Issue 3, 2012

Effects of manganese and arsenic species on the level of energy related nucleotides in human cells

Abstract

Cellular adenine and pyridine nucleotides play important roles in the cellular energy and redox state. An imbalance in the cellular levels of these tightly regulated energy related nucleotides can lead to oxidative stress and thus is discussed to contribute to neurotoxic and carcinogenic processes. Here we established a reliable ion-pair reversed phase HPLC based method for the parallel quantification of six energy related nucleotides (ATP, ADP, ADP-ribose, AMP, NAD+, NADH) in cells and subsequently applied it to determine effects of manganese and arsenic species in cultured human cells. In human lung cells, MnCl2 (≥50 μM) decreased the levels of ATP, NAD+ and NADH as well as the NAD+/NADH ratio. This reflects a decline in the cellular energy metabolism, most likely resulting from a disturbance of the mitochondrial function. In contrast, cultured astrocytes were more resistant towards manganese. Regarding the arsenicals, a disturbance of the cellular energy related nucleotides was detected in lung cells for arsenite (≥50 μM), monomethylarsonous (≥1 μM), dimethylarsinous (≥1 μM) and dimethylarsinic acid (≥100 μM). Thereby, the single arsenicals seem to disturb the cellular energy and redox state by different mechanisms. Taken together, this study provides further evidence that cellular energy related nucleotides serve as sensitive indicators for toxic species exposure. When searching for a molecular mechanism of toxic compounds, the data illustrate the necessity of quantifying several energy related nucleotides in parallel, especially since ATP depletion, redox state alterations and oxidative stress are known to potentiate each other.

Graphical abstract: Effects of manganese and arsenic species on the level of energy related nucleotides in human cells

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Oct 2011
Accepted
21 Dec 2011
First published
20 Jan 2012

Metallomics, 2012,4, 297-306

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