Mercury toxicokinetics--dependency on strain and gender.

Toxicol Appl Pharmacol

Molecular and Immunological Pathology, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Linköping University, SE-58185 Linköping, Sweden.

Published: March 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mercury exposure from dental amalgams and vaccines is generally not a significant health risk, but a small subset of individuals may be more susceptible to its effects.
  • Individual differences in how mercury is processed in the body (toxicokinetics) can explain varying susceptibilities among people, similar to findings in a study with specific mouse strains.
  • The study revealed that male A.SW mice had significantly higher mercury retention in their bodies compared to females and another mouse strain, with kidneys playing a major role in mercury accumulation and elimination, indicating that multiple genetic factors influence how mercury affects different individuals.

Article Abstract

Mercury (Hg) exposure from dental amalgam fillings and thimerosal in vaccines is not a major health hazard, but adverse health effects cannot be ruled out in a small and more susceptible part of the exposed population. Individual differences in toxicokinetics may explain susceptibility to mercury. Inbred, H-2-congenic A.SW and B10.S mice and their F1- and F2-hybrids were given HgCl2 with 2.0 mg Hg/L drinking water and traces of (203)Hg. Whole-body retention (WBR) was monitored until steady state after 5 weeks, when the organ Hg content was assessed. Despite similar Hg intake, A.SW males attained a 20-30% significantly higher WBR and 2- to 5-fold higher total renal Hg retention/concentration than A.SW females and B10.S mice. A selective renal Hg accumulation but of lower magnitude was seen also in B10.S males compared with females. Differences in WBR and organ Hg accumulation are therefore regulated by non-H-2 genes and gender. Lymph nodes lacked the strain- and gender-dependent Hg accumulation profile of kidney, liver and spleen. After 15 days without Hg A.SW mice showed a 4-fold higher WBR and liver Hg concentration, but 11-fold higher renal Hg concentration, showing the key role for the kidneys in explaining the slower Hg elimination in A.SW mice. The trait causing higher mercury accumulation was not dominantly inherited in the F1 hybrids. F2 mice showed a large inter-individual variation in Hg accumulation, showing that multiple genetic factors influence the Hg toxicokinetics in the mouse. The genetically heterogeneous human population may therefore show a large variation in mercury toxicokinetics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.taap.2009.08.026DOI Listing

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