Review: myogenic and muscle toxicity targets of environmental methylmercury exposure.

Arch Toxicol

Department of Environmental Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, 601 Elmwood Ave, Rochester, NY, 14642, USA.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A variety of environmental toxicants are known to negatively impact motor function, yet muscle's role as a target for these toxins is often overlooked compared to the nervous system.
  • While methylmercury (MeHg) is primarily recognized as a neurotoxicant, recent research shows it also affects muscle development and can lead to motor defects, especially with prenatal exposure.
  • The study discusses MeHg's impact on skeletal muscle formation and maintenance, highlights the use of alternative model organisms in research, and connects these findings to theories about how early-life exposures can affect health and muscle fitness later in life.

Article Abstract

A number of environmental toxicants are noted for their activity that leads to declined motor function. However, the role of muscle as a proximal toxicity target organ for environmental agents has received considerably less attention than the toxicity targets in the nervous system. Nonetheless, the effects of conventional neurotoxicants on processes of myogenesis and muscle maintenance are beginning to resolve a concerted role of muscle as a susceptible toxicity target. A large body of evidence from epidemiological, animal, and in vitro studies has established that methylmercury (MeHg) is a potent developmental toxicant, with the nervous system being a preferred target. Despite its well-recognized status as a neurotoxicant, there is accumulating evidence that MeHg also targets muscle and neuromuscular development as well as contributes to the etiology of motor defects with prenatal MeHg exposure. Here, we summarize evidence for targets of MeHg in the morphogenesis and maintenance of skeletal muscle that reveal effects on MeHg distribution, myogenesis, myotube formation, myotendinous junction formation, neuromuscular junction formation, and satellite cell-mediated muscle repair. We briefly recapitulate the molecular and cellular mechanisms of skeletal muscle development and highlight the pragmatic role of alternative model organisms, Drosophila and zebrafish, in delineating the molecular underpinnings of muscle development and MeHg-mediated myotoxicity. Finally, we discuss how toxicity targets in muscle development may inform the developmental origins of health and disease theory to explain the etiology of environmentally induced adult motor deficits and accelerated decline in muscle fitness with aging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11105986PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00204-024-03724-3DOI Listing

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