Leptospirosis is a worldwide zoonosis caused by the motile bacterium . This disease can cause hemorrhagic symptoms, multi-visceral and renal failures, resulting in one million cases and approximately 60,000 deaths each year. The motility of is highly involved in its virulence and is ensured by the presence of two flagella in the periplasm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Rodent management involves the use of anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs). This use has resulted in the selection of numerous resistance alleles in the Vkorc1 gene, encoding the target enzyme of ARs. In Africa, although rodents are a major problem as a consequence of their transport and transmission of zoonotic pathogens, and damage to crops, the use of ARs and the spread of resistance alleles are poorly documented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVitamin K antagonists (VKAs) anticoagulants have been used since the 1950s as medicines and rodenticides. These molecules are mainly 4-hydroxycoumarin derivatives and act by inhibiting the vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKORC1), an endoplasmic reticulum membrane resident enzyme. However, many VKORC1 mutations have been reported over the last decade, inducing VKAs resistances and thus treatments failures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Protein Disulfide Isomerase (PDI) enzyme is an emerging therapeutic target in oncology and hematology. Although PDI reductase activity has been studied with isolated fragments of the protein, natural structural variations affecting reductase activity have not been addressed.
Methods: In this study, we discovered four coding splice variants of the Pdi pre-mRNA in rats.
Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) are important tools for controlling rodent pests, but they also pose a health threat to non-target species. ARs are one of the most common causes of pet poisoning. However, exposure of domestic animals to subclinical doses of ARs is poorly documented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRodent control is mainly done using anticoagulant rodenticides leading to the death of rodents through internal bleeding by targeting the VKORC1 protein. However, mutations in VKORC1 can lead to resistance to anticoagulant rodenticides that can cause treatment failure in the field. This study provides the first insight into the distribution, frequency and characterization of Vkorc1 mutations in roof rats (Rattus rattus) in France and in three administrative areas of Spain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ecotoxicity of anticoagulants used for rodent pests' management is a major concern, particularly with second generation anticoagulants, which are more persistent in the body of rodents and therefore more likely to cause secondary exposure in their predators. One of the solutions envisaged to mitigate this risk is to use stereoisomers of these anticoagulants, each of which has particular pharmacokinetics. However, the few studies published to date have considered only one species and one sex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR) activity is catalyzed by the VKORC1 enzyme. It is a target of vitamin K antagonists (VKA). Numerous mutations of VKORC1 have been reported and are suspected to confer resistance to VKA and (or) affect its velocity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWild raptors are widely used to assess exposure to different environmental contaminants, including anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs). ARs are used on a global scale for rodent control, and act by disruption of the vitamin K cycle that results in haemorrhage usually accompanied by death within days. Some ARs are highly persistent and bioaccumulative, which can cause significant exposure of non-target species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMammals living at temperate latitudes typically display annual cyclicity in their reproductive activity: births are synchronized when environmental conditions are most favorable. In a majority of these species, day length is the main proximate factor used to anticipate seasonal changes and to adapt physiology. The brain integrates this photoperiodic signal through key hypothalamic structures, which regulate the reproductive axis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeasonally breeding mammals display timely physiological switches between reproductive activity and sexual rest, which ensure synchronisation of births at the most favourable time of the year. These switches correlate with seasonal changes along the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis, but they are primarily orchestrated at the hypothalamic level through environmental control of KISS1-dependent GnRH release. Our field study shows that births of fossorial water voles, Arvicola terrestris, are concentrated between March and October, which indicates the existence of an annual reproductive cycle in this species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticoagulant rodenticides (AR) resistance has been defined as "a major loss of efficacy due to the presence of a strain of rodent with a heritable and commensurately reduced sensitivity to the anticoagulant". The mechanism that supports this resistance has been identified as based on mutations in the Vkorc1 gene leading to severe resistance in rats and mice. This study evaluates the validity of this definition in the fossorial water vole and explores the possibility of a non-genetic diet-based resistance in a strict herbivorous rodent species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclic water vole population explosions can be controlled in some European countries with anticoagulant rodenticides leading sometimes to wildlife poisonings due to the toxin's tissue persistence. Here, we analyzed the pharmacokinetics of rodenticide residues in voles and we explored potential ways of improving the mass application of these agents based on the concept of stereoisomers. We demonstrated the dramatic persistence of bromadiolone in vole tissues with a hepatic half-life of about 10-30 days, while the tissue persistence of chlorophacinone is rather short with a hepatic half-life of about one day.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicol Lett
October 2020
All vitamin K antagonist active substances used as rodenticides were reclassified in 2016 by the European authorities as active substances "toxic for reproduction", using a "read-across" alternative method based on warfarin, a human vitamin K antagonist drug. Recent study suggested that all vitamin K antagonist active substances are not all teratogenic. Using a neonatal exposure protocol, warfarin evokes skeletal deformities in rats, while bromadiolone, a widely used second-generation anticoagulant rodenticide, failed to cause such effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticoagulant rodenticides are widely used for rodent control in agricultural and urban settings. Their intense use can sometimes result in accidental exposure and even poisoning of livestock. Can milk, eggs or meat derived from such accidently exposed animals be consumed by humans? Data on the pharmacokinetics of chlorophacinone in milk of accidently exposed ewes were used to estimate the risk associated with its consumption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapid Commun Mass Spectrom
October 2020
Rationale: Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) are used worldwide for rodent population control to protect human health and biodiversity, and to prevent agricultural and economic losses. Rodents may develop a metabolic resistance to ARs. In order to help understand such metabolic resistance, mass spectrometry was used to position the hydroxylated group of hydroxyl metabolites of second-generation ARs (SGARs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKORC1) enzyme is of primary importance in many physiological processes, i.e., blood coagulation, energy metabolism, and arterial calcification prevention, due to its role in the vitamin K cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe current management of rodent pest populations is based on second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGAR). These molecules, of which difethialone is part, are much more efficient than the first generation. Nevertheless, this efficiency comes with a major drawback, SGARs are tissue persistent that increases the exposure of rodent predators to them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVitamin K antagonists (VKA) are not recommended during pregnancy because warfarin (a first-generation VKA) is associated with a malformation syndrome "the fetal warfarin syndrome" (FWS). VKA are also used for rodent management worldwide. Recently, the Committee for Risk Assessment responsible for the European chemical legislation for advances on the safe use of chemicals had classed 8 anticoagulant used as rodenticides in the reprotoxic category 1A or 1B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe need for the control of rodent populations with anticoagulant rodenticides remains actual, and enantioselective analytical methods are mandatory to understand ecotoxicity issues of those chiral pesticides. This study presents two enantioselective methods to achieve the residue levels and differentiated persistence of the four stereoisomers of difethialone (called in this work E1-trans, E2-cis, E3-cis and E4-trans), which is one of the most toxic second generation anticoagulant rodenticide. Their enantiomeric fraction evaluation in biological matrices of rats was determined by two LC-MS/MS methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeptospirosis is a re-emergent worldwide zoonosis. It is endemic in Martinique where transmission conditions are favourable. Humans are usually infected through contact with water contaminated with urine of rodents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVitamin K is crucial for many physiological processes such as coagulation, energy metabolism, and arterial calcification prevention due to its involvement in the activation of several vitamin K-dependent proteins. During this activation, vitamin K is converted into vitamin K epoxide, which must be re-reduced by the VKORC1 enzyme. Various mutations have been described in humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeptospirosis is a reemerging zoonosis and ranges in severity from benign to sometimes fatal. In cattle, infection may be responsible for abortion and infertility cases causing economic losses. Humans may be contaminated through direct contact with urine of infected animals or indirectly though interaction with urine-contaminated environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFew studies have reported quantitative data about the levels of prenylated coumarins in Ferula sp. Yet, the toxicity of Ferula sp. is only due to the presence of prenylated coumarins and to their concentrations and all studies suggest the existence of several chemotypes within the same species or even within the same variety.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVitamin K family molecules-phylloquinone (K1), menaquinone (K2), and menadione (K3)-act as γ-glutamyl carboxylase (GGCX)-exclusive cofactors in their hydroquinone state, activating proteins of main importance for blood coagulation in the liver and for arterial calcification prevention and energy metabolism in extrahepatic tissues. Once GGCX is activated, vitamin K is found in the epoxide state, which is then recycled to quinone and hydroquinone states by vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKORC1). Nevertheless, little information is available concerning vitamin K1, K2, or K3 tissue distribution and preferential interactions towards VKORC1.
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