TY - JOUR
T1 - Methylmercury's chemistry
T2 - From the environment to the mammalian brain
AU - Nogara, Pablo A.
AU - Oliveira, Cláudia S.
AU - Schmitz, Gabriela L.
AU - Piquini, Paulo C.
AU - Farina, Marcelo
AU - Aschner, Michael
AU - Rocha, João B.T.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by Coordination for Improvement of Higher Education Personnel CAPES/PROEX (n° 23038.005848/2018-31; n° 0737/2018; n° 88882.182123/2018-01), the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), the Rio Grande do Sul Rio Grande do Sul Foundation for Research Support (FAPERGS - Brazil), as well as the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS R01ES07331, NIEHS R01ES10563 and NIEHS R01ES020852).
Funding Information:
This work was supported by Coordination for Improvement of Higher Education Personnel CAPES/PROEX (n° 23038.005848/2018-31 ; n° 0737/2018 ; n° 88882.182123/2018-01 ), the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), the Rio Grande do Sul Rio Grande do Sul Foundation for Research Support (FAPERGS - Brazil), as well as the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences ( NIEHS R01ES07331 , NIEHS R01ES10563 and NIEHS R01ES020852 ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2019/12
Y1 - 2019/12
N2 - Methylmercury is a neurotoxicant that is found in fish and rice. MeHg's toxicity is mediated by blockage of -SH and -SeH groups of proteins. However, the identification of MeHg's targets is elusive. Here we focus on the chemistry of MeHg in the abiotic and biotic environment. The toxicological chemistry of MeHg is complex in metazoans, but at the atomic level it can be explained by exchange reactions of MeHg bound to –S(e)H with another free –S(e)H group (R1S(e)-HgMe + R2-S(e)H ↔ R1S(e)H + R2-S(e)-HgMe). This reaction was first studied by professor Rabenstein and here it is referred as the “Rabenstein's Reaction”. The absorption, distribution, and excretion of MeHg in the environment and in the body of animals will be dictated by Rabenstein's reactions. The affinity of MeHg by thiol and selenol groups and the exchange of MeHg by Rabenstein's Reaction (which is a diffusion controlled reaction) dictates MeHg's neurotoxicity. However, it is important to emphasize that the MeHg exchange reaction velocity with different types of thiol- and selenol-containing proteins will also depend on protein-specific structural and thermodynamical factors. New experimental approaches and detailed studies about the Rabenstein's reaction between MeHg with low molecular mass thiol (LMM-SH) molecules (cysteine, GSH, acetyl-CoA, lipoate, homocysteine) with abundant high molecular mass thiol (HMM-SH) molecules (albumin, hemoglobin) and HMM-SeH (GPxs, Selenoprotein P, TrxR1-3) are needed. The study of MeHg migration from –S(e)-Hg- bonds to free –S(e)H groups (Rabenstein's Reaction) in pure chemical systems and neural cells (with special emphasis to the LMM-SH and HMM-S(e)H molecules cited above) will be critical to developing realistic constants to be used in silico models that will predict the distribution of MeHg in humans.
AB - Methylmercury is a neurotoxicant that is found in fish and rice. MeHg's toxicity is mediated by blockage of -SH and -SeH groups of proteins. However, the identification of MeHg's targets is elusive. Here we focus on the chemistry of MeHg in the abiotic and biotic environment. The toxicological chemistry of MeHg is complex in metazoans, but at the atomic level it can be explained by exchange reactions of MeHg bound to –S(e)H with another free –S(e)H group (R1S(e)-HgMe + R2-S(e)H ↔ R1S(e)H + R2-S(e)-HgMe). This reaction was first studied by professor Rabenstein and here it is referred as the “Rabenstein's Reaction”. The absorption, distribution, and excretion of MeHg in the environment and in the body of animals will be dictated by Rabenstein's reactions. The affinity of MeHg by thiol and selenol groups and the exchange of MeHg by Rabenstein's Reaction (which is a diffusion controlled reaction) dictates MeHg's neurotoxicity. However, it is important to emphasize that the MeHg exchange reaction velocity with different types of thiol- and selenol-containing proteins will also depend on protein-specific structural and thermodynamical factors. New experimental approaches and detailed studies about the Rabenstein's reaction between MeHg with low molecular mass thiol (LMM-SH) molecules (cysteine, GSH, acetyl-CoA, lipoate, homocysteine) with abundant high molecular mass thiol (HMM-SH) molecules (albumin, hemoglobin) and HMM-SeH (GPxs, Selenoprotein P, TrxR1-3) are needed. The study of MeHg migration from –S(e)-Hg- bonds to free –S(e)H groups (Rabenstein's Reaction) in pure chemical systems and neural cells (with special emphasis to the LMM-SH and HMM-S(e)H molecules cited above) will be critical to developing realistic constants to be used in silico models that will predict the distribution of MeHg in humans.
KW - Exchange reaction
KW - Methylation/demethylation
KW - Neurotoxicity
KW - Organomercurials
KW - Rabenstein's Reaction
KW - Thiol/selenol groups
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U2 - 10.1016/j.bbagen.2019.01.006
DO - 10.1016/j.bbagen.2019.01.006
M3 - Review article
C2 - 30659885
AN - SCOPUS:85061426793
SN - 0304-4165
VL - 1863
JO - Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - General Subjects
JF - Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - General Subjects
IS - 12
M1 - 129284
ER -