Ethanol-dependent toxicity in zebrafish is partially attenuated by antioxidants.

Neurotoxicol Teratol

Department of Environmental and Molecular Toxicology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA.

Published: November 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Research on zebrafish, a useful model for studying development, showed that when embryos were exposed to ethanol and inhibitors of its metabolism, they experienced increased pericardial edema and developmental malformations.
  • * While antioxidants like glutathione and lipoic acid mitigated some effects of ethanol, they did not prevent cell death, indicating that the processes leading to pericardial edema and cell death may be different.

Article Abstract

Ethanol is a well-established developmental toxicant; however, the molecular and cellular mechanism(s) of toxicity remains unclear. It has been suggested that ethanol metabolism leads to oxidative stress resulting in an increase in cell death. Alcohol developmental toxicity has not been well studied in zebrafish; however, zebrafish represent an excellent vertebrate model for investigating and understanding normal and aberrant development. To evaluate ethanol metabolism dependent toxicity, chemical inhibitors of the ethanol metabolizing enzymes were utilized. Embryos co-exposed to ethanol and a combination of ethanol metabolism inhibitors led to a significant increase in the occurrence of pericardial edema. Further, in the presence of the inhibitor mixture there was an increase in developmental malformations at lower ethanol concentrations. Cell death has been implicated as a potential explanation for ethanol-dependent toxicity. Using cell death assays, ethanol significantly increased embryonic cell death. To determine if oxidative stress underlies cardiovascular dysfunction, embryos were co-exposed to ethanol and several antioxidants. The antioxidants, glutathione and lipoic acid, partially attenuated the incidence of pericardial edema. The effectiveness of the antioxidants to protect the embryos from ethanol-induced cell death was also evaluated. The antioxidants provided no protection against cell death. Thus, ethanol-mediated pericardial edema and cell death appear to be mechanistically distinct.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ntt.2006.05.007DOI Listing

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