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J Environ Sci Health C 2020;38(2):124-40

Pulmonary toxicity is a common phenomenon of toxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids.

Song Z, He Y, Ma J, Fu PP, Lin G

Abstract

The hepatotoxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) are metabolically activated in the liver to form reactive dehydro-PAs, which generate pyrrole-protein adducts leading to hepatotoxicity. Monocrotaline, but not other PAs, is also pneumotoxic, supposedly due to the migration of the liver-generated corresponding dehydro-PA into the lung to form pyrrole-protein adducts to induce pneumotoxicity. The present study investigated whether other PAs are also pneumotoxic. Metabolic activation of four representative hepatotoxic PAs, monocrotaline, retrorsine, riddelliine and clivorine, was investigated using rat liver or lung S9 incubation. All PAs produced pyrrole-protein adducts significantly in rat liver S9 but negligible in lung S9 fraction, revealing that liver is the key organ responsible for metabolic activation generating dehydro-PAs. Furthermore, these four PAs and another two PAs present in the alkaloid extract of Gynura segetum, a widely used PA-producing herb responsible for human PA poisonings in China, were orally administered to rats using the same hepatotoxic dose of 0.2¿mmol/kg. All six PAs induced pneumotoxicity in rats within 48¿h. The results demonstrated that pneumotoxicity could be a common phenomenon of PAs and the liver-derived dehydro-PAs might move to the lung and form pyrrole-protein adducts, leading to pulmonary toxicity.


Category: Journal Article
PubMed ID: #32500835 DOI: 10.1080/26896583.2020.1743608
Includes FDA Authors from Scientific Area(s): Toxicological Research
Entry Created: 2020-06-07 Entry Last Modified: 2020-06-14
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