| Literature DB >> 32514323 |
Jun Nakamura1,2, Darcy W Holley3, Toshihiro Kawamoto4, Scott J Bultman3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exogenous formaldehyde is classified by the IARC as a Category 1 known human carcinogen. Meanwhile, a significant amount of endogenous formaldehyde is produced in the human body; as such, formaldehyde-derived DNA and protein adducts have been detected in animals and humans in the absence of major exogenous formaldehyde exposure. However, the toxicological effects of endogenous formaldehyde on individuals with normal DNA damage repair functions are not well understood. In this study, we attempted to generate C57BL/6 mice deficient in both Adh5 and Aldh2, which encode two major enzymes that metabolize endogenous formaldehyde, in order to understand the effects of endogenous formaldehyde on mice with normal DNA repair function.Entities:
Keywords: ADH5; ALDH2; Knockout mice; Synthetic lethality; formaldehyde metabolism
Year: 2020 PMID: 32514323 PMCID: PMC7268536 DOI: 10.1186/s41021-020-00160-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Environ ISSN: 1880-7046
Fig. 1Endogenous formaldehyde metabolism. Endogenous formaldehyde is mainly detoxified via the ADH5 pathway. Formaldehyde is non-enzymatically bound to GSH, oxidized by ADH5, and further metabolized to formic acid by FGH. ALDH2 exists as an enzyme that redundant to the ADH5-dependent detoxification system. The biological significance of oxidation by other formaldehyde detoxification enzymes such as CYP2E1 and ADH appears to be negligible
Fig. 2General appearance, body weight and organ weight of Aldh2−/−/Adh5−/− mice. a General appearance of 25-day-old Aldh2−/−/Adh5−/− mice (white arrow) and Aldh2−/−/Adh5+/− and Aldh2−/−/Adh5+/+mice in a cage. b Body weight (mean ± SD) of Aldh2−/−/Adh5−/− mice (n = 2) and Aldh2−/−/Adh5+/− and Aldh2−/−/Adh5+/+ mice (n = 3). c, d Organ weight and relative organ weight (mean ± SD) of Aldh2−/−/Adh5−/− mice (n = 2) and Aldh2−/−/Adh5+/− and Aldh2−/−/Adh5+/+ mice (n = 3)
Fig. 3Hypothetical mechanism of possible human diseases caused by endogenous formaldehyde in individuals with the ALDH2*2 allele. GSH depletion occurs due to systemic or local oxidative/glycation stress, leading to the failure of the main formaldehyde detoxification pathway via ADH5. Under such conditions, individuals with the ALDH2*2 allele, which normally oxidizes formaldehyde at lower levels, accumulate intracellular formaldehyde. The increased endogenous formaldehyde may induce various human health problems