| Literature DB >> 22016712 |
Alexander S Chiu1, Michelle M Gehringer, Jeffrey H Welch, Brett A Neilan.
Abstract
The association of α-amino-β-methylaminopropionic acid (BMAA) with elevated incidence of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/Parkinson's disease complex (ALS/PDC) was first identified on the island of Guam. BMAA has been shown to be produced across the cyanobacterial order and its detection has been reported in a variety of aquatic and terrestrial environments worldwide, suggesting that it is ubiquitous. Various in vivo studies on rats, mice, chicks and monkeys have shown that it can cause neurodegenerative symptoms such as ataxia and convulsions. Zebrafish research has also shown disruption to neural development after BMAA exposure. In vitro studies on mice, rats and leeches have shown that BMAA acts predominantly on motor neurons. Observed increases in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and Ca(2+) influx, coupled with disruption to mitochondrial activity and general neuronal death, indicate that the main mode of activity is via excitotoxic mechanisms. The current review pertaining to the neurotoxicity of BMAA clearly demonstrates its ability to adversely affect neural tissues, and implicates it as a potentially significant compound in the aetiology of neurodegenerative disease. When considering the potential adverse health effects upon exposure to this compound, further research to better understand the modes of toxicity of BMAA and the environmental exposure limits is essential.Entities:
Keywords: ALS; Alzheimer’s; BMAA; PDC; Parkinson’s; cyanobacteria; cycad; excitotoxicity; glia; neural; neurodegeneration; neuron; toxicology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22016712 PMCID: PMC3194113 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph8093728
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The chemical structure of β-methylaminoalanine (BMAA).
Figure 2Comparison of the structure of (A) β-carbamate (BMAA adduct) and (B) glutamtic acid (glutamate).
A chronological summary of mechanisms of BMAA activity determined by in vivo research.
| Routez of exposure | Species | Dose level, exposure time | Research group and date | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intraperitoneal injections | Rat | 6–14 μmoles/g body weight | Vega and Bell. 1967 | Weakness, convulsions and uncoordination |
| Intraperitoneal injections | Rat | 6–14 μmoles/g body weight | Polski | Weakness, convulsions and uncoordination |
| Perorally Intraperitoneal injections | Monkey | 100–350 mg/kg, 12 months | Kisby | BMAA can cross from gut to blood |
| Gavage | Monkey | 100–350 mg/kg daily, up to 10 weeks | Spencer | Corticomotoneuronal dysfunction, Parkinsonian features and behavioural abnormalities |
| Gavage | Cynomologous monkey | 500 mg/kg daily, 18 days, then | Perry | No behavioral or physiological effects observed |
| Intracerebral injections | Rat | 10 μg or 400 μg/150–200 g rat | Lindström | Activation of NMDA receptor, release noradrenalin from cells |
| Intracerebroventricular injections | Rat | 500 μg/day | Rakonczay | Agonistic effects on NMDA, EAA and AMPA receptors in synapse Physical impairment. Mixed agonistic receptor activity |
| Gavage and intravenous injections | Cynomologous monkey, rat | 2 mg/kg gavage; 1 mg/kg iv | Duncan | 80% of ingested BMAA enters systemic circulation. BMAA can cross the blood brain barrier. |
| Dosed feed pellets | Mouse | 28 mg/kg daily, 30 days | Cruz-Aguado | No motor, cognitive or neuropathological effect observed |
| Intracranial injections | Mouse | 10 μL of 100 mM, 24 h | Buenz and Howe. 2007 | Injury to hippocampal neurons |
| Intravenous and subcutaneous injections | Mouse and frog | 7.3 μg/kg, 30 min, 1 h, 3 h, 24 h, 12 days | Karlsson | BMAA interacts/binds melanin, particularly during synthesis, and accumulates in melanin and neuromelanin containing cells increasingly over time |
| Ocular injections | Mouse | 5–10 nmol, 4, 8 and 24 h | Santucci | Retinal neuron death and production of ROS |
A chronological summary of mechanisms of BMAA activity determined by in vitro research.
| Experimental model | Species | Dose level, exposure time | Research group and date | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary cortical neurons | Mouse | 3 mM, 1 h With and without 10–24 mM HCO3− | Weiss and Choi, 1988 | BMAA activity is dependent on bicarbonate at a min. of 20mM |
| Primary cortical neurons | Mouse | 300 μM–3 mM, 24 h | Weiss | BMAA has activity on NMDA and non-NMDA receptors |
| Primary cortical neurons | Rat | 1 mM | Richter and Mena, 1989 | Inhibition of glutamate binding in synapse, impaired neuron function |
| Chemical assay | - | Myers and Nelson, 1990 | Formation of bicarbonate adduct with structural similarity to glutamate | |
| Brain slices | Rat | 1 mM, acute | Copani | BMAA acts as a mixed agonist of metabotropic and NMDA receptors |
| Minced brain | Rat | 5 mM, acute | Brownson | Impairment of intracellular calcium ion homeostasis. |
| Primary nerve cells | Leech | 1–10 mM, acute | Nedeljkov | Depolarisation of cell, impaired nerve function. |
| Primary embryonic spinal cord culture | Mouse | 30–1000 μM, 20–24 h | Rao | Increase on calcium ion concentration and ROS. |
| Primary mixed cortical cells | Mouse | 0.1–10 mM, 24 h 3 mM, 3 h (DCFDA) | Lobner et al. 2007 | Potentiation of other insults, makes cells more sensitive to other compounds. Increase in ROS |
| NSC-34 cells | Mouse | 50–1000 μM, 18 h | Buenz and Howe 2007 | Dose dependent death of NSC-34 cells |
| Primary mixed cortical cell cultures | Mouse | 3 mM, 3 h | Liu | Induction of oxidative stress is through inhibition of the cystine/glutamate antiporter system Xc− |
| Brain slices. Brain, liver, kidney homogenates | Rat | 10 mM, 30 min for slices | Nunn and Ponnusamy, 2009 | The dimethylated product of BMAA, 2,3-diaminopropionic acid was formed in liver and kidney (but not brain) preparations |
| Nerve cells | Leech | 100–3000 μM, acute | Lopicic | Action on non-NMDA ionotropic glutamate receptors, with a concomitant increase in cell membrane input conductance, as well as an increase in Na+ activity and a decrease in K+ activity. |
| Brain slices | Rat | 100–10000 μM, acute | Cucchiaroni | BMAA activates mGluR1 receptors to cause neuronal degeneration |
Figure 3Illustrative summary of the modes of action of BMAA on neurons. In vivo, BMAA is present as a β-carbamate (represented by the blue dots), which binds to NMDA, AMPA and mGlu receptors (i). Activation of glutamate receptors results in an increase in the levels of Na+ and Ca2+ in the cell, accompanied by a reduction in K+ (ii). The cell becomes depolarised and the membrane becomes permeable, as illustrated by the dotted line, and combined with NMDA receptor activity, noradrenalin is released from the cell as a result (iii). The cysteine/glutamate antiporter system Xc− is inhibited, as indicated by the red X (iv), leading to intracellular depletion of glutathione and an increase in ROS. This inhibition also causes an increase in the release of glutamate (v), which then binds to receptors to induce further excitotoxicity (vi). All these mechanisms combine to cause an increase in the generation of ROS (vii). The elevation of Ca2+ leads to overload of the mitochondria resulting in a massive release of cyt-c into the cytosol (viii).