Title : Toxicity of sea nettle toxin to human hepatocytes and the protective effects of phosphorylating and alkylating agents - Cao_1998_Toxicon_36_269 |
Author(s) : Cao CJ , Eldefrawi ME , Eldefrawi AT , Burnett JW , Mioduszewski RJ , Menking DE , Valdes JJ |
Ref : Toxicon , 36 :269 , 1998 |
Abstract :
The sea nettle jellyfish toxin (SNTX), which contains several polypeptides, was highly toxic to human hepatocytes. The Cytosensor microphysiometer was used continuously to monitor cell media acidification rate as an index of cellular metabolic activity. Cells exposed to > 1 microg SNTX protein/ml media exhibited a transient increase in metabolic activity, followed by a sharp decrease and cell death within minutes. The kinetics of the transient increase and subsequent decline increased with higher concentrations of SNTX. The biphasic and time-dependent response of hepatocytes to SNTX suggests that more than one mechanism may be involved in the toxicity of its different polypeptides. SNTX-induced cytotoxicity of hepatocytes was reduced by the presence of high titer antibodies against a heterologous jellyfish. Phenobarbital-induced cells became more vulnerable to SNTX, suggesting that some toxin component(s) require(s) bioactivation. Short-term exposure (1-2 h) to 10 microg/ml of the calcium ionophore calcimycin, or the non-selective monovalent cation ionophore gramicidin, had no effect on metabolic activity. However, 165 microg/ml gramicidin or 53 microg/ml calcimycin produced slight transient activation followed by steady decline in metabolic activity, while 20 h exposure to either ionophore produced total cell death. Exposure to even a 10-fold lower concentration of either ionophore killed 88% and 75%, respectively. This contrasts with the toxicity of SNTX which is detectable in minutes with as little as 3 microg/ml. Since pre-exposure to the organophosphate anticholinesterases VX and paraoxon, or the chemotherapeutic alkylating agents cyclophosphamide and mechlorethamine reduced the cytotoxic effects of SNTX, it suggests that phosphorylation or alkylation of cell protein(s) interferes with SNTX toxicity. |
PubMedSearch : Cao_1998_Toxicon_36_269 |
PubMedID: 9620575 |
Cao CJ, Eldefrawi ME, Eldefrawi AT, Burnett JW, Mioduszewski RJ, Menking DE, Valdes JJ (1998)
Toxicity of sea nettle toxin to human hepatocytes and the protective effects of phosphorylating and alkylating agents
Toxicon
36 :269
Cao CJ, Eldefrawi ME, Eldefrawi AT, Burnett JW, Mioduszewski RJ, Menking DE, Valdes JJ (1998)
Toxicon
36 :269