| Literature DB >> 29127487 |
Eric Jakobsson1,2,3,4,5,6, Orlando Argüello-Miranda7, See-Wing Chiu8,9, Zeeshan Fazal10,11, James Kruczek12, Santiago Nunez-Corrales9,13, Sagar Pandit12, Laura Pritchet14,15.
Abstract
Lithium has literally been everywhere forever, since it is one of the three elements created in the Big Bang. Lithium concentration in rocks, soil, and fresh water is highly variable from place to place, and has varied widely in specific regions over evolutionary and geologic time. The biological effects of lithium are many and varied. Based on experiments in which animals are deprived of lithium, lithium is an essential nutrient. At the other extreme, at lithium ingestion sufficient to raise blood concentration significantly over 1 mM/, lithium is acutely toxic. There is no consensus regarding optimum levels of lithium intake for populations or individuals-with the single exception that lithium is a generally accepted first-line therapy for bipolar disorder, and specific dosage guidelines for sufferers of that condition are generally agreed on. Epidemiological evidence correlating various markers of social dysfunction and disease vs. lithium level in drinking water suggest benefits of moderately elevated lithium compared to average levels of lithium intake. In contrast to other biologically significant ions, lithium is unusual in not having its concentration in fluids of multicellular animals closely regulated. For hydrogen ions, sodium ions, potassium ions, calcium ions, chloride ions, and magnesium ions, blood and extracellular fluid concentrations are closely and necessarily regulated by systems of highly selective channels, and primary and secondary active transporters. Lithium, while having strong biological activity, is tolerated over body fluid concentrations ranging over many orders of magnitude. The lack of biological regulation of lithium appears due to lack of lithium-specific binding sites and selectivity filters. Rather lithium exerts its myriad physiological and biochemical effects by competing for macromolecular sites that are relatively specific for other cations, most especially for sodium and magnesium. This review will consider what is known about the nature of this competition and suggest using and extending this knowledge towards the goal of a unified understanding of lithium in biology and the application of that understanding in medicine and nutrition.Entities:
Keywords: Ion channels and transporters; Magnesium-dependent enzymes; Physical properties of biological membranes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29127487 PMCID: PMC5696506 DOI: 10.1007/s00232-017-9998-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Membr Biol ISSN: 0022-2631 Impact factor: 1.843
Fig. 1Major mechanisms by which lithium crosses biological membranes. a Lithium permeates both voltage-gated (Richelson 1977; Naylor et al. 2016) and epithelial (Thomsen and Shirley 2006) channels that are otherwise selective for sodium. b Lithium is reabsorbed in the kidney by the sodium-phosphate cotransporter (Uwai et al. 2014). c A major mechanism for lithium efflux from cells is a sodium-lithium countertransport (Szentistvanyi et al. 1979; Yurinskaya et al. 2014; Vereninov et al. 2016). d Another significant lithium efflux mechanism is the sodium-proton pump (Busch et al. 1995). e Members in yeast of the ENA family of cation-transport ATPases move lithium as well as sodium (Ruiz and Arino 2007). Based on sequence homology, we hypothesize that the mammalian members of the family will share this functional feature. f The NHA1 antiporter in yeast is important for both sodium and lithium efflux (Prior et al. 1996). This antiporter does not appear to have mammalian orthologs. g Lithium protects mitochondria against the effects of elevated calcium (Shalbuyeva et al. 2007), presumably through its action in the sodium-calcium antiporter in the mitochondrial outer membrane (Boyman et al. 2013). h Lithium permeates pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (Grosman, Claudio 2016. Personal communication based on unpublished observations; Lewis and Stevens 1983)
Fig. 2Snapshot of a common conformation observed in molecular dynamics simulations of lithium ion coming out of aqueous solution and interacting with a POPC membrane (Kruczek et al. 2017). The lithium ion has induced formation of a tetrahedral shell involving a phosphate group and an sn-2 carbonyl group from one phospholipid molecule plus an sn-2 carbonyl from a second phospholipid and a phosphate group from a third phospholipid. Larger alkali metal ions such as sodium or potassium are found to induce this structure only rarely or not at all. The tetrahedral cage geometry in the membrane mimics the tetrahedral geometry of the first shell of hydration waters for the lithium ion in solution (seen in upper right). While lithium commonly has a four-fold coordination in its inner hydration shell, sodium and potassium have six and seven, respectively (Mähler and Persson 2011)
Fig. 3Interaction diagram for GSK3B and the 265 other proteins with which it interacts directly with 70% confidence, based on the STRING protein–protein interaction database. Protocol for replicating the search for an up-to-date version of this network is provided in Supplementary Material
The 13 KEGG pathways most enriched in the 265 genes that interact directly with GSK3B
| Pathway ID | Pathway description | Gene count | FDR |
|---|---|---|---|
| 05200 | Pathways in cancer | 77 | 1.86e−74 |
| 04310 | Wnt signaling pathway | 54 | 4.78e−65 |
| 05166 | HTLV-1 infection | 65 | 6.33e−65 |
| 04390 | Hippo signaling pathway | 46 | 1.4e−49 |
| 05205 | Proteoglycans in cancer | 52 | 2.36e−49 |
| 05161 | Hepatitis B | 45 | 2.97e−49 |
| 04151 | Pl3K-Ak1 signaling pathway | 59 | 2.97e−49 |
| 05215 | Prostate cancer | 38 | 2.97e−49 |
| 05217 | Basal cell carcinoma | 32 | 2.97e−49 |
| 05203 | Viral carcinogenesis | 45 | 1.28e−43 |
| 05213 | Endometrial cancer | 28 | 5.89e−39 |
| 04916 | Melanogenesis | 34 | 9.16e−39 |
| 05210 | Colorectal cancer | 29 | 9.16e−39 |
All of these pathways are implicated in cancer. The false discovery rates show that the probability that the degrees of enrichment observed could have occurred by chance, is vanishingly small. Protocol for replicating this search in the STRING database is provided in Supplementary Material