| Literature DB >> 33142924 |
Shuaishuai Xu1, Xiping Yi2,3, Wenya Liu1, Chengcheng Zhang1, Isaac Yaw Massey1, Fei Yang4, Li Tian5.
Abstract
Cyanobacterial blooms triggered by eutrophication and climate change have become a global public health issue. The toxic metabolites microcystins (MCs) generated by cyanobacteria can accumulate in food chain and contaminate water, thus posing a potential threat to human and animals health. Studies have suggested that aside liver, the kidney may be another target organ of MCs intoxication. Therefore, this review provides various evidences on the nephrotoxicity of MCs. The review concludes that nephrotoxicity of MCs may be related to inhibition of protein phosphatases and excessive production of reactive oxygen species, cytoskeleton disruption, endoplasmic reticulum stress, DNA damage and cell apoptosis. To protect human from MCs toxic consequences, this paper also puts forward some directions for further research.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; microcystins; nephrotoxicity; oxidative stress; phosphatases 2A
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33142924 PMCID: PMC7693154 DOI: 10.3390/toxins12110693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the chemical structure of microcystins. (A) generic structure of the MCs. (B) Microcystin-LR (MC-LR). (C) represents some of the most frequent MC congeners (reproduced from [11], 2016, Elsevier Ltd., Amsterdam, The Netherlands).
Summary of nephrotoxicity of microcystins in population.
| Country/Year | Sample Size | Investigated Effects | Cyanotoxins(Detection Method) | Conclusion | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil/1996 | 95 | Blood biochemical indicators | MCs (ELISA, LC-MS) | Incident— | Hilborn et al. [ |
| Brazil/2001 | 44 | Blood biochemical indicators | MCs (ELISA, LC-MS) | Incident— | Soares et al. [ |
| China/2005 | 76 | Renal function indicators | MCs (LC-MS) | Epidemiological study— | Chen et al. [ |
| China/2013 | 5493 | Renal function indicators | MC-LR (ELISA) | Epidemiological study— | Lin et al. [ |
| Sri Lanka/2016 | 330 | Chronic kidney disease | MCs (LC-MS) | Epidemiological study— | Liyanage et al. [ |
Summary of nephrotoxicity of microcystins crude extracts in mammalian studies in vivo.
| Test Organism/System | Exposure | Toxicant | Concentration/Dose | Time Point | Toxic Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male rats | I.P. | Microcystis cell extracts | 0.5, 1.0, 2.0 LD50 | - | BUN↑, SCr↑, LDH↓, GPT↓, followed with hematuria, albuminuria and bilirubinuria | Bhattacharya et al. [ |
| Male KM mice | I.P. | Cyanobacterial crude extracts | 0.25, 0.5 and 1.0 g/kg | 10, 24 h | BUN↑, SCr↑, T-AOC↓, microstructural damage | Pan et al. [ |
| Balb/c mice | I.P. | Cyanobacterial crude extracts | 180 and 195 mg/mL | 2, 4, 24 h | Microstructural damage | Humpage et al. [ |
| Male Wistar rats | I.V. | Cyanobacterial crude extracts | 86.7 μg MC-LR eq/kg | 1, 2, 4, 6, 12, 24 h | mRNA of c-fos ↑, c-jun↑ and c-mys↑; protein of c-fos↑, c-jun↑ | Li et al. [ |
| Wistar rats | I.V. | Cyanobacterial crude extracts | 80 μg MC-LR eq/kg | 1, 2, 4, 6, 12, 24 h | Modulation of CAT, Mn-SOD, Cu, Zn-SOD,GR, GPX, γ-GCS transcription | Xiong et al. [ |
| Wistar rats | I.V. | Cyanobacterial crude extracts | 87 μg MC-LR eq/kg | 1, 2, 4, 6, 12, 24 h | Modulation of 14 GSTs transcription | Li et al. [ |
| KM mice | I.G. | Cyanobacterial crude extracts | 0.1 mL | 1 month | Microstructural damage | Yang et al. [ |
| Wistar rats | P.O. | Cyanobacterial crude extracts | 136 and 928 μg MC-LR eq/kg | 28 days | Ultrastructural damage, MDA↑, GR↑ and LPO↑ | Adamovsky et al. [ |
I.P. = intraperitoneal; I.V. = intravenous; ↑ = effect increase; ↓ = effect decrease; - = not determined.
Summary of nephrotoxicity of pure microcystin-LR in mammalian studies in vivo.
| Test Organism/System | Exposure | Concentration/Dose | Time Point | Toxic Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SD rats | I.P. | 20, 40, 80, 120, 160, 180, 200, or 400 μg/kg | 1, 12, 24 h | BUN↑, SCr↑, ALT↑, AST↑, TBIL↑, followed with ultrastructural damage | Hooser et al. [ |
| Wistar rats | I.P. | 55 μg/kg | 24 h | Glomerular filtration rate↑, albuminuria↑, ROS↑ and Na+ reabsorption↓, microstructural and ultrastructural damage | Lowe et al. [ |
| Balb/c mice | I.P. | 22, 43 μg/kg | 0.5, 4 h | Kidney relative weight↑, UA↑ | Lei et al. [ |
| KM mice | I.P. | 10 μg/kg | 13 days | ALT↑, AST↑, ALP↑,BUN↑, SCr↑, MDA↑, LPO↑ and microstructural damage | Xu et al. [ |
| KM mice | I.P. | 3, 6, 12 μg/kg | 7 days | Kidney absolute weight↓, Kidney relative weight↑, DNA-protein crosslinking↑ and protein carbonyl↑ | Dong et al. [ |
| ICR mice | I.P. | 20 μg/kg | 21 days | Apoptosis, CHOP↓, caspase-12↓, Bcl-2↑ | Qin et al. [ |
| Wistar rats | I.P. | 100, 150 μg/kg | 8 h | GSH-Px↓, GR↓, SOD↓, CAT↓, LPO↑ | Moreno et al. [ |
| KM mice | I.P. | 5 μg/kg | 15 days | MDA↑, GSH↓, SOD↓, CAT↓ | Han et al. [ |
| KM mice | I.P. | 30 μg/kg | 1, 4, 8 h | ALT↑, SOD↑, CAT↑, BUN first↓ then↑, and all the biochemical indicators are reversible | Li et al. [ |
| SD rats | I.P. | 30 μg/kg | 1, 3, 7, 12 h | Microstructural damage | Li et al. [ |
| Male mice | I.P. | 25μg/kg | 1, 2 months | Kidney relative weight↑, GSH↓, GPH-Px↓, SOD↓, CAT↓, NOx↑ and partial of indicators are reversible after one month’s cleaning period | Sedan et al. [ |
| C57BL/6 mice | P.O. | 1, 30, 60, 90,120 μg/L | 3, 6 months | BUN↓, microstructural and ultrastructural damage | Yi et al. [ |
| Wistar rats | I.P. | 10 μg/L | 8 months | Microstructural damage | Milutinović et al. [ |
| Wistar rats | I.P. | 10 μg/L | 8 months | Microstructural damage, apoptosis↑, cytoskeleton disruption↑ | Milutinović et al. [ |
I.P. = intraperitoneal; P.O. = peroral; ↑ = effect increase; ↓ = effect decrease.
Summary of nephrotoxicity of microcystins in mammalian studies in vitro.
| Test Organism/System | Toxicant | Concentration/Dose | Time Point | Toxic Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat kidney epithelial | MC-LR | 13.3 μM | 24 h | Apoptosis↑, ultrastructural damage | Khan et al. [ |
| Rat NRK cell | MC-LR | 10, 100, 1000 nM | 4, 6, 7, 8 h | Bax↑ | Chen et al. [ |
| Isolated rat kidney | MC-LR | 1 μg/L | 2 h | Urine flow↑, perfusion pressure↑, glomerular filtration rate↑, sodium tubule transport fraction↓, microstructural damage | Nobre et al. [ |
| Vero-E6 cell | MC-LR, cyanobacterial crude extracts | 1.4–175 nM | 24, 48, 72 h | Cell viability↓ | Dias et al. [ |
| Vero-E6 cell | MC-LR, cyanobacterial crude extracts | 5, 50, 500, 5000 nM | 24 h | Cell proliferation↑, P38↑, JNK↑, ERK1/2 activity↑ | Dias et al. [ |
| Vero-E6 cell | MC-LR | 1.3, 2.5, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 75, 100, 150 μM | 24, 48, 72 h | Cell viability↓, autophagy, apoptosis, necrosis, | Alverca et al. [ |
| Vero-E6 cell | MC-LR | 6, 12, 25, 50 μM | 24 h | Cell viability↓, autophagy, cytoskeleton disruption↑ | Menezes et al. [ |
| HEK293 | MC-LR, MC-RR, MC-LW, MC- LF | 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 100, 1000 nM | 4 h | Cell viability↓, phosphatase activity↓, modulation of Oatps expression | Fischer et al. [ |
| HEK293 | MC-LR | 2, 10 μM | 24 h | Ceramide↑, PP2A activity↑, cytoskeleton disruption↑ | Li et al. [ |
| HEK293 | MC-LR | 10 μM | 24 h | PP2A activity↓, alteration of c-myc expression | Fan et al. [ |
Summary of nephrotoxicity of microcystins in fishes.
| Test Organism/System | Exposure | Toxicant | Concentration/Dose | Time Point | Toxic Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
|
| I.G. | cyanobacterial crude extracts | 400 μg/kg MC-LR | 3 days | Microstructural damage, apoptosis, necrosis, cell shedding, proteinaceous casts↑ at the cortico-medullary junction | Fischer et al. [ |
|
| Immersion | cyanobacterial crude extracts | 60.0 μg MC-LR/fish | 14, 21 days | Microstructural damage, ALP↑, ACP↑ | Molina et al. [ |
|
| Immersion | cyanobacterial crude extracts | - | - | CAT↑, GST↑, GSH↑, GPX↑, SOD↑, ultrastructural changes | Li et al. [ |
|
| I.P. | cyanobacterial crude extracts | 200, 400 μg/kg MC-LR | 24 h | CAT↑, microstructural damage | Li et al. [ |
|
| Immersion | cyanobacterial crude extracts | 5, 11, 25, 55 μg | CAT↓, SOD↓, ultrastructural damage | Atencio et al. [ | |
|
| Immersion | cyanobacterial crude extracts | - | - | Microstructural damage, alterations of antioxidant enzymes | Qiu et al. [ |
|
| ||||||
|
| I.P. | MC-LR | 400, 1000 μg/kg | 16 h | Microstructural damage | Kotak et al. [ |
|
| I.V. | MC-LR | 50, 200 μg/kg | 1, 3, 8, 12 h | Downregulated PP2A-A transcription | Ma et al. [ |
|
| Immersion | MC-LR | 120 μg/kg | 7 days | Dysfunction in redox dynamic balance, CAT↓, SOD↓, GSH-Px↓, GR↓ | Prieto et al. [ |
|
| Immersion | MC-LR | 60 μg MC-LR | 21 days | LPO↑, alterations of antioxidant enzymes, modulation of GPx and GST genes transcription | Puerto et al. [ |
|
| I.V. | MC-LR | 50 and 200 μg/kg | 8, 24, 48 h | Modulation of 7 miRNAs transcription | Feng et al. [ |
|
| Immersion | MC-LR | 1, 5, 25 μg/L | 60 days | Microstructural damage, modulation of genes transcription, apoptosis, ROS↑ | Wang et al. [ |
| CIK cell | - | MC-LR | 1, 10, 100 μg/L | 24, 48 h | Cell viability↓, G2/M phase arrest, ROS↑, MDA↑, modulation of antioxidant enzymes including CAT and SOD, modulation of cytoskeletal genes (β-actin, lc3a, and keratin) transcription | Huang et al. [ |
I.P. = intraperitoneal; I.V. = intravenous; I.G. = intragastrical; ↑ = effect increase; ↓ = effect decrease; - = not determined.
Figure 2Potential mechanisms of renal toxicity caused by microcystins. (reproduced from [119]).