| Literature DB >> 28534225 |
Katharina Goempel1, Laura Tedsen1, Meike Ruenz1, Tamara Bakuradze1, Dorothea Schipp2, Jens Galan3, Gerhard Eisenbrand1, Elke Richling4.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to explore the relation of controlled dietary acrylamide (AA) intake with the excretion of AA-related urinary mercapturic acids (MA), N-acetyl-S-(carbamoylethyl)-L-cysteine (AAMA) and N-acetyl-S-(1-carbamoyl-2-hydroxyethyl)-L-cysteine (GAMA). Excretion kinetics of these short-term exposure biomarkers were monitored under strictly controlled conditions within a duplicate diet human intervention study. One study arm (group A, n = 6) ingested AA via coffee (0.15-0.17 µg/kg bw) on day 6 and in a meal containing an upper exposure level of AA (14.1-15.9 μg/kg bw) on day 10. The other arm (group B) was on AA minimized diet (washout, 0.05-0.06 µg/kg bw) throughout the whole 13-day study period. On day 6, these volunteers ingested 13C3D3-AA (1 μg/kg bw). In both arms, urinary MA excretion was continuously monitored and blood samples were taken to determine hemoglobin adducts. Ingestion of four cups of coffee resulted in a slightly enhanced short-term biomarker response within the background range of group B. At the end of the 13-day washout period, group B excreted an AAMA baseline level of 0.14 ± 0.10 µmol/d although AA intake was only about 0.06 µmol/d. This sustained over-proportional AAMA background suggested an endogenous AA baseline exposure level of 0.3-0.4 µg/kg bw/d. The excretion of 13C3D3-AA was practically complete within 72-96 h which rules out delayed release of AA (or any other MA precursor) from deep body compartments. The results provide compelling support for the hypothesis of a sustained endogenous AA formation in the human body.Entities:
Keywords: Coffee; Duplicate diet study; Endogenous acrylamide; Hemoglobin adducts; Human background; Mercapturic acids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28534225 PMCID: PMC5696489 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-017-1990-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Fig. 1Study design of group A and B of the 13-day human intervention study; washout: maximum AA intake 0.05–0.06 µg/kg bw/d; coffee: AA intake 0.15–0.17 µg/kg bw/d; 13C3D3-AA: intake of 1 µg/kg bw of stable isotope labelled 13C3D3-AA; high AA: AA intake 14.1–15.9 µg/kg bw. Begin of each study day was 8 a.m. (0 h)
Mass spectrometric (AB Sciex QTrap 5500) parameters to determine AA, AAMA, 13C3D3-AAMA, GAMA, AAValPFPTH, and GAValPFPTH in food and biological samples
| Q1 | Q3 | Time | DP | EP | CE | CXP | CUR | CAD | IS | TEM | GS1 | GS2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AA | 72.1 | 55.1 | 100a | 36 | 10 | 16 | 15 | 40 | Medium | 4500 | 550 | 70 | 40 |
| D3-AA | 75.1 | 58.1 | 100a | 36 | 10 | 15 | 7 | 40 | Medium | 4500 | 550 | 70 | 40 |
| AAMA 1 | 233.0 | 104.0 | 3.9b | −30 | −10 | −20 | −11 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| AAMA 2 | 233.0 | 162.0 | 3.9b | −30 | −10 | −14 | −13 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| 13C3D3-AAMA 1 | 239.1 | 110.0 | 3.9b | −40 | −10 | −20 | −11 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| 13C3D3-AAMA 2 | 239.1 | 162.1 | 3.9b | −40 | −10 | −15 | −14 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| D3-AAMA | 236.0 | 103.9 | 3.9b | −55 | −10 | −20 | −5 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| GAMA 1 | 249.0 | 120.0 | 2.2b | −35 | −10 | −22 | −11 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| GAMA 2 | 249.0 | 128.1 | 2.2b | −35 | −10 | −16 | −9 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| D3-GAMA | 252.0 | 119.7 | 2.2b | −30 | −10 | −20 | −11 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 550 | 50 | 70 |
| AAValPFPTH 1 | 394.1 | 275.1 | 160a | −110 | −10 | −30 | −11 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 500 | 25 | 50 |
| AAValPFPTH 2 | 394.1 | 302.9 | 160a | −110 | −10 | −22 | −31 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 500 | 25 | 50 |
| D7-AAValPFPTH | 401.1 | 310.1 | 160a | −125 | −10 | −24 | −17 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 500 | 25 | 50 |
| GAValPFPTH 1 | 410.0 | 226.9 | 160a | −110 | −10 | −22 | −11 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 500 | 25 | 50 |
| GAValPFPTH 2 | 410.0 | 206.0 | 160a | −110 | −10 | −38 | −13 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 500 | 25 | 50 |
| D7-GAValPFPTH | 417.2 | 234.1 | 160a | −75 | −10 | −22 | −15 | 50 | Medium | −4500 | 500 | 25 | 50 |
Q1 quadrupole 1 (m/z), Q3 quadrupole 3 (m/z), DP declustering potential (V), EP entrance potential (V), CE collision energy (V), CXP cell exit potential (V), CUR curtain gas (psi), CAD collisionally activated dissociation gas, IS ionspray voltage (V), TEM temperature (°C), GS1 nebulizer gas (psi), GS2 turbo heater gas (psi)
aDwell time (msec)
bExpected retention time (min)
AA contents of food samples with quantifiable AA amounts (mean ± SD; n = 3)
| Food | AA content (µg/kg) |
|---|---|
| French fries (lunch) | 2778 ± 133 |
| French fries (dinner) | 2127 ± 161 |
| Potato crisps | 1100 ± 50 |
| Crisp bread | 396 ± 23 |
| Coffee pads | 241 ± 11 |
| Cereals | 182 ± 8 |
| Swedish oat cookies | 143 ± 7 |
| Brewed coffee | 15.9 ± 0.5 |
Fig. 2a Urinary excretions of AAMA of group A (n = 6) for each individual study day (24 h, start at 8 a.m.); squares represent mean values, horizontal lines are median values, crosses and stars represent the minimum respective maximum; b development of AAMA excretion from day 1 to 9 at the level of each single volunteer of group A indicated as one line per volunteer; days 1–5, 7–9, 11–13: washout days (0.05–0.06 µg/kg bw/d), day 6 (coffee): 0.15–0.17 μg/kg bw; day 10 (high AA): 14.1–15.9 μg/kg bw
Fig. 3a Urinary excretions of AAMA of group B (n = 6) for each individual study day (24 h, start at 8 a.m.); squares represent mean values, horizontal lines are median values, crosses and stars represent the minimum respective maximum; b development of AAMA excretion at the level of each single volunteer of group B indicated as one line per volunteer; days 1–13: washout days (0.05–0.06 µg/kg bw/d)
Fig. 4Urinary excretions of AAMA and GAMA (in μmol/g urinary creatinine) of group A for each individual study day (24 h, start at 8 a.m.). Days 1–5, 7–9, 11–13: washout days (0.05–0.06 µg/kg bw/d), day 6 (coffee): 0.15–0.17 μg/kg bw/d; day 10 (high AA): 14.1–15.9 μg/kg bw/d (details see materials and methods section). Data were expressed as mean ± standard deviation (n = 6)
MA excretion given as absolute excreted amounts (in nmol) during the human intervention study with high (14.1–15.9 µg/kg bw) AA intake via food (group A) respective single oral administration of 13C3D3-AA (1 µg/kg bw) of group B
| High AA | Washout | AA intake | Washout | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24 h (day 9) | 24 h (day 10) | 48 h (day 10–11) | 72 h (day 10–12) | 96 h (day 10–13) | |
| AAMA (nmol) | 91 ± 54 | 3654 ± 824 | 5950 ± 780 | 6811 ± 865 | 7089 ± 875 |
| GAMA (nmol) | 25 ± 12 | 270 ± 58 | 628 ± 115 | 774 ± 133 | 854 ± 149 |
Fig. 5Urinary excretions of AAMA and 13C3D3-AAMA (in μmol/g ucr) for each individual study day (24 h, start at 8 a.m.) of group B. Days 1–13: washout days (0.05–0.06 µg/kg bw/d), day 6 (0 h): single oral administration of 1 μg 13C3D3-AA/kg bw. Data were expressed as mean ± standard deviation (n = 6)
N-terminal valine hemoglobin adducts of AA (AAVal) and GA (GAVal) during the human intervention study with coffee consumption on day 6 and high AA intake via food on day 10 (group A) respective 13 days of washout (group B)
| Blood sampling | AAVal (pmol/g Hb) | GAVal (pmol/g Hb) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group A ( | Group B ( | Group A ( | Group B ( | |
| 1. BS | 24.5 ± 19.7 | 46.4 ± 44.1 | 17.2 ± 16.0 | 27.5 ± 25.8 |
| 2. BS | 22.3 ± 17.6 | 38.4 ± 34.9 | 15.9 ± 14.5 | 23.3 ± 21.5 |
| 3. BS | 26.0 ± 16.1 | 34.0 ± 32.6 | 18.7 ± 13.5 | 20.9 ± 20.7 |
1. BS prior study start day 1, 2. BS end of day 7, 3. BS end of day 13