| Literature DB >> 29396538 |
Oddvar Myhre1, Dag Marcus Eide1, Synne Kleiven2, Hans Christian Utkilen2, Tim Hofer3.
Abstract
The cyanobacterial toxins β-methylamino-L-alanine (L-BMAA) and microcystin-LR (MC-LR; a potent liver toxin) are suspected to cause neurological disorders. Adult male C57BL/6JOlaHsd mice aged approximately 11 months were subcutaneously injected for five consecutive days with L-BMAA and microcystin-LR alone, or as a mixture. A dose-range study determined a tolerable daily dose to be ~31 µg MC-LR/kg BW/day based on survival, serum liver status enzymes, and relative liver and kidney weight. Mice tolerating the first one-two doses also tolerated the subsequent three-four doses indicating adaptation. The LD50 was 43-50 μg MC-LR/kg BW. Long-term effects (up to 10 weeks) on spatial learning and memory performance was investigated using a Barnes maze, were mice were given 30 µg MC-LR/kg BW and/or 30 mg L-BMAA/kg BW either alone or in mixture for five consecutive days. Anxiety, general locomotor activity, willingness to explore, hippocampal and peri-postrhinal cortex dependent memory was investigated after eight weeks using Open field combined with Novel location/Novel object recognition tests. Toxin exposed animals did not perform worse than controls, and MC-LR exposed animals performed somewhat better during the first Barnes maze re-test session. MC-LR exposed mice rapidly lost up to ~5% body weight, but regained weight from day eight.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29396538 PMCID: PMC5797144 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20327-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Study designs for the dose-range finding and main studies. The dose-range finding study was performed to determine a suitable tolerable dose of MC-LR to be used in the main study, which investigated long-term behavioral effects.
Figure 2Survival and tolerated MC-LR doses by mice in the five-day repeated dose-range finding study. On the fifth injection, all mice except controls were co-administrated 100 mg L-BMAA/kg BW which is not acutely toxic. Time-points of deaths are indicated with a dagger (†).
Figure 3MC-LR related effects on mice serum parameters, organ and body weights in the dose-range finding study. (a) Serum ALT (U/L), (b) serum GD (U/L), (c) serum AST (U/L), (d) BW (g), (e) liver/BW, (f) kidneys/BW, (g) liver (g), and (h) kidneys (both, g) weight at sacrifice (day 17). Slopes that significantly deviate from zero using linear regression are indicated with p-values whereas ‘ns’ means not significantly different from zero. Body and organ weights were not recorded in the 25 μg/kg BW group due to an error. The unexposed control group contained one abnormally large mouse.
Figure 4Normalized BWs (%) for the four groups of mice in the main study over 72 days. Data shown as mean ± SEM (N = 12/group and time-point except on days 19, 22 and 66 when BWs for only one of the two subsets were recorded (N = 6/group)).
Figure 5Behavioral performance of mice in the Barnes maze over eight consecutive sessions. (a) Startdirection error (0 to 180 degrees), (b) primary latency (s), (c) escape latency (s), (d) number of primary errors, (e) number of total errors, (f) mean velocity (cm/s), and (g) distance travelled (m). Testing was performed four (over three consecutive days) and 10 (on one day) weeks after administration with two sessions (1 = morning; 2 = afternoon) per day. Data are shown as mean ± SEM. Significant main effects by two-way ANOVA and significant differences among the groups by Dunnett’s t-test at the respective session are indicated with asterisks (*p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01) above and below the curves, respectively.
Figure 6OF, NLR and NOR tests of mice during week eight. On the first day, OF tests were performed during 10 min with recording of (a) the time spent (shown as % of total) in the center (25 × 25 cm) zone inside white squared (50 × 50 cm) boxes, and (b) total distance travelled (m). The following day begun with a 5 min acclimatization period where two identical objects had been placed inside the box. Thereafter the NLR (c–f) and NOR (g–j) tests were performed (5 min each) on the same day with 2 h in-between the sessions. Number of entries (#) and time (s) spent in the zones surrounding the two objects were calculated from which discrimination indexes were calculated. N = 12 in all groups. Data are shown as mean ± SEM.
Figure 7Positive control test using scopolamine in the Barnes maze to assess spatial learning and memory performance in mice by the seven quantified parameters. (a) Startdirection error (0 to 180 degrees), (b) primary latency (s), (c) escape latency (s), (d) number of primary errors, (e) number of total errors, (f) mean velocity (cm/s), and (g) distance travelled (m). Testing was performed 15 min after saline or scopolamine i.p. administration (1 mg/kg BW) over three consecutive days with two sessions (1 = morning; 2 = afternoon) per day. Data are shown as mean ± SEM. Significant differences between the two groups (1 mg/kg BW scopolamine or saline injected i.p. 15 min prior to each session) by repeated measures (RM) ANOVA are indicated with asterisks (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, and ***p < 0.001).
Animal studies having investigated long-term (>2 weeks after administration) neurotoxic effects for L-BMAA and MC-LR in adult post-puberty (mouse ≥ 8- and rat ≥ 12-week-old) animals.
| Substance | Species | Age or weight | Administration | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L-BMAA | Cynomolgus monkey (macaque, male) | One-year-old (1.4–3.2 kg) | Daily gavage administration of 100–350 mg/kg for 2.5–17 weeks (six differently exposed groups). | Motor-neuron dysfunction after 2–12 weeks. No memory tests performed. Brain and spinal cord structural degenerative changes. |
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| L-BMAA | Mouse (CD1, female) | Two-month-old at start | Gavage over 11 weeks (500 mg/kg daily for 18 days, then 500 mg/kg every other day for 28 days, then 1000 mg/kg every other day for 30 days). | No behavioral abnormalities (no specific tests). No pathological or chemical changes observed. |
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| L-BMAA | Rat (Sprague-Dawley, male) | 200–250 g | Intracerebroventricular administration (500 µg/day) for 16, 30, 40 or 60 days. | Behavioral effects (splay, jerking) for the first six days but which disappeared after 10 days of administration. No memory tests performed. |
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| L-BMAA | Mouse (CD1, male) | Six-month-old at start | Through pellet (28 mg/kg BW) daily for 30 days. | Battery of behavioral tests (locomotor, memory (radial arm water maze), etc.) – all were negative. Neuronal cell death in brain and spinal cord analyzed for – also negative. |
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| L-BMAA | Rat (Sprague-Dawley, male) | 250 g (Adult) | Daily i.v. tail vein injections of 300 mg/kg on three consecutive days. | Behavioral effects (functional disabilities) after two-three weeks. No memory tests performed. Various brain tissue changes. |
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| L-BMAA | Monkey (vervet, sex unclear) | Seven-year-old | Dosed fruit, 21 or 210 mg/kg/day for 140 days. | Brain NFT & β-amyloid deposits at both doses. No behavioral testing performed. |
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| L-BMAA | Mouse (C57BL/6, male) | ∼One-year-old | S.c. injection, 30 mg/kg BW daily for five days. | No behavioral effects observed up to 72 days after administration using Barnes maze, OF, NLR, NOR tests. | This study |
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| MC-LR | Mouse (C57BL/6, male) | ∼One-year-old | S.c. injection, 30 µg/kg BW daily for five days. | No behavioral effects observed up to 72 days after administration using Barnes maze, OF, NLR, NOR tests. | This study |
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| L-BMAA + MC-LR | Mouse (C57BL/6, male) | ∼One-year-old | S.c. injection, 30 µg MC-LR +30 mg L-BMAA/kg BW daily for five days. | No behavioral effects observed up to 72 days after administration using Barnes maze, OF, NLR, NOR tests. | This study |