Comparative Analyses of the 12 Most Abundant PCB Congeners Detected in Human Maternal Serum for Activity at the Thyroid Hormone Receptor and Ryanodine Receptor
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Authors: Sethi, Sunjay; Morgan, Rhianna K.; Peng, Wei; Lin, Yanping; Li, Xueshu; Luna, Corey; Koch, Madison; Bansal, Ruby; Duffel, Michael W.; Puschner, Birgit; Zoeller, R. Thomas; Lehmler, Hans-Joachim; Pessah, Isaac N.; Lein, Pamela J.
Abstract
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) pose significant risk to the developing human brain; however, mechanisms of PCB developmental neurotoxicity (DNT) remain controversial. Two widely posited mechanisms are tested here using PCBs identified in pregnant women in the MARBLES cohort who are at increased risk for having a child with a neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD). As determined by gas chromatography-triple quadruple mass spectrometry, the mean PCB level in maternal serum was 2.22 ng/mL. The 12 most abundant PCBs were tested singly and as a mixture mimicking the congener profile in maternal serum for activity at the thyroid hormone receptor (THR) and ryanodine receptor (RyR). Neither the mixture nor the individual congeners (2 fM to 2 mu M) exhibited agonistic or antagonistic activity in a THR reporter cell line. However, as determined by equilibrium binding of [H-3]ryanodine to RyR1-enriched microsomes, the mixture and the individual congeners (SO nM to 50 mu M) increased RyR activity by 2.4-19.2-fold. 4-Hydroxy (OH) and 4-sulfate metabolites of PCBs 11 and 52 had no TH activity; but 4-OH PCB 52 had higher potency than the parent congener toward RyR These data support evidence implicating RyRs as targets in environmentally triggered NDDs and suggest that PCB effects on the THR are not a predominant mechanism driving PCB DNT. These findings provide scientific rationale regarding a point of departure for quantitative risk assessment of PCB DNT, and identify in vitro assays for screening other environmental pollutants for DNT potential.
Efficient High-Throughput Screening by Endoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+ Measurement to Identify Inhibitors of Ryanodine Receptor Ca2+-Release Channels
MOLECULAR PHARMACOLOGY
Authors: Murayama, Takashi; Kurebayashi, Nagomi; Ishigami-Yuasa, Mari; Mori, Shuichi; Suzuki, Yukina; Akima, Ryunosuke; Ogawa, Haruo; Suzuki, Junji; Kanemaru, Kazunori; Oyamada, Hideto; Kiuchi, Yuji; Iino, Masamitsu; Kagechika, Hiroyuki; Sakurai, Takashi
Abstract
Genetic mutations in ryanodine receptors (RyRs), Ca2+-release channels in the sarcoplasmic reticulum essential for muscle contractions, cause various skeletal muscle and cardiac diseases. Because the main underlying mechanism of the pathogenesis is overactive Ca2+ release by gain-of-function of the RyR channel, inhibition of RyRs is expected to be a promising treatment of these diseases. Here, to identify inhibitors specific to skeletal muscle type 1 RyR (RyR1), we developed a novel high-throughput screening (HTS) platform using time-lapse fluorescence measurement of Ca2+ concentrations in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) ([Ca2+] ER). Because expression of RyR1 carrying disease-associated mutation reduces [Ca2+] ER in HEK293 cells through Ca2+ leakage from RyR1 channels, specific drugs that inhibit RyR1 will increase [Ca2+] ER by preventing such Ca2+ leakage. RyR1 carrying the R2163C mutation and R-CEPIA1er, a genetically encoded ER Ca2+ indicator, were stably expressed in HEK293 cells, and timelapse fluorescence was measured using a fluorometer. False positives were effectively excluded by using cells expressing wild-type (WT) RyR1. By screening 1535 compounds in a library of well characterized drugs, we successfully identified four compounds that significantly increased [Ca2+] ER. They include dantrolene, a known RyR1 inhibitor, and three structurally different compounds: oxolinic acid, 9-aminoacridine, and alexidine. All the hit compounds, except for oxolinic acid, inhibited [H-3] ryanodine binding of WT and mutant RyR1. Interestingly, they showed different dose dependencies and isoform specificities. The highly quantitative nature and good correlation with the channel activity validated this HTS platform by [Ca2+] ER measurement to explore drugs for RyR-related diseases.