Title: MECHANISMS
1MECHANISMS
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4MechanismsStep 1 - Toxicant Delivery
- Traverse epithelial barriers and reach blood
capillaries by diffusing through cells. - Rate prop to C prop to exposure and dissolution
and surface area of absorbing surface. - Lipid-soluble chemicals absorbed more readily
than H2O-soluble chemicals.
- GIT and lungs are major players (e.g., ethanol,
morphine), leads to first-pass elimination
decreases toxicity of chemical before they can
ever harm the rest of the body.
5- Distribution Towards Target
- Enhanced by
- Distribution Away from Target
- Enhanced by
- Porosity of capillary endothelium due to large
fenestrae that permit passage of even
protein-bound xenobiotics. - Specialized membrane transport (e.g.,
ATPase-hydrolysis, MPTP. - Accumulation in cell organelles (e.g., MPTP
accumulates in the mitochondria of dopamine
neurons).
- Binding to plasma proteins (e.g., DDT, TCDD bind
high-MW proteins in plasma, preventing their
escape from capillaries by diffusion). - Specialized barriers (e.g., BBB endothelial cells
lack fenestrae, have tight junctions, oocyte
surrounded by granulosa cells, spermatogenic
cells surrounded by Sertoli cells all prevent
hydrophillic substances from gaining entry).
However, lipophillic substances can gain entry. - Distribution to storage sites (e.g., bone,
kidneys, liver, fat) protect target tissues from
toxicants
6- Reversible intracellular binding (e.g., by
binding to the pigment melanin, PAHs accumulate
in melanin-containing cells also, release of
melanin-bound toxicants contributes to the
retinal toxicity assoc. with chlorpromazine and
chloroquine injury to SN neurons by MPTP, and
induction of melanoma by polycyclic aromatics).
- Association with intracellular binding proteins
(e.g., metallothionen binds Cd in the event of
acute Cd intoxication). - Export from cells. Intracellular toxicants may
be transported back into the extracellular space
(e.g., brain capillary endothelial cells, which
contain in their luminal membrane an
ATP-dependent membrane transporter
(P-glycoprotein) - contributes to the BBB.
7- High lipid solubility.
- Many glucuronide conjugates.
- Lipid-soluble compounds are reabsorbed by
transcellular diffusion.
- Removal of xenobiotics from the blood and their
return to the external environment - Renal glomeruli hydrostatically filter small
molecules (lt 60 kDal) through their pores
(HOH-soluble and ionized). - Transporters in hepatocytes and proximal tubular
cells are specialized for the secretion of highly
hydrophillic organic acids and bases eliminated
in bile and urine high pH-dependency
8- Sometimes, it is the chemical itself is directly
toxic (e.g., HCN, CO, strong acids and bases,
nicotine). - Most often, however, toxification renders
xenobiotics and sometimes, autocoids (O2 and NO)
indiscriminantly reactive towards endogenous
molecules - Electophiles
- (e.g., chloroform overhead)
- Free Radicals (next 2 slides)
- Nucleophiles - Relatively rare (e.g.,
dihalomethandes undergo oxidative dehalogenation
to yield CO). - Redox-active reactiants
- Â
- Eliminates the ultimate toxicant or prevents its
formation. - Detoxification of toxicants with no functional
groups (e.g., benzene or toluene) undergoes Phase
I and Phase II reactions - readily excreted as
hydrophillic organic acids. - Detoxification of Nucleophiles - Phase II
reactions prevent peroxidase-catalyzed conversion
of the nucleophiles to FRs and biotransformation
of phenols, catechols and hydroquinones to
electrophiles. - Detoxification of Electrophiles - Commonly occurs
with the thiol nucleophile GSH, facilitated by
GSH-S-transferase. - Detoxification of FRs. Generation of FRs must be
undone by various enzymes - See handouts for
generation of superoxide anion and for its
elimination by potentially 3 different enzymes. - Detoxification of protein toxins - many venoms
contain intramolecular disulfid bonds, which can
be reduced by an endogenous dithiol protein
thioredoxin.
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13- In summary, the most reactive metabolites are
electron-deficient molecules and molecular
fragments such as neutral or cationic free
radicals. - Other FRs with an extra electron cause damage by
yielding the neutral OH after the formation and
subsequent homolytic cleavage of HOOH.
- When Detoxification Fails
- Toxicants may overwhelm detox processes, leading
to exhaustion of the detox enzymes, consumption
of substrates, or depletion of antioxidants such
as GSH, Asc. acid, and alpha-tocopherol. - Occasionally, a reactive toxicant inactivates a
detoxicating enzyme (e.g., ONOO- incapacitates
Mn-SOD, which would normally counteract ONOO-
formation. - Some conjugation reactions can be reversed (e.g.,
bladder carcinogen 2-naphthylamine is
hydroxylated and glucuronidated in liver and
excreted into urine while in bladder, the
glucuronide is hydrolyzed and the released
arylhydroxylamine is protonated and dehydrated to
the reactive electrophile arylnitrenium ion). - Detoxification can sometimes generate potentially
harmful by-products, such as GSH thyl radical and
GSH disulfide, which are produced during the
detoxification of FRs.
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17Step 2 Reaction of the Ultimate Toxicant with
the Target Molecule
- I. Attributes of the target molecules
- Reactivity
- Accessibility
- Critical function
- Reactive metabolites that cannot find appropriate
endogenous molecules in close proximity to their
site of formation may diffuse until they
encounter such reactants. - Not all chemical targets contribute to harmful
effects (e.g., CO has deleterious consequences
when it binds the heme in Hb, but not when it
binds the heme in cytochrome P-450. - II. Reaction Types
- 1. Noncovalent binding ionic, H, van der
Waals interaction of toxicants with receptors,
ion channels, some enzymes, intracellular
receptors (e.g., strychnine binds using these
interactions when binding the GABA receptor in
the spinal cord TCDD to the Ah receptor
saxitoxin to Na channels) - Such forces are also responsible for
intercalation of chemicals such as acridine
orange into the DNA double helix
182. Covelent binding Irreversible. Thus greatly
and permanently alters endogenous molecules.
E.g., elecrophillic reactions with nucleophillic
atoms neutral FRs to DNA. 3. Hydrogen
Abstraction Fenton Reaction (Fig. 3-4) and lipid
peroxidation (Fig. 3-9). 4. Electron
Transfer Oxidation of the Fe in Hb from II to
III produces methemoglobinemia. 5. Enzymatic
Reactions a few toxins act like enzymes in
specific target proteins (e.g., ricin inhibits
protein synthesis by hydrolyzing ribosomes).
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22- III. Outcomes Effects of Toxicants on Target
Molecules - Dysfunction of Target Molecules some toxicants
activate endogenous molecules, such as mimicking
endogenous ligands (e.g., morphine to opiate
receptors phorbol esters to protein kinase C). - More commonly, many toxins inhibit function of
endogenous molecules e.g., atropine, curare, or
strychnine inhibit Ach receptor-medieated nerve
transmission. - Also, interference with template function in DNA
e.g., covalent binding of aflatoxin 8,9-oxide to
N7 of G results in base-pairing of the G with A,
rather, than with C, leading to incorrect codon
and a point mutation. - Destruction of Target Molecules Cross-linking
of endogenous molecules e.g., OH radicals can
cross-link macromolecules into reactive
electrophiles, such as protein carbonyls. - Also, lipid peroxidation (See Fig. 3-9).
- Neoantigen Formation Occasionally, covalent
binding of xenobiotics or their metabolites to
macromolecules results in Ab production in some
individuals e.g., CYP-450 biotransforms
halothane to an electrophile (trifluoroacetyl
Cl), which binds as a hapten to various
microsomal and cell surface proteins in the
liver, thereby inducing an immune response (Ab
production).
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24Step 3 Cellular Dysfunction and Resultant
Toxicities
- I. Toxicant-Induced Cellular Dysregulation
- A. Dysregulation of Gene Expression
- Occurs at elements that are directly responsible
for transcription, signal transduction pathways,
synthesis, storage, or release of extracellular
signaling molecules. - B. Dysregulation of Transcription
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- Xenobiotics may interact/promote/interfere with
promotor regions, interfering with transcription
factors (TFs). - e.g., many hormones, vitamins influence gene
expression by binding to and activating TFs. - Xenobiotics may mimic the natural compounds
(e.g., Cd2 may substitute for Zn2 at the
metal-responsive element-binding TF. - e.g., estrogen acts as a mitogen normally in
female reproductive organs but prolonged
exposure induces tumor formation in these organs. - e.g, TCDD, Phenobarbital, and pregnenolone
activate the AhR, thereby inducing CYP1A1
25- C. Dysregulation of Signal Transduction
- Fig. 3-11 in (painstaking) detail NEXT SLIDE.
- Xenobiotics may increase phosphorylation too much
(e.g., TCDD-liganded AhR binds MAPK may
contribute to TCDD-induced overexpression of
kinase activity in liver. - Abberant phosphorylation or proteins may result
not only from increased phosphorylation, but also
from decreased phosphatase activity, such as is
seen with various chemicals, oxidative stress,
and UV radiation, which inhibit phosphatase
activity - e.g., arsenite, tributyltin, and oxidants, such
as HOOH, cause phosphorylation of the EGF
receptor by interfering with the tyr phosphatase
that would dephosphorylate this receptor. - e.g., PP2A dephosphorylates MAPK, keeping MAPK
under control. - However, some naturally occurring toxins are
extremely potent inhibitors of PP2A (e.g.,
blue-green algae poison microsystin-LG and the
dinoflagellate-derived okadeic acid), which are
tumor-promotors in experimental animals exposed
to prolonged low doses.
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27- Acute high dose of microsystin-LG ? severe liver
injury. - Acute high dose of okadeic acid ? diarrhetic
shellfish poisoning. - But this may be due to hyperphosphorylation of
proteins other than those involved in
intracellular signaling (e.g., microfillaments)
e.g., phosphorylation of tau in Alzheimers may
be caused by too much FRs, oxidant production,
tyr phosphatase inhibited?
28- D. Dysregulation of Extracellular Signal
Production - Hormonal intereference (e.g., herbicide amitrole
inhibit thyroid hormone production Phenobarbital
enhance thyroid hormone elimination) - Â
- Both decrease thyroid hormone levels and increase
the secretion of TSH because of the reduced
feedback inhibition. - Another e.g., estrogens (e.g., xenoestrogen
chlordecone) produce male testicular atrophy by
means of feedback inhibition of gonadotropin
secretion ? low sperm count.
29- E. Dysregulation of Ongoing cellular activity
- Note the myriad agents that act on signaling
systems for neurotransmitters and causing
dysregulation of momentary activity of
electrically excitable cells such as neurons and
myocytes. - F. Dysregulation of the activity of other Cells
- Many exocrine secretory cells are governed by
muscarinic Ach receptors, e.g., lacrimation and
salivation are due to organophosphate insecticide
poisoning due to stimulation of these receptors.
30- II. Toxic Alteration of Cellular Maintenance
- A. Impairment of Internal Cellular Maintenance
Mechanisms of Toxic Cell Death - ATP depletion
- Sustained rise in intracellular Ca2
- Overproduction of ROS and RNS
- Depletion of ATP. Recall Oxidative
Phosphorylation mitochondrial function of ATP
production, delivery of H in the form of NADH,
formation of the H gradient, O2 delivery to the
terminal electron-transport complex and the
reduction of O2 to H2O. - Sustained rise in intracellular Ca2. Fig. 3-14.
Influenced by 3 Mechanisms - High cytoplasmic Ca2 levels cause increased
mitochondrial Ca2 uptake by the Ca2 uniporter,
which uses the mitochondrial internal negative
membrane potential as the driving force. The
membrane potential, therefore, dissipates and ATP
production ceases. - ATP synthesis is impaired by Ca2-induced
oxidative injury to the inner mitochondrial
membrane - (3) ATP consumption is increased due to the
Ca2-ATPase working overtime to eliminate the
excess Ca2. - Overproduction of ROS and RNS (recall Fig. 3-3
and Fig. 3-4).
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35Interplay Among Primary Metabolic Cell Disorders
Spells Disaster For The Cell
- Mito. Permeability Transfer (MPT) and the worst
possible outcome Necrosis. - MPT ? permeability of the mitochondrial inner
membrane - ? Mitochondrial Ca2 uptake
- ? ??m
- ? ROS, RNS
- ? ATP
- ? Pi, FFAs
36- Proteinaceous pore opens up and spans both
mitochondrial membranes (pore size lt 1.5 kDal). - Causes free influx of Ca2, H2O, dissipation of
the ??m, osmotic swelling, ? ATP synthesis,
lysis. - Also, depolarization of inner mito. membranes
?ATP synthesis to operate in reverse, as in
ATPase, hydrolyzing ATP. - Also, glycolysis may become compromised by
insufficient ATP to supply ATP-requiring enzymes
(e.g., PFK, hexokinase). - Then, oxidative and hydrolytic degredation of
macromolecules and membranes and degredation of
intracellular milieu ? cell lysis (necrosis).
37Alternative Outcome of MPT Apoptosis
- Swells
- Lysis
- Chaotic, random sequence of events
- Shrinks
- Cyto and nuclear materials condense, break off
into membrane-bound fragments (apoptotic bodies)
that are phagocytosed. - Membranes bleb.
- Ordered, cascade-like activation of catabolic
processes that disassemble the cell.
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40ATP Availability Determine the Form of Cell Death
- Common features of Necrosis and Apoptosis
- Many xenobiotics (e.g., acetominophen, ocratoxin)
cause both. - A. Apoptosis induced at low exposure levels and
early after high exposure levels. - B. Necrosis later at higher exposure levels.
- Similar metabolic disturbances, e.g., MPT.
- Blockers of necrosis (e.g., Bcl2 over-expression
will block apoptosis.
41ATP Availability is Critical in Determining the
form of Cell Death
MPT
In few mito and cytochrome c are removed
by lysosomal autophagy
In all mito. ATP Severely depleted. Cannot
execute apoptotic program (requires
ATP). Cytolysis occurs before caspases
are activated.
In a few more mito autophagic mech are
overwelmed released cyt c initiates caspase and
activation and apoptosis.
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43Step 4 Repair or Disrepair
- MOLECULAR REPAIR
- Repair of proteins
- Some Methods
- Repair of Oxidized Hb (Met Hb) e- transfer from
cyt. b5 from cyt b5 reductase (-NAHPH-dependent). - Chaperones e.g., heat-shock proteins refold
altered proteins. - Proteosomes proteolytically degrade mutated
protein.
44- Repair of Lipids.
- NAPDH-dependent repair of peroxidized lipids
using GSH peroxidase and reductase. - Repair of DNA.
- Despite high reactivity with electrophiles and
FRs, nuclear DNA is quite stable, partly because
its packaged into chromatin, highly folded, and
has several repair mechanisms. Mitochondrial
DNA, however, is more prone to damage because it
lacks histones and efficient repair mechanisms.
45Some DNA-Damaging AgentsFour Major Categories
- Direct-acting carcinogens intrinsically
reactive and dont require metabolic activation
by cellular enzymes to covalently interact with
DNA e.g., N-methyl-N-nitrosourea,
alkylsulfonates (methyl methanesulfonate),
lactones (beta-propriolactone), and N and S
mustards. - Â Indirect-acting carcinogens require metabolic
activation by cellular enzymes to form the
ultimate carcinogenic species that covalently
binds to DNA e.g., dimethylnitrosamine,
benzoapyrene, 7,12-dimethylbenzaanthracene,
aflatoxin B1, and 2-acetylaminofluorene.
46Some DNA-Damaging AgentsFour Major Categories
(contd)
- Radiation and oxidative damage can occur either
indirectly or directly ionizing radiation to
produce ds breaks or ionization of water to
produce ROS/RNS that damage DNA bases. UV
radiation also. - 4. Inorganic agents (e.g., As, Cr, Ni), but many
mechanisms are unknown but 3 general types of
genetic alterations can result
47Some DNA-Damaging AgentsFour Major Categories
(contd)
- Gene mutations point- (bp-substitutions) and
frame-shift mutations. - Chromosome aberrations (gross rearrangements,
deletions, duplications, inversions, and
translocations). - Aneuploidy, polyploidy.
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50- Direct Repair DNA photolyase
- Excision Repair Base/nucleotide excision,
ligase, polymerase, PARP. - Recombinatorial Repair
- --sister chromatid exchange.
- --Occurs when the excision of a bulky adduct or
an intrastrand pyrimidine dimer fails to occur
before DNA replication begins. - --Cross-over and recombination.
51- CELLULAR REPAIR
- Nonneural tissue divide to replace lost cells.
- Neurons dont multiply.
- PNS Macrophages and Schwann Cells
- Phagocytosis
- and
- Growth factors and cytokines
- facilitate transdifferentiation from
- myelination mode to growth-
- supporting mode.
- CNS Lost neurons are compensated by
- neighboring neurons.
52- TISSUE REPAIR
- Tissue is composed of t components
- cells and ECM. 2 Processes
- Apoptosis Deleting damaged cells.
- Proliferation Regeneration of (damaged)
tissue. - Replacement of lost cells by
mitosis. -
53- Replacement of the ECM.
- In liver stellate cells and adipocytes
- (spaces of Disse)
- ECM proteins
- glycosaminoglycans
- glycoprotein
- proteoglycan glucoconjugates
54- When Repair Fails
- Repair mechanisms are not absolute can overlook
various lesions. - Repair can contribute to toxicity.
- e.g., after chronic tissue injury when the
repair process goes astray and leads to
uncontrolled proliferation, rather than tissue
remodeling. Such proliferation of cells may
yield neoplasms, whereas overproduction of ECM
results in fibrosis.
55- Toxicity Resulting from Disrepair
- Tissue Necrosis.
- e.g, lipid peroxidation can be repaired unless
a-tocopherol is depleted ? cell injury progresses
toward cell necrosis if molecular repair
mechanisms are insufficient or the molecular
damage is not readily reversible. - -- Fibrosis.
- Pathological condition characterized by
excessive deposition of abnormally composed ECM
or too much ECM. E.g., chronic alcohol leading
to hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis.
56- --- Carcinogenesis
- Chemical carcinogenesis involves insufficient
function of various repair mechanisms including - (1) Failure of DNA repair.
- (2) Failure of Apoptosis.
- (3) Failure to terminate cell proliferation.
57- Failure of DNA repair Mutation is the
initiating event in carcinogenesis. - DNA damage adduct formation
- oxidative changes
- strand breakage
- Failure to repair lesion ? heritable alteration
(mutation) in the daughter strands during
replication. Mutations can reprogram cells for
multiplication. Enhanced cell divisions ? - likelihood of mutations.
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59- Proto-oncogenes.
- Highly conserved genes encoding proteins that
stimulate the progression of cells through the
cell cycle. - Products are growth factors, GF receptors,
intracellular signaling transducers, such as G
proteins, protein kinases, and nuclear
transcription factors. - Genetic carcinogens mutate proto-oncogenes ?
Oncogene. - Constitutive sustained activation of the
promotor region of the proto-oncogenem e.g.,
TCDD or benzo(a)pyrene can activate the Ah
receptor ? binds the promotor on Ras ?
transactivation in perpetuity.
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62- Tumour-Suppressor Genes
- p53 Guardian of the genome because it
eliminates cancer-prone cells from the
replicative pool, counteracting neoplasmic
transformation. - Mutations in p53 gene found in 50 of human
tumors and in a variety of induced cancers. - Cells with no p53 are 106 times more likely to
permit DNA amplification then are cells with a
normal level of p53 suppressor protein.
63- Cooperation of Proto-oncogenes and Tumor
Suppressor Genes in Carcinogenesis - The accumulation of genetic damage is due to
mutant proto-oncogenes and mutant tumor
suppressor genes. - ? This is the main driving force in the
transformation of normal cells with controlled
proliferative activity (normal mitosis) to
malignant cells with uncontrolled proliferative
activity (cancer cells, metastatic). - Because the normal number of cells in a tissue is
regulated by a balance between mitosis and
apoptosis, uncontrolled proliferation results
from a disturbance of this balance.
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67- (2) Failure of Apoptosis Promotion of mutation
and clonal growth. - Apoptosis eliminates cells with damaged DNA,
preventing mutation, which initiates
carcinogenesis. - Inhibiting apoptosis facilitates mutation and
clonal expansion of pre-neoplastic cells - e.g., phenobarbital.
68- (3) Failure to Terminate Replication.
- A. Enhanced mitotic activity ? P(mutations).
- G1 phase of cell cycle is shortened ? ? time
used for DNA repair ?? P(mutations). - B. During increased proliferation,
proto-oncogenes are over-expressed, which may
cooperate with oncogene proteins to facilitate
neoplastic transformation of cells. ? ? time for
DNA methylation at C5 of C residues ? enhances
gene expression and may result in over-expression
of proto-oncogenes and oncogenes.
69- C. Cell-cell communication through gap
junctions and intercellular adhesion through
cadherins are temporarily disrupted during
proliferation. -
- Lack of these junctions contributes to the
invasiveness of tumor cells. - Several tumor promotors (phenobarbitol, phorbol
esters) ? gap junctions and intercellular
communication.