Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology
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Concentration-dependent kinetics of acetylcholinesterase inhibition by the organophosphate paraoxon.
For decades the interaction of the anticholinesterase organophosphorus compounds with acetylcholinesterase has been characterized as a straightforward phosphylation of the active site serine (Ser-203) which can be described kinetically by the inhibitory rate constant k(i). However, more recently certain kinetic complexities in the inhibition of acetylcholinesterase by organophosphates such as paraoxon (O,O-diethyl O-(p-nitrophenyl) phosphate) and chlorpyrifos oxon (O,O-diethyl O-(3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl) phosphate) have raised questions regarding the adequacy of the kinetic scheme on which k(i) is based. The present article documents conditions in which the inhibitory capacity of paraoxon towards human recombinant acetylcholinesterase appears to change as a function of oxon concentration (as evidenced by a changing k(i)), with the inhibitory capacity of individual oxon molecules increasing at lower oxon concentrations. ⋯ These values were used in a comparison of the Ordered Uni Bi model versus a k(i) model in order to assess the capacity of k(i) to describe accurately the inhibition of acetylcholinesterase by paraoxon. Interestingly, the k(i) model was accurate only at equilibrium (or near equilibrium), and when the inhibitor concentration was well below its K(d) (pseudo first order conditions). Comparisons of the Ordered Uni Bi and k(i) models demonstrate the changing k(i) as a function of inhibitor concentrations is not an artifact resulting from inappropriate inhibitor concentrations.
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The dentate granule cell (DG) layer of the hippocampal formation has the distinctive property of ongoing neurogenesis that continues throughout adult life. Although the function of these newly generated neurons and the mechanisms that control their birth are unknown, age, activity, diet and psychosocial stress have all been demonstrated to regulate this type of neurogenesis. Little information on the impact of environmental insults on this process has appeared to date. ⋯ Double labeling with BrdU and the glial specific marker, glial acidic fibrillary protein (GFAP) indicated that the bulk of the surviving cells were of a neuronal rather than a glial phenotype. These data reveal that chronic low-level Pb exposure reduces the capacity for neurogenesis in the adult hippocampus. Despite deficits in synaptic plasticity previously reported from our laboratory, and now structural plasticity, no significant impact on spatial learning was detected.
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The present study determined effects of thalidomide on three successive generations of New Zealand White rabbits after oral dosing to F0 maternal rabbits during the later third of gestation (post major organogenesis) and lactation. One hundred and twenty four time-mated F0 rabbits (31/dose) were gavaged with 0, 30, 150, or 500 mg/kg thalidomide from gestation day 18 (DG 18) to lactation day 28 (DP or day postpartum 28) for approximately 42 days. At 6 months, 12 F1 males and 12 F1 females were randomly paired within each dose group and mated. ⋯ No F2 fetal gross external alterations were observed. In summary, pregnant rabbits orally dosed with up to 500 mg/kg thalidomide from gestation day 18 to lactation day 28 had increased abortion, changes in some natural delivery and litter parameters, and limb splay in some F1 pups. No gross external changes were observed in F1 and F2 pups.
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Ketamine is a widely used pediatric anesthetic recently reported (C. Ikonomidou et al., 1999, Science 283, 70-74) to enhance neuronal death in neonatal rats. To confirm and extend these results, we treated four groups of PND 7 rats with seven sc doses, one every 90 min, of either saline, 10 mg/kg ketamine, 20 mg/kg ketamine, or a single dose of 20 mg/kg ketamine. ⋯ Levels of ketamine in blood following exposure to the multiple 10 mg/kg doses of ketamine or to a single 20 mg/kg dose ranged around 2-5 micrograms/ml; although these blood levels are close to an anesthetic level in humans, they failed to produce neurodegeneration. To investigate the mode of ketamine-induced neuronal death, coronal sections were stained with both Fluoro-Jade B (a green fluorescent stain selective for neurodegeneration) and DAPI (a blue DNA stain), as well as for caspase-3 (using an antisera labeled red with rhodamine). These histochemical results confirmed the developmental neurotoxicity of ketamine, demonstrated that Fluoro-Jade B (FJ-B), like silver methods, successfully stained degenerating neurons in neonatal rats, and indicated that ketamine acts by increasing the rate of neuronal apoptosis.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of chlorpyrifos-oxon and paraoxon acetylcholinesterase inhibition dynamics: potential role of a peripheral binding site.
The primary mechanism of action for organophosphorus (OP) insecticides, like chlorpyrifos and parathion, is to inhibit acetylcholinesterase (AChE) by their oxygenated metabolites (oxons), due to the phosphorylation of the serine hydroxyl group located in the active site of the molecule. The rate of phosphorylation is described by the bimolecular inhibitory rate constant (k(i)), which has been used for quantification of OP inhibitory capacity. It has been proposed that a peripheral binding site exists on the AChE molecule, which, when occupied, reduces the capacity of additional oxon molecules to phosphorylate the active site. ⋯ At low concentrations, the k(i) estimates were approximately similar for both CPO and PO (150-180 [two determinations] and 300 +/- 180 nM(-1)h(-1), respectively). This implies that, at low concentrations, both oxons exhibited similar inhibitory potency in contrast to the marked difference exhibited at higher concentrations. These results support the potential importance of a secondary peripheral binding site associated with AChE kinetics, particularly at low, environmentally relevant concentrations.