Abstract
Methylcyclopentadienyl manganese tricarbonyl (MMT), an organic manganese-containing gasoline additive, was investigated to determine whether MMT potentially causes dopaminergic neurotoxic effects. MMT is acutely cytotoxic and dopamine-producing cells (PC-12) seemed to be more susceptible to cytotoxic effects than nondopaminergic cells (striatal γ-aminobutyric acidergic and cerebellar granule cells). MMT also potently depleted dopamine apparently by cytoplasmic vesicular release to the cytosol, a neurochemical change resembling other dopaminergic neurotoxicants. Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), an early effect in toxicant-induced apoptosis, occurred within 15 min of MMT exposure. MMT caused a loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨm), a likely source of ROS generation. The ROS signal further activated caspase-3, an important effector caspase, which could be inhibited by antioxidants (Trolox orN-acetyl cysteine). Predepletion of dopamine by using α-methyl-p-tyrosine (tyrosine hydroxylase inhibitor) treatment partially prevented caspase-3 activation, denoting a significant dopamine and/or dopamine by-product contribution to initiation of apoptosis. Genomic DNA fragmentation, a terminal hallmark of apoptosis, was induced concentration dependently by MMT but completely prevented by pretreatment with Trolox, deprenyl (monoamine oxidase-B inhibitor), and α-methyl-p-tyrosine. A final set of critical experiments was performed to verify the pharmacological studies using a stable Bcl-2-overexpressing PC-12 cell line. Bcl-2-overexpressing cells were significantly refractory to MMT-induced ROS generation, caspase-3 activation, and loss of ΔΨm and were completely resistant to MMT-induced DNA fragmentation. Taken together, the results presented herein demonstrate that oxidative stress plays an important role in mitochondrial-mediated apoptotic cell death in cultured dopamine-producing cells after exposure to MMT.
Footnotes
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↵1 Present Address: Department of Chemistry, California State University, 2555 E. San Ramon Ave., Fresno CA 93740.
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This study was supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Grant R01-ES10586.
- Abbreviations:
- MMT
- methylcyclopentadienyl manganese tricarbonyl
- PD
- Parkinson's disease
- ROS
- reactive oxygen species
- MPP+
- 1-methyl-4-pyridinium
- caspase
- cysteine-aspartate protease
- α-MPT
- α-methyl-p-tyrosine
- NAC
- N-acetyl-l-cysteine
- Ac-DEVD-AMC
- acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin
- DiOC6
- 3,3′-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide
- DMEM
- Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
- LDH
- lactate dehydrogenase
- DOPAC
- 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid
- HPLC-EC
- high-pressure liquid chromatography-electrochemical detection
- DCF-DA
- dichlorofluorescein-diacetate
- DCF-H
- 2,7-dichlorofluorescein
- ΔΨm
- mitochondrial membrane potential
- ELISA
- enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
- HRP
- horseradish peroxidase
- Received December 11, 2001.
- Accepted March 21, 2002.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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