* Department of Anesthesiology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, New York 10467-2490, and Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health and Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
1 To whom correspondence should be addressed at Montefiore Medical Center, Moses Research Tower 7, 111 E. 2210th St., Bronx, NY 10467-2490. Fax: (718) 515-4903. E-mail: lopachin{at}aecom.yu.edu.
Received March 24, 2005; accepted April 28, 2005
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ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: toxic neuropathy; axonopathy; protein adduct; electrophilic chemicals; acrylamide; 2,5-hexanedione.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The Influence of Xenobiotic Biotransformation on Sites of Adduct Formation
The biotransformation of a chemical to an active electrophilic derivative appears to be a common mechanism in the toxicological sciences (Fig. 1; Ketterer, 1980; Miller and Miller, 1981
). As discussed above, depending upon the physiochemical nature of the electrophile, the resulting metabolite can produce toxicity by reacting with: (1) soft nucleophilic sites on proteins and free thiols such as GSH or (2) harder nucleophilic centers on DNA and RNA. Alternatively, both the parent and metabolite can produce adduct-based toxicity (Fig. 1). Frequently, the parent chemical is a soft electrophile that is metabolically converted to a harder toxic metabolite. For example, acrylonitrile (ACN; cyanoethylene) has been shown to have both carcinogenic and neurotoxic actions (Willhite, 1982
; Woutersen, 1998
). The vinyl group of ACN is a soft electrophilic center that reacts with free sulfhydryl groups on GSH and protein cysteines (Fig. 1). However, metabolic epoxidation of the double bond produces the relatively hard electrophilic metabolite, cyanoethylene oxide (Fig. 1; Sumner et al., 1999
). This epoxide will form adducts primarily with nucleophilic sites on DNA (Guengerich et al., 1981
; Oesch et al., 1971
). Similarly, acrylamide (ACR) is an
,ß-unsaturated carbonyl and is a well-recognized human neurotoxicant and possible carcinogen (Fig. 1; reviewed in LoPachin et al., 2003a
; LoPachin, 2004
; Dearfield et al., 1995
). As a soft electrophile, ACR will adduct thiol groups on proteins and GSH (LoPachin et al., 2003b
, 2004a
; Tong et al., 2004
). Cytochrome P450 2E1-mediated metabolism of ACR yields the epoxide derivative, glycidamide (Fig. 1; Calleman et al., 1990
; Sumner et al., 1992
). This harder electrophilic metabolite will react with nucleophilic centers on adenine and guanine of DNA (Gamboa da Costa et al., 2003
). These examples show that both the parent chemical and oxidative metabolite can exhibit distinct electrophilic characteristics. This difference in electrophilicity predicts correspondingly different nucleophilic targets for the parent (i.e., protein thiols) and harder metabolite (i.e., nucleic acids). That these divergent macromolecular targets mediate different adduct-based toxicities is suggested by the observation that most genotoxic chemicals are hard electrophiles that adduct hard nucleophilic sites on DNA. In contrast, chemicals that produce noncarcinogenic cytotoxicity (e.g., neurotoxicity, hepatotoxicity) are soft electrophiles such as the
,ß-unsaturated aldehydes, ketones or related derivatives that bind cysteine sulfhydryl groups on proteins (reviewed in Hinson and Roberts, 1992
; Coles, 1985
).
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Putative Mechanisms of Adduct-Based Neurotoxicity
In this section, we will discuss mechanisms by which protein adduction might induce neurotoxicity at the molecular and cellular levels. The principles of adduct-based mechanisms are presented schematically in Figure 2. Although substantial evidence supports a role for adduct formation in toxic cell injury, for many chemicals a direct causal relationship has not been established. This is not an indictment of adduct-based mechanisms, but rather reflects the in vivo complexity of chemical-protein adduction and the limited analytical methodologies previously available. Recent advances in proteomic techniques should accelerate progress in the detection and quantification of low in vivo adduct levels (reviewed in Harder et al., 2003; Liebler, 2002
; LoPachin et al., 2003c
; Tornqvist et al., 2002
). It should also be noted that mechanisms indirectly involving adduct formation, most notably oxidative stress, can also play a role in the production of toxicity. Some electrophilic chemicals lead either directly or indirectly to generation of reactive oxygen species (e.g., superoxide anion, hydroxyl radicals) that subsequently cause oxidative damage. In addition, soft electrophiles that adduct thiol groups can significantly decrease cellular reducing equivalents (e.g., NADPH, glutathione, vitamin E) and thereby shift the redox balance of the cell toward oxidation. Regardless of the oxidative mechanism, lipid peroxidation, protein thiol oxidation and other oxidative changes can, in addition to direct covalent protein modifications, lead to cytotoxicity.
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Even when adduction of a critical amino acid residue and subsequent changes in protein structure and/or function can be demonstrated, it cannot be assumed a priori that this effect necessarily produces cellular injury. This caveat is particularly germane to the chemical adduction of proteins that are members of metabolic pathways (e.g., glycolysis) or are constituents of complexes (e.g., SNARE core complexes) that mediate neuronal processes (e.g., neurotransmitter release, energy production). Here, the function of the pathway or process is more likely to be affected if the adduct-inhibited protein plays a key regulatory role or is otherwise operationally critical. This concept is best illustrated by the research surrounding the "glycolysis" hypothesis of toxic axonopathies. It was proposed that acrylamide inhibited the activities of glycolytic enzymes resulting in an axonal energy deficit and subsequent degeneration of distal fibers (Spencer et al., 1979). Supporting evidence suggested that acrylamide intoxication of rats decreased the activities of neuron specific enolase (NSE) and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) in brain homogenates (Howland, 1981
; Howland et al., 1980
). Additional results implied that this effect was due to adduction of cysteine residues in the active sites of these enzymes (Orstan and Gafni, 1990
). However, other research showed that acrylamide did not affect lactate production or other indices of brain glycolytic pathway function (Brimijoin and Hammond, 1985
; LoPachin et al., 1984
; Matsuoka and Igisu, 1992
). The absence of an effect on glycolytic flux is consistent with additional data showing that acrylamide did not inhibit the activity of phosphofructokinase (PFK), the rate-limiting glycolytic enzyme (Howland, 1981
; Sakamoto and Hashimoto, 1985
). Thus, despite adduction of functionally important amino acid residues (cysteines) and subsequent glycolytic enzyme inhibition (e.g., GAPDH and NSE activities), acrylamide did not decrease overall glucose flux. Protein adduct formation is, therefore, not necessarily a prelude to toxicity. Instead, toxicity occurs only when the activities of key regulatory proteins (e.g., PFK) are inhibited by adduct formation.
In the preceding sections, we have defined the physiochemical attributes of electrophilic chemicals and their protein nucleophilic sites of adduction. In addition, we have discussed the molecular mechanisms that might mediate the production of selective cellular toxicity by electrophilic xenobiotics. To place these concepts within a neurotoxicological perspective, in the following section we will provide a brief overview of the substantial evidence supporting a role for protein adduct formation in -diketone neuropathy. Also presented will be results from recent studies, which suggest that ACR produces neurotoxicity through adduction of cysteine residues on certain nerve terminal proteins that regulate membrane fusion processes such as neurotransmission.
The Role of Adduct Formation in 2,5-Hexanedione Neurotoxicity
HD is the active -diketone metabolite of the neurotoxic hexacarbon solvents n-hexane and methyl n-butyl ketone (Couri and Milks, 1982
; Krasavage et al., 1980
). HD intoxication of laboratory animals produces loss of body weight and changes in several neurological parameters, including gait abnormalities (ataxia) and reductions in hindlimb skeletal muscle strength (LoPachin et al., 2002
; Spencer and Schaumburg, 1977a
). Quantitative morphometric and electrophysiologic studies conducted over the past 20 years have shown that axon atrophy in the PNS and CNS is the morphological hallmark of
-diketone neuropathy (reviewed in LoPachin and Lehning, 1997
; LoPachin et al., 2000
; LoPachin and DeCaprio, 2004
). Previous investigations have revealed that, regardless of exposure rate (100400 mg/kg/day), axon atrophy was an early consequence of HD neurotoxicity. HD-induced atrophy developed in conjunction with the onsets of neurological deficits and decreases in nerve conduction velocity (Lehning et al., 2000
; Yagi, 1994
). Since it is well documented that loss of caliber produces changes in axonal cable properties and nerve conduction (Sakaguchi et al., 1993
), the atrophy induced by
-diketone intoxication could be causally related to the observed nerve dysfunction. Together, these attributes suggest that the development of axon atrophy is a necessary event in the pathophysiological process that leads to
-diketone neurological toxicity.
The mechanism by which HD produces axon atrophy is not known, but likely involves either direct or indirect disruption of neurophysiological processes that maintain axon caliber. Based on this premise, the neurofilament (NF) subunits, NF-light (NF-L), NF-medium (NF-M) and NF-heavy (NF-H) are primary target candidates (DeCaprio and O'Neill, 1985), since these proteins play an important role in determining the size of mature axons (reviewed in Muma and Hoffman, 1993
). Indeed, we have found that the axon atrophy induced by HD is correlated with a loss of these cytoskeletal proteins in PNS and CNS tissues (Chiu et al., 2000
; LoPachin et al., 2004b
, 2005
). Whereas the reason for this protein loss is not understood, we have hypothesized that HD adduction of NF proteins interferes with the turnover and maintenance of the axonal cytoskeleton (see below). HD is a diketone electrophile that reacts covalently with nucleophilic lysine
-amine groups (Fig. 3) to form 2,5-dimethylpyrrole adducts on NFs and other proteins (DeCaprio et al., 1982
, 1983
; DeCaprio and O'Neil, 1985
; Graham et al., 1982
). Pyrrole formation is unique to
-diketones, which have a two carbon spacing between the carbonyl functions and is the basis of the structure-activity relationships that have been established for
-diketone neuropathy (see Anthony et al., 1983
; DeCaprio et al., 1988
; Genter et al., 1988
; Monaco et al., 1985
). Graham and colleagues (1991
, 1995
) suggested that once formed, pyrrole adducts undergo oxidative reactions that yield crosslinked NF proteins. However, the pathophysiological relevance of this secondary step has not been established (reviewed in DeCaprio, 2000
; LoPachin and DeCaprio, 2004
; LoPachin and Lehning, 1997
).
Although evidence has shown that the formation of pyrrole adducts on lysine residues is a critical and required event in the production of HD neuropathy, the low levels of NF adducts formed during -diketone exposure and the lack of protein specificity appear to argue against a causative role. Specifically, during in vivo
-diketone exposure non-neuronal proteins (e.g., hemoglobin, serum albumin) that are unlikely to be involved in neurotoxic mechanisms exhibit pyrrole adduct levels that are quantitatively similar to those of cytoskeletal proteins (DeCaprio and O'Neill, 1985
; Genter St. Clair et al., 1988
; Pyle et al., 1992
). This observation suggests a wide range of targets and is consistent with the fact that virtually all proteins contain one or more lysine
-amine sidechains that are potential sites of adduction for HD. Moreover, in vivo and in vitro studies showed that only a small fraction (e.g., <5%) of total available lysyl
-amine groups on NF proteins were converted to pyrrole adducts by HD exposure (DeCaprio and O'Neill, 1985
; DeCaprio and Fowke, 1992
). If NFs are the primary neuropathogenic target, then one might expect that substantial adduct formation in NF proteins should occur. However, in support of a specific involvement of pyrrole formation, in vitro experiments demonstrated that the adducted lysine residues were primarily located within KSP repeats on the C-terminal ("tail") regions of NF-M and NF-H subunit proteins (DeCaprio and Fowke, 1992
; DeCaprio et al., 1997
). These regions are critically involved in the interactions of NF subunits with the cytoskeletal polymer (see below). Based on this selectivity, it has been proposed that, despite a broad range of adducted proteins,
-diketone neuropathy is mediated by adduction of a limited number of critical lysine amine groups on NF subunits (DeCaprio and Fowke, 1992
; DeCaprio et al., 1997
).
How does pyrrole formation cause axonal NF protein loss and subsequent atrophy? NF interactions with the cytoskeletal polymer could be modified directly by HD adduction of critical C-terminal lysine groups. Conversion of lysine amine groups to pyrrole adducts will cause a loss of net positive charge and formation of a hydrophobic moiety at the reaction site. This is likely to be followed by changes in NF physiological characteristics, which might include solubility, electrostatic potential, and three-dimensional structure (reviewed in DeCaprio, 1985, 1987
; Sayre et al., 1985
). If these chemically modified NF proteins cannot interact appropriately with the cytoskeletal network, axon atrophy could develop as accelerated transport and degradation of adducted, unincorporated triplet protein deplete regional subunit levels (for details see LoPachin and DeCaprio, 2004
). The elegant proteomic studies involving HD illustrate the important concept that although neurotoxicant exposure might be associated with seemingly indiscriminant adduct formation, adduction of certain key nucleophilic protein residues (i.e., lysine residues within KSP repeats on NF tail regions) might mediate selective compromise of a critical neuronal character (i.e., axon caliber).
The Role of Adduct Formation in Acrylamide Neurotoxicity
Acrylamide (ACR) is a water-soluble, vinyl monomer (Figs. 1 and 3) that has multiple applications in the chemical and manufacturing industries; e.g., ore processing, soil grouting and dye synthesis. In addition, ACR is used extensively in molecular laboratories for separation of macromolecules by gel chromatography and is present in certain foods that have been prepared at very high temperatures (Tareke et al., 2000). Long-term, low-level exposure to monomeric ACR produces ataxia and skeletal muscle weakness in humans and experimental laboratory animal models (LeQuesne, 1985
; LoPachin et al., 2002
; Spencer and Schaumburg, 1974a
). Early morphological studies suggested that the neurological defects associated with ACR intoxication were mediated by degeneration of distal axon regions in the PNS and CNS (reviewed in Spencer and Schaumburg, 1974b
, 1977a
,b
, 1980a
). However, substantial evidence from other morphological, electrophysiological, and neurochemical studies now implicate nerve terminals and cerebellar Purkinje neurons as neurotoxicologically relevant sites of ACR action (reviewed in LoPachin et al., 2002
, 2003; LoPachin, 2004
). Whereas ACR is a soft electrophile, the parent chemical can be metabolized to the reactive epoxide, glycidamide (Calleman et al., 1990
). Therefore, at issue is the role of this metabolite in the production of neurotoxicity. A qualitative morphological study has suggested that glycidamide is involved in the mechanism of distal axon degeneration and accompanying neurological deficits in ACR-exposed rats (Abou-Donia et al., 1993
). However, other research failed to find evidence for the induction of neurotoxicity by this metabolite (Barber et al., 2001
; Brat and Brimijion, 1993
; Costa et al., 1992
, 1995
). Thus, although glycidamide adduction of nucleic acid residues might mediate the genotoxicity associated with ACR intoxication of rodents (see above), neurotoxicity appears to be a product of the parent compound.
The molecular mechanism by which ACR produces nerve terminal and Purkinje cell damage has not been fully delineated. Nonetheless, understanding the structure and chemical properties of ACR can provide insight into the molecular mechanism of neurotoxicity. As indicated previously, ACR is an ,ß-unsaturated aldehyde with electrophilic reactivity at the carbonyl carbon atom. As a soft electrophile, ACR could conceivably adduct amines, imidazoles and sulfhydryl groups on proteins via the Michael carbonyl condensation reaction (Fig. 3; Friedman, 1973
; Kemp and Vellaccio, 1980
). However, the reactivity of free thiols is greater than that of other soft nucleophilic centers and, consequently, the preferential in vivo target of ACR is sulfhydryl groups on protein cysteine residues and glutathione (reviewed in Calleman, 1996
). Early chemical measurements (Bergmark et al., 1991
; Cavins and Friedman, 1968
; Dixit et al., 1986
; Kemplay and Cavanagh, 1984a
,b
; Sega et al., 1989
) and more recent mass spectroscopy studies (Barber and LoPachin, 2004
; Bordini et al., 1999
, 2000
; Hall et al., 1993
) have shown that ACR selectively reacts with cysteine residues of proteins to form S-(2-carbamoylethyl)-cysteine adducts. That cysteine adduct formation in nervous tissue might have mechanistic significance is suggested by the finding that in vitro exposure of brain synaptosomes to graded concentrations of ACR (0.0011.0 M) produced decreases in evoked neurotransmitter release and parallel increases in adduct levels (Barber and LoPachin, 2004
). Furthermore, in synaptosomes isolated from brains of ACR-intoxicated rats, cysteine adduct levels increased in concert with the temporal development of neurological deficits (Barber and LoPachin, 2004
). These data indicate that the molecular mechanism of ACR neurotoxicity likely involves the formation of thiol adducts on neuronal proteins. Nonetheless, results from other studies do not support this conclusion (Hashimoto and Aldridge, 1970
; Lapin et al., 1982
; Martenson et al., 1995a
,b
). For example, Martenson et al. (1995a
,b
) showed that relatively high in vitro ACR concentrations (10100 mM) caused morphological disruptions of dorsal root ganglion growth cones that were similar to changes induced by much lower concentrations of other sulfhydryl reagents; e.g., iodoacetic acid (IAA; 6.7527 µM) or ethacrynic acid (ECA; 33.5100 nM). The authors concluded that, since it is unlikely that mM concentrations of ACR are achieved during whole animal intoxication, the mechanism of in vivo nerve damage could not involve sulfhydryl alkylation. However, these findings are not necessarily contrary to an involvement of thiol adduction. It is important to recognize that all three chemicals produced similar in vitro neurotoxicity, although the potency of ACR for this effect was significantly lower than the relative potencies of either IAA or ECA. In a recent study of in vitro synaptosomal neurotransmitter release, LoPachin et al. (2004a)
reported a similar dispersion of potencies among ACR, IAA and N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) with respect to inhibition of exocytosis. Because ACR is a relatively weak electrophile (Barber and LoPachin, 2004
; Cavins and Freidman, 1968
), high in vitro concentrations are likely required to generate, on an acute basis, intracellular cysteine adduct levels that exceed toxic thresholds. Furthermore, the relatively low potency for adduct formation is consistent with the cumulative in vivo neurotoxicity caused by ACR, where relatively long exposure durations or high daily dose-rates are necessary for the induction of neurological deficits (see detailed discussion in Barber and LoPachin, 2004
; LoPachin et al., 2004a
).
If adduction of protein cysteine residues is the basis of ACR neurotoxicity, it is not clear how such a generalized reaction leads to a specific effect on neurotransmitter release. One possibility is that ACR produces a relatively selective neurotoxic response by reacting with cysteine groups on proteins that regulate membrane fusion processes in nerve terminals and cell bodies. Our most recent research has focused on presynaptic mechanisms and has shown that ACR can form cysteine adducts with many nerve terminal proteins (Barber and LoPachin, 2004; LoPachin et al., 2004a
). Among the adducted proteins that have been identified, several play a critical role in synaptic vesicle-membrane fusion and neurotransmitter release; i.e., N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion (NSF) protein and synaptosomal associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP-25; Barber and LoPachin, 2004
). In particular, ACR adduction of NSF has significant mechanistic relevance. The fusion of synaptic vesicles with the presynaptic membrane, which is necessary for transmitter release, is mediated by the formation of 7S cis-SNARE complexes. NSF is an ATPase that dissociates the SNARE complexes into the corresponding trans-protein components; i.e., SNAP-25, synaptobrevin, syntaxin 1. Disassembly of presynaptic SNARE complexes is accomplished by ATP hydrolysis and allows continuous cycling of vesicle-membrane fusion (reviewed in Whiteheart et al., 2001
). Recent tandem mass spectrometric analyses of NSF revealed that ACR formed adducts with Cys 264 located within domain I (#255-266) of the nucleotide-binding consensus sequence (Barber and LoPachin, 2004
). This residue is critically involved in ATP hydrolysis and, therefore, determines the function of NSF (Matsushita et al., 2003
; Tagaya et al., 1993
; Whiteheart et al., 1994
). Previous studies have shown that sulfhydryl alkylation by NEM inhibits NSF activity, reduces synaptosomal neurotransmitter release, and increases the levels of 7S SNARE complex in exposed synaptosomes (Lonart and Sudhof, 2000
; LoPachin et al., 2004a
; Nedvetsky et al., 2000
; Tagaya et al., 1993
; Whiteheart et al., 1994
). Similarly, in vitro exposure to ACR also produced concentration-dependent decreases in synaptosomal release (LoPachin et al., 2004a
) and increased the content of 7S SNARE complexes (Barber and LoPachin, 2004
). These findings suggest that ACR does not affect the protein-protein interactions that mediate SNARE core assembly. Rather, the observed accumulation of synaptosomal 7S complexes is consistent with ACR inhibition of NSF ATPase activity, presumably through adduction of Cys 264.
Growing evidence now indicates that the neurological deficits associated with ACR intoxication are mediated by disruption of membrane fusion processes. Whereas the molecular mechanism of this disruption is not known, recent experiments suggest that ACR forms adducts with functionally important cysteine residues (Cys 264) on proteins (NSF) that play a regulatory role in membrane fusion. Whereas our proteomic studies have dealt primarily with presynaptic events, it is possible that Purkinje cell injury in the cerebellum also involves inhibition of critical membrane fusion processes (reviewed in LoPachin et al., 2003b; LoPachin, 2004
). In general, it is becoming increasingly obvious that many cellular pathways and processes are regulated by cysteine sulfhydryl groups that act as redox sites for posttranslational modification of protein function by nitric oxide and other presumed signal mechanisms (Broillet, 1999
; Forman et al., 2002
; Jaffrey et al., 2001
; Stamler et al., 2001
). This suggests that the diverse toxicities induced by other soft electrophiles (see above) involve adduction of regulatory sulfhydryl groups that are subject to redox-based modulation.
Conclusions and Future Research Directions
In this review we have considered the possible mechanistic roles of protein adduct formation in toxic neuropathies. For other organ system toxicants and/or their active metabolites, covalent interaction with proteins has been a frequently proposed mechanism of cellular toxicity. However, although the formation of adducts by certain neurotoxicants has been exploited as a biomarker of exposure (DeCaprio, 1997; Tornqvist et al., 2002
), protein adducts as a neuropathogenic hallmark have received limited attention. Nonetheless, many neurotoxic chemicals have electrophilic centers that could react with nucleophilic amino acid residues to form aducts on neuronal proteins (Table 1). Adduct formation could negatively impact the tertiary structure and/or function of these proteins and thereby interfere with, for example, energy metabolism, axonal transport or presynaptic neurotransmitter release. In contrast, the lack of specificity and low levels of adducts formed with key proteins seems counterintuitive to an involvement in primary pathophysiological processes. Regardless of this apparent enigma, it is possible for electrophilic neurotoxicants to produce specific effects by reacting with functionally critical nucleophilic centers on proteins that regulate cellular pathways or processes. Whereas the molecular mechanism of many neurotoxicants remains poorly defined, for others a greater understanding of neuropathogenesis has been achieved by investigating the role of protein adduct formation. Thus, for neurotoxicants such as carbon disulfide, isoniazid, dithiobiuret, sodium pyridinethione or p-bromophenylacetylurea the electrophilic nature and nucleophilic targets should continue to be explored as potential mechanistic components. This adduct-based approach could implement new research directions and lead to a better understanding of neurotoxic processes. Finally, understanding the chemistry and pathophysiological consequences of adduct formation could not only benefit neurotoxicology, but might also provide insight into mechanisms of human neurodegenerative diseases. For example, the neurodegeneration associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD) appears to involve oxidative damage characterized by protein oxidation (Hensley et al., 1995
), increased expression of antioxidant enzymes (Pappolla et al., 1998
), and elevated lipid peroxidation (Sayre et al., 1997
). Lipid peroxidation produces several
,ß-unsaturated aldehydes (e.g., acrolein, malondialdehyde, 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal) among which, acrolein has the highest nucleophilic reactivity (Picklo et al., 2002
; Uchida et al., 1998
). Acrolein-protein adducts have been detected in brains of AD patients (Calingasan et al., 1999
) and are considered to be a biomarker of the accompanying oxidative stress (Uchida et al., 1998
). In addition, it has been hypothesized that acrolein adduct formation with lysine residues on tau proteins might play a role in the development of neurofibrillary tangles that are a pathological hallmark of AD (Calingasan et al., 1999
; Picklo et al., 2002
). It is interesting to note that acrolein is a ubiquitous environmental pollutant (Ghilarducci and Tjeerdema, 1995
). Thus, the pathophysiology of AD could involve protein adduct formation mediated by both endogenous and exogenous neurotoxic components.
The goals for future research should be to identify and quantitate neurotoxicologically important protein adducts and to establish their causal role in the production of nerve cell injury. This latter requirement is perhaps the most challenging, although recent advances in proteomic technology will facilitate such investigations. Current neurotoxicant classification schemes are based on presumed neuronal sites of action (e.g., axon, neuron, nerve terminal) as suggested by previous morphological characterizations (e.g., Spencer and Schaumburg, 1980a). However, morphological changes are often terminal endpoint events and, as such, are insensitive indices of neurotoxicity and of limited value (see LoPachin et al., 2000
; LoPachin, 2004
; LoPachin and DeCaprio, 2004
). As we have discussed, the chemical structure of a neurotoxicant, the resulting toxicokinetics and strength of the corresponding electrophilic center are likely to determine target nucleophilic residues on specific proteins. This in turn could dictate the site of neuronal action and possible neuropathogenic mechanism. Therefore, development of future nosological schemes should incorporate the chemical nature of the toxicant and corresponding potential for protein adduct formation.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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