| Literature DB >> 33066435 |
Killian L'Herondelle1, Matthieu Talagas1,2, Olivier Mignen3, Laurent Misery1,2, Raphaele Le Garrec1.
Abstract
Ciguatera fish poisoning (CFP), the most prevalent seafood poisoning worldwide, is caused by the consumption of tropical and subtropical fish contaminated with potent neurotoxins called ciguatoxins (CTXs). Ciguatera is a complex clinical syndrome in which peripheral neurological signs predominate in the acute phase of the intoxication but also persist or reoccur long afterward. Their recognition is of particular importance in establishing the diagnosis, which is clinically-based and can be a challenge for physicians unfamiliar with CFP. To date, no specific treatment exists. Physiopathologically, the primary targets of CTXs are well identified, as are the secondary events that may contribute to CFP symptomatology. This review describes the clinical features, focusing on the sensory disturbances, and then reports on the neuronal targets and effects of CTXs, as well as the neurophysiological and histological studies that have contributed to existing knowledge of CFP neuropathophysiology at the molecular, neurocellular and nerve levels.Entities:
Keywords: ciguatera; ciguatoxin; neurological; pathophysiology; sensory
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33066435 PMCID: PMC7602189 DOI: 10.3390/cells9102291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Structures of CTXs isolated from fish of the Pacific Ocean (CTX-3C and P-CTX-1) and the Caribbean Sea (C-CTX-1). The structure of the Indian-CTXs has not been characterized yet. From [7,11,31], respectively.
Electrophysiological and neurocellular effects of CTXs.
| CTX Effect | Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Nav-mediated depolarization ± spontaneous firing | Mouse differentiated neuroblastoma N1E 115 cells | [ |
| Frog myelinated nerve fibers | [ | |
| Guinea pig atrial heart muscle cells | [ | |
| Frog motor nerve terminals of NMJs | [ | |
| Guinea pig sympathetic ganglia | [ | |
| Rat parasympathetic neurons | [ | |
| Rat skeletal myotubes | [ | |
| Rat and mouse DRG neurons/afferents | [ | |
| Mouse cortical neurons | [ | |
| Swelling | Ranvier nodes of frog myelinated nerve fibers | [ |
| Rat DRG neurons | [ | |
| Frog motor nerve terminals | [ | |
| Human adaxonal Schwann cell cytoplasm | [ | |
| Human intra-epidermal and sural nerve fibers | [ | |
| Human corpus callosum | [ | |
| Mice myenteric plexus nerves | [ | |
| Mouse and frog erythrocytes | [ | |
| Endothelial lining cells of heart capillaries | [ | |
| Neuromediator release | ACh release from (parasympathetic innervation of): | |
| Cat cardiovascular system | [ | |
| Guinea pig and mouse small intestine, taenia caeci and ileum | [ | |
| Frog atrial muscle | [ | |
| Frog motor nerve terminals of skeletal NMJs | [ | |
| Torpedo cholinergic synaptosomes | [ | |
| NAd release from sympathetic innervation of: | ||
| Guinea pig and human atria | [ | |
| Guinea pig vas deferens | [ | |
| Smooth muscle of rat tail artery | [ | |
| Catecholamines from bovine chromaffin cells | [ | |
| Dopamine and GABA from rat brain synaptosomes | [ | |
| GABA from mouse cortical neurons | [ | |
| CGRP and/or SP from mouse and rat sensory neurons/afferents | [ | |
| [Ca2+]i increase | Influx through NCX in Torpedo cholinergic synaptosomes | [ |
| Mobilization from internal stores: | ||
| Neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid NG108-15 cells | [ | |
| Rat skeletal myotubes | [ | |
| Bovine chromaffin cells | [ | |
| Influx through TRPA1 in DRG neurons | [ | |
| Influx through Cav in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells | [ | |
| Modulation of gene expression | Upregulation of iNOS and pro-inflammatory cytokines in RAW 264.7 macrophages | [ |
| Gene expression modulation in mouse cortical neurons | [ | |
| Expression modulation of genes involved in immune responses and detoxification in the blood, liver and brain | [ |
Figure 2Spontaneous action potential firing induced by P-CTX-1 (1 nM) in cultured mouse dorsal root ganglion neurons. Upper panel: membrane depolarization followed by series of action potentials. Lower panel: expanded view showing membrane potential oscillations frequently followed by action potentials (reprinted from [111] with editor permission).
Figure 3P-CTX-1 sensitizes C-type sensory fibers to cold in a Nav1.8- and TRPA1-dependent manner. Ongoing activity induced by P-CTX-1 (0.5 nM) in single C-fibers recorded from murine skin-saphenous nerve preparations from wild-type (wt) mice (a) and TRPA1-deficient mice (b). Residual cumulative action potentials induced in 5 min in single C-fibers from Nav1.8-deficient mice (c) compared with wt mice. Reprinted from [111] with editor permission.