| Literature DB >> 31929964 |
Michael Coryell1, Barbara A Roggenbeck1, Seth T Walk1.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Arsenic exposure is a public health concern of global proportions with a high degree of interindividual variability in pathologic outcomes. Arsenic metabolism is a key factor underlying toxicity, and the primary purpose of this review is to summarize recent discoveries concerning the influence of the human gut microbiome on the metabolism, bioavailability, and toxicity of ingested arsenic. We review and discuss the current state of knowledge along with relevant methodologies for studying these phenomena. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Arsenic; Human gut microbiome
Year: 2019 PMID: 31929964 PMCID: PMC6953987 DOI: 10.1007/s40495-019-00206-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Pharmacol Rep ISSN: 2198-641X
Arsenic doses used in murine exposure studies
| Arsenical | Mouse (C57BL/6 = WT) | Dose (ppm)[ | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| iAsV | A/J | 1, 10, 100 | Cui et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT | 0.01, 0.25 | Dheer et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT | 18.75, 37.5, 62.5 | Garcia-Montalvo et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT | 10 | Lu et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT, IL10-KO | 10 | Lu et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT | 10 | Lu et al. [ |
| iAsIII | CD1 | 6, 12, 24 | Tokar et al. [ |
| iAsIII | CD1 | 0.05, 0.5, 5 | Waalkes et al. [ |
| iAsIII, iAsV | WT, As3mt-KO | 25, 100 | Dodmane et al. [ |
| iAsV | WT, As3mt-KO | 3.125 | Naranmandura et al. [ |
| iAsV | WT, As3mt-KO | 3.125 | Drobna et al. [ |
| iAsV | WT, As3mt-KO | 3.125 | Hughes et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT, As3mt-KO | 25 | Arnold et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT, As3mt-KO | 1, 10, 25, 50 | Yokohira et al. [ |
| iAsIII | WT, As3mt-KO | 50, 100, 150 | Yokohira et al. [ |
Exposures reported by Garcia-Montalvo et al., Naranmandura et al., Drobna et al., and Hughes et al. were converted from milligrams As per kilogram body weight per day to parts per million in water based on a 20-g mouse drinking 3.2 mL day−1 [65]
Fig. 1Overview of supported and potential arsenic-microbiome interactions in the mammalian gut. Bacteria-encoded enzymes (a dotted boxes, black text) are known to biotransform inorganic and organic arsenicals via reduction, oxidation, methylation, and demethylation reactions (a dotted boxes, blue text) in combination with requisite substrates (a dotted boxes, red text). Bacterial metabolites (a dotted box, green text) may also be important for arsenical biotransformation in the gut. Starting and end products in these biotransformations are labeled with arrows. While bacteria are known to drive all these reactions, evidence for demethylation and oxidation has yet to be generated for bacteria living in a mammalian gut and thiolation due to bacterial hydrogen sulfide (H2S) production has yet to be shown directly. The overall fate of arsenic in the gut (b) is influenced by the composition of intestinal contents and the likelihood of bacteria to sequester arsenic into biomass. These routes are similar to source-sink dynamics that take place in the environment.