Literature DB >> 17669457

Dehydromonocrotaline inhibits mitochondrial complex I. A potential mechanism accounting for hepatotoxicity of monocrotaline.

Fábio E Mingatto1, Daniel J Dorta, Aline B dos Santos, Ivone Carvalho, Carlos H T P da Silva, Vinícius B da Silva, Sérgio A Uyemura, Antonio C dos Santos, Carlos Curti.   

Abstract

Monocrotaline is a pyrrolizidine alkaloid present in plants of the Crotalaria species, which causes cytotoxicity and genotoxicity, including hepatotoxicity in animals and humans. It is metabolized by cytochrome P-450 in the liver to the alkylating agent dehydromonocrotaline. We evaluated the effects of monocrotaline and its metabolite on respiration, membrane potential and ATP levels in isolated rat liver mitochondria, and on respiratory chain complex I NADH oxidase activity in submitochondrial particles. Dehydromonocrotaline, but not the parent compound, showed a concentration-dependent inhibition of glutamate/malate-supported state 3 respiration (respiratory chain complex I), but did not affect succinate-supported respiration (complex II). Only dehydromonocrotaline dissipated mitochondrial membrane potential, depleted ATP, and inhibited complex I NADH oxidase activity (IC50=62.06 microM) through a non-competitive type of inhibition (K(I)=8.1 microM). Therefore, dehydromonocrotaline is an inhibitor of the activity of respiratory chain complex I NADH oxidase, an action potentially accounting for the well-documented monocrotaline's hepatotoxicity to animals and humans. The mechanism probably involves change of the complex I conformation resulting from modification of cysteine thiol groups by the metabolite.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17669457     DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2007.06.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicon        ISSN: 0041-0101            Impact factor:   3.033


  5 in total

1.  Regional skeletal muscle remodeling and mitochondrial dysfunction in right ventricular heart failure.

Authors:  Rob C I Wüst; David S Myers; Rachel Stones; David Benoist; Philip A Robinson; John P Boyle; Chris Peers; Ed White; Harry B Rossiter
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2011-10-28       Impact factor: 4.733

2.  A new mouse model of radiation-induced liver disease reveals mitochondrial dysfunction as an underlying fibrotic stimulus.

Authors:  Nicolas Melin; Tural Yarahmadov; Daniel Sanchez-Taltavull; Fabienne E Birrer; Tess M Brodie; Benoît Petit; Andrea Felser; Jean-Marc Nuoffer; Matteo Montani; Marie-Catherine Vozenin; Evelyn Herrmann; Daniel Candinas; Daniel M Aebersold; Deborah Stroka
Journal:  JHEP Rep       Date:  2022-05-21

3.  The Role of Astrocytes in Metabolism and Neurotoxicity of the Pyrrolizidine Alkaloid Monocrotaline, the Main Toxin of Crotalaria retusa.

Authors:  Bruno Penas Seara Pitanga; Ravena P Nascimento; Victor Diógenes A Silva; Silvia L Costa
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2012-08-03       Impact factor: 5.810

4.  Monocrotaline: histological damage and oxidant activity in brain areas of mice.

Authors:  José Eduardo Ribeiro Honório; Germana Silva Vasconcelos; Francisca Taciana Sousa Rodrigues; José Guedes Sena Filho; José Maria Barbosa-Filho; Carlos Clayton Torres Aguiar; Luzia Kalyne Almeida Moreira Leal; Pedro Marcos Gomes Soares; David John Woods; Marta Maria de França Fonteles; Silvânia Maria Mendes Vasconcelos
Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev       Date:  2012-11-29       Impact factor: 6.543

Review 5.  Pyrrole-protein adducts - A biomarker of pyrrolizidine alkaloid-induced hepatotoxicity.

Authors:  Jiang Ma; Qingsu Xia; Peter P Fu; Ge Lin
Journal:  J Food Drug Anal       Date:  2018-06-14       Impact factor: 6.157

  5 in total

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