Methylmercury (MeHg) is a well-known neurotoxicant that induces various cellular functions depending on cellular- and developmental-specific vulnerabilities. MeHg has a high affinity for selenol and thiol groups, thus impairing the antioxidant system. Such affinity characteristics of MeHg led us to develop sensor vectors to assess MeHg toxicity. In this study, MeHg-mediated defects in selenocysteine (Sec) incorporation were demonstrated using thioredoxin reductase 1 cDNA fused with the hemagglutinin tag sequence at the C-terminus. Taking advantage of such MeHg-mediated defects in Sec incorporation, a cDNA encoding luciferase with a Sec substituted for cysteine-491 was constructed. This construct showed MeHg-induced decreases in signaling in a dose-dependent manner. To directly detect truncated luciferase under MeHg exposure, we further constructed a new sensor vector fused with a target for proteasomal degradation. However, this construct was inadequate because of the low rate of Sec insertion, even in the absence of MeHg. Finally, a Krab transcriptional suppressor fused with Sec was constructed and assessed to demonstrate MeHg-dependent increases in signal intensity. We confirmed that the vector responded specifically and in a dose-dependent manner to MeHg in cultured cerebellar granule cells. This vector is expected to allow monitoring of MeHg-specific toxicity via spatial and temporal imaging.
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Sci Rep
September 2024
Department of Basic Medical Sciences, National Institute for Minamata Disease, 4058-18 Hama, Minamata, Kumamoto, 867-0008, Japan.
Methylmercury (MeHg) is a well-known neurotoxicant that induces various cellular functions depending on cellular- and developmental-specific vulnerabilities. MeHg has a high affinity for selenol and thiol groups, thus impairing the antioxidant system. Such affinity characteristics of MeHg led us to develop sensor vectors to assess MeHg toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Toxicol
June 2024
Department of Environmental Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, 601 Elmwood Ave, Rochester, NY, 14642, USA.
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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntioxidants (Basel)
October 2020
Division of Neuroimmunology, Joint Research Center for Human Retrovirus Infection, Kagoshima University, Kagoshima 890-8544, Japan.
Methylmercury (MeHg) is a well-known neurotoxicant that causes severe intoxication in humans. In Japan, it is referred to as Minamata disease, which involves two characteristic clinical forms: fetal type and adult type depending on the exposed age. In addition to MeHg burden level, individual susceptibility to MeHg plays a role in the manifestation of MeHg toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Chem
February 2011
Department of Clinical Medicine, National Institute for Minamata Disease, 4058-18 Hama, Minamata 867-0008, Japan.
Methylmercury (MeHg) toxicity is a continuous environmental problem to human health. The critical role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of MeHg cytotoxicity has been clarified, but the molecular mechanisms underlying MeHg-mediated oxidative stress remain to be elucidated. Here we demonstrate a post-transcriptional effect of MeHg on antioxidant selenoenzymes by using a MeHg-susceptible cell line.
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