Altered protein S-glutathionylation depicts redox imbalance triggered by transition metal oxide nanoparticles in a breastfeeding system.

NanoImpact

College of Animal Sciences, Dairy Science Institute, MOE Key Laboratory of Molecular Animal Nutrition, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, PR China. Electronic address:

Published: April 2021

Nanosafety has become a public concern following nanotechnology development. By now, attention has seldom been paid to breastfeeding system, which is constructed by mammary physiological structure and derived substances (endogenous or exogenous), cells, tissues, organs, and individuals (mother and child), connecting environment and organism, and spans across mother-child dyad. Thus, breastfeeding system is a center of nutrients transport and a unique window of toxic susceptibility in the mother-child dyad. We applied metabolomics combined with redox proteomics to depict how nanoparticles cause metabolic burden via their spontaneous redox cycling in lactating mammary glands. Two widely used nanoparticles [titanium dioxide (nTiO) and zinc oxide (nZnO)] were exposed to lactating mice via intranasal administration. Biodistribution and biopersistence of nTiO and nZnO in mammary glands destroyed its structure, reflective of significantly reduced claudin-3 protein level by 32.1% (P < 0.01) and 47.8% (P < 0.01), and significantly increased apoptosis index by 85.7 (P < 0.01) and 100.3 (P < 0.01) fold change, respectively. Airway exposure of nTiO trended to reduced milk production by 22.7% (P = 0.06), while nZnO significantly reduced milk production by 33.0% (P < 0.01). Metabolomics analysis revealed a metabolic shift by nTiO or nZnO, such as increased glycolysis (nTiO: fold enrichment = 3.31, P < 0.05; nZnO: fold enrichment = 3.68, P < 0.05), glutathione metabolism (nTiO: fold enrichment = 5.57, P < 0.01; nZnO: fold enrichment = 4.43, P < 0.05), and fatty acid biosynthesis (nTiO: fold enrichment = 3.52, P < 0.05; nZnO: fold enrichment = 3.51, P < 0.05) for tissue repair at expense of lower milk fat synthesis (35.7% reduction by nTiO; 51.8% reduction by nZnO), and finally led to oxidative stress of mammary glands. The increased GSSG/GSH ratio (57.5% increase by nTiO; 105% increase by nZnO) with nanoparticle exposure confirmed an alteration in the redox state and a metabolic shift in mammary glands. Redox proteomics showed that nanoparticles induced S-glutathionylation (SSG) modification at Cys sites of proteins in a nanoparticle type-dependent manner. The nTiO induced more protein SSG modification sites (nTiO: 21; nZnO:16), whereas nZnO induced fewer protein SSG modification sites but at deeper SSG levels (26.6% higher in average of nZnO than that of nTiO). In detail, SSG modification by nTiO was characterized by Ltf at Cys (25.3% increase), and Trf at Cys (42.3%, 42.3%, 22.8% increase) compared with control group. While, SSG modification by nZnO was characterized by Trfc at Cys (71.3% increase) and Fasn at Cys (41.0% increase). The discovery of SSG-modified proteins under airway nanoparticle exposure further supplemented the oxidative stress index and mammary injury index, and deciphered precise mechanisms of nanotoxicity into a molecular level. The unique quantitative site-specific redox proteomics and metabolomics can serve as a new technique to identify nanotoxicity and provide deep insights into nanoparticle-triggered oxidative stress, contributing to a healthy breastfeeding environment.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.impact.2021.100305DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

breastfeeding system
12
mother-child dyad
8
mammary glands
8
altered protein
4
protein s-glutathionylation
4
s-glutathionylation depicts
4
depicts redox
4
redox imbalance
4
imbalance triggered
4
triggered transition
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!