| Literature DB >> 32239239 |
Brandon Pressly1, Natalia Vasylieva2, Heike Wulff3, Bogdan Barnych2, Vikrant Singh1, Latika Singh1, Donald A Bruun4, Sung Hee Hwang2, Yi-Je Chen1, James C Fettinger5, Stephanie Johnnides6, Pamela J Lein4, Jun Yang2, Bruce D Hammock2.
Abstract
Acute intoxication with picrotoxin or the rodenticide tetramethylenedisulfotetramine (TETS) can cause seizures that rapidly progress to status epilepticus and death. Both compounds inhibit γ-aminobutyric acid type-A (GABAA) receptors with similar potency. However, TETS is approximately 100 × more lethal than picrotoxin. Here, we directly compared the toxicokinetics of the two compounds following intraperitoneal administration in mice. Using LC/MS analysis we found that picrotoxinin, the active component of picrotoxin, hydrolyses quickly into picrotoxic acid, has a short in vivo half-life, and is moderately brain penetrant (brain/plasma ratio 0.3). TETS, in contrast, is not metabolized by liver microsomes and persists in the body following intoxication. Using both GC/MS and a TETS-selective immunoassay we found that mice administered TETS at the LD50 of 0.2 mg/kg in the presence of rescue medications exhibited serum levels that remained constant around 1.6 μM for 48 h before falling slowly over the next 10 days. TETS showed a similar persistence in tissues. Whole-cell patch-clamp demonstrated that brain and serum extracts prepared from mice at 2 and 14 days after TETS administration significantly blocked heterologously expressed α2β3γ2 GABAA-receptors confirming that TETS remains pharmacodynamically active in vivo. This observed persistence may contribute to the long-lasting and recurrent seizures observed following human exposures. We suggest that countermeasures to neutralize TETS or accelerate its elimination should be explored for this highly dangerous threat agent.Entities:
Keywords: Convulsant; GABAA receptor; Picrotoxinin; TETS; Threat agent
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32239239 PMCID: PMC7303059 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-020-02728-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Fig. 1a Chemical structures of TETS, picrotoxinin, and picrotin. b Stability of picrotoxinin at pH 4, pH 7.4 and pH 12 at room temperature and at 37 °C
Fig. 4TETS remains pharmacodynamically active in vivo for 14 days. a Pooled serum from mice sacrificed 2 days or 14 days after administration of 0.2 mg/kg TETS blocks current through recombinantly expressed α2β3γ2 GABAA receptors. Control currents were elicited by 40 μM GABA, which corresponds to the EC90 for this receptor combination. After washout, serum extracts were perfused and currents again elicited by 40 μM GABA. Only recordings where TETS could subsequently be washed out were used for quantification of the blocking effect. Control serum: 1.3 ± 4.2% (n = 5 cells); 1 μM TETS: 60.5 ± 4.4% current block (n = 8 cells); pooled 2-day serum: 61.3 ± 9.4% current block (n = 4 cells); pooled 14-day serum: 39.4 ± 8.3% current block (n = 7 cells). Data are mean ± SD. Inhibition of GABA currents by extracts from mouse brain removed 10 min (b) and 2 days (c) after TETS administration
Fig. 2Picrotoxinin hydrolyses in plasma and has a short in vivo half-life. a LC/MS chromatograms of picrotoxinin after 0, 5, 20, 60, 90 and 180 min of incubation in mouse plasma. Picrotoxinin has a retention time of 3.19 min. The hydrolysis product has a retention time of 1.35 min. b Incubation of picrotoxinin at pH 9 produces the same hydrolysis product, while acidification can convert the hydrolysis product back into picrotoxinin. c Suggested structure of the hydrolysis product based on high-resolution mass spectrometry. d Total picrotoxinin plasma, liver and brain concentrations in mice; n = 6–9 mice per time point; shown mean ± SD values in nM
Fig. 3TETS persist in vivo. a Pilot experiment comparing the sensitivity of the TETS ELISA to GC/MS following i.p. administration of 0.2 m/kg TETS to mice (n = 3). Shown are serum concentration as mean ± SD. b TETS serum concentration following i.v. bolus administration of 0.05 mg/kg TETS (n = 5). c Long-term pharmacokinetic experiment showing TETS concentrations in serum, brain, kidney and liver over a time course of 2 weeks (n = 3 mice per time point). Shown are total concentrations as mean ± SD