrole-protein
(DHP-protein) adducts, and the resulting 7,9-di-C<sub>2</sub>H<sub>5</sub>O–DHP is quantified by HPLC-ES-MS/MS multiple reaction
monitoring analysis in the presence of a known quantity of isotopically
labeled 7,9-di-C<sub>2</sub>D<sub>5</sub>O–DHP internal standard.
Using this method, we determined that diester-type PAs administered
to rats produced higher levels of DHP-protein adducts than other types
of PAs. The results suggest that DHP-protein adducts can potentially
serve as minimally invasive biomarkers of PA exposure
Full Structure Assignments of Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid DNA Adducts and Mechanism of Tumor Initiation
Pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing plants are widespread
in the
world and are probably the most common poisonous plants affecting
livestock, wildlife, and humans. Pyrrolizidine alkaloids are among
the first chemical carcinogens identified in plants. Previously, we
determined that metabolism of pyrrolizidine alkaloids in vivo and
in vitro generated a common set of DNA adducts that are responsible
for tumor induction. Using LC-ESI/MS/MS analysis, we previously determined
that four DNA adducts (DHP-dG-3, DHP-dG-4, DHP-dA-3, and DHP-dA-4)
were formed in rats dosed with riddelliine, a tumorigenic pyrrolizidine
alkaloid. Because of the lack of an adequate amount of authentic standards,
the structures of DHP-dA-3 and DHP-dA-4 were not elucidated, and the
structural assignment for DHP-dG-4 warranted further validation. In
this study, we developed an improved synthetic methodology for these
DNA adducts, enabling their full structural elucidation by mass spectrometry
and NMR spectroscopy. We determined that DHP-dA-3 and DHP-dA-4 are
a pair of epimers of 7-hydroxy-9-(deoxyadenosin-<i>N</i><sup>6</sup>-yl) dehydrosupinidine, while DHP-dG-4 is 7-hydroxy-9-(deoxyguanosin-<i>N</i><sup>2</sup>-yl)Âdehydrosupinidine, an epimer of DHP-dG-3.
With the structures of these DNA adducts unequivocally elucidated,
we conclude that cellular DNA preferentially binds dehydropyrrolizidine
alkaloid, for example, dehydroriddelliine, at the C9 position of the
necine base, rather than at the C7 position. We also determined that
DHP-dA-3 and DHP-dA-4, as well as DHP-dG-3 and DHP-dG-4, are interconvertible.
This study represents the first report with detailed structural assignments
of the DNA adducts that are responsible for pyrrolizidine alkaloid
tumor induction on the molecular level. A mechanism of tumor initiation
by pyrrolizidine alkaloids is consequently fully determined
Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid-Derived DNA Adducts as a Common Biological Biomarker of Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid-Induced Tumorigenicity
Pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing
plants are the most common poisonous
plants affecting livestock, wildlife, and humans. The U.S. National
Toxicology Program (NTP) classified riddelliine, a tumorigenic pyrrolizidine
alkaloid, as “reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen”
in the NTP 12th Report on Carcinogens in 2011. We previously determined
that four DNA adducts were formed in rats dosed with riddelliine.
The structures of the four DNA adducts were elucidated as (i) a pair
of epimers of 7-hydroxy-9-(deoxyguanosin-<i>N</i><sup>2</sup>-yl)Âdehydrosupinidine adducts (termed as DHP-dG-3 and DHP-dG-4) as
the predominant adducts; and (ii) a pair of epimers of 7-hydroxy-9-(deoxyadenosin-<i>N</i><sup>6</sup>-yl)Âdehydrosupinidine adducts (termed as DHP-dA-3
and DHP-dA-4 adducts). In this study, we selected a nontumorigenic
pyrrolizidine alkaloid, platyphylliine, a pyrrolizidine alkaloid <i>N</i>-oxide, riddelliine <i>N</i>-oxide, and nine
tumorigenic pyrrolizidine alkaloids (riddelliine, retrorsine, monocrotaline,
lycopsamine, retronecine, lasiocarpine, heliotrine, clivorine, and
senkirkine) for study in animals. Seven of the nine tumorigenic pyrrolizidine
alkaloids, with the exception of lycopsamine and retronecine, are
liver carcinogens. At 8–10 weeks of age, female F344 rats were
orally gavaged for 3 consecutive days with 4.5 and 24 ÎĽmol/kg
body weight test article in 0.5 mL of 10% DMSO in water. Twenty-four
hours after the last dose, the rats were sacrificed, livers were removed,
and liver DNA was isolated for DNA adduct analysis. DHP-dG-3, DHP-dG-4,
DHP-dA-3, and DHP-dA-4 adducts were formed in the liver of rats treated
with the individual seven hepatocarcinogenic pyrrolizidine alkaloids
and riddelliine <i>N</i>-oxide. These DNA adducts were not
formed in the liver of rats administered retronecine, the nontumorigenic
pyrrolizidine alkaloid, platyphylliine, or vehicle control. These
results indicate that this set of DNA adducts, DHP-dG-3, DHP-dG-4,
DHP-dA-3, and DHP-dA-4, is a common biological biomarker of pyrrolizidine
alkaloid-induced liver tumor formation. To date, this is the first
finding that a set of exogenous DNA adducts are commonly formed from
a series of tumorigenic xenobiotics
Detection of Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid DNA Adducts in Livers of Cattle Poisoned with <i>Heliotropium europaeum</i>
Pyrrolizidine
alkaloids are among the most common poisonous plants
affecting livestock, wildlife, and humans. Exposure of humans and
livestock to toxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids through the intake of contaminated
food and feed may result in poisoning, leading to devastating epidemics.
During February 2014, 73 mixed breed female beef cows from the Galilee
region of Israel were accidently fed pyrrolizidine alkaloid contaminated
hay for 42 days, resulting in the sudden death of 24 cows over a period
of 63 days. The remaining cows were slaughtered 2.5 months after the
last ingestion of the contaminated hay. In this study, we report the
histopathological analysis of the livers from five of the slaughtered
cows and quantitation of pyrrolizidine alkaloid-derived DNA adducts
from their livers and three livers of control cows fed with feed free
of weeds producing pyrrolizidine alkaloids. Histopathological examination
revealed that the five cows suffered from varying degrees of bile
duct proliferation, fibrosis, and megalocytosis. Selected reaction
monitoring HPLC–ES-MS/MS analysis indicated that (±)-6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5<i>H</i>-pyrrolizine (DHP)-derived DNA adducts were formed in all
five livers. The livers from the three control cows did not have any
liver damage nor any indication of DHP–DNA adduct formed. These
results confirm that the toxicity observed in these cattle was caused
by pyrrolizidine alkaloid poisoning and that pyrrolizidine alkaloid-derived
DNA adducts could still be detected and quantified in the livers of
the chronically poisoned cows 2.5 months after their last exposure
to the contaminated feed, suggesting that DHP-derived DNA adducts
can serve as biomarkers for pyrrolizidine alkaloid exposure and poisoning