riddelliine and dehydroretronecine

riddelliine has been researched along with dehydroretronecine* in 8 studies

Other Studies

8 other study(ies) available for riddelliine and dehydroretronecine

ArticleYear
7-cysteine-pyrrole conjugate: A new potential DNA reactive metabolite of pyrrolizidine alkaloids.
    Journal of environmental science and health. Part C, Environmental carcinogenesis & ecotoxicology reviews, 2016, Volume: 34, Issue:1

    Pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) require metabolic activation to exert cytotoxicity, genotoxicity, and tumorigenicity. We previously reported that (±)-6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP)-derived DNA adducts are responsible for PA-induced liver tumor formation in rats. In this study, we determined that metabolism of riddelliine and monocrotaline by human or rat liver microsomes produced 7-cysteine-DHP and DHP. The metabolism of 7-glutathionyl-DHP by human and rat liver microsomes also generated 7-cysteine-DHP. Further, reaction of 7-cysteine-DHP with calf thymus DNA in aqueous solution yielded the described DHP-derived DNA adducts. This study represents the first report that 7-cysteine-DHP is a new PA metabolite that can lead to DNA adduct formation.

    Topics: Animals; Cysteine; DNA; DNA Adducts; Glutathione; Humans; Male; Microsomes, Liver; Monocrotaline; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats, Inbred F344; Tandem Mass Spectrometry

2016
Reaction of dehydropyrrolizidine alkaloids with valine and hemoglobin.
    Chemical research in toxicology, 2014, Oct-20, Volume: 27, Issue:10

    Pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing plants are probably the most common poisonous plants affecting livestock, wildlife, and humans. Pyrrolizidine alkaloids exert toxicity through metabolism to dehydropyrrolizidine alkaloids that bind to cellular protein and DNA, leading to hepatotoxicity, genotoxicity, and tumorigenicity. To date, it is not clear how dehydropyrrolizidine alkaloids bind to cellular constituents, including amino acids and proteins, resulting in toxicity. Metabolism of carcinogenic monocrotaline, riddelliine, and heliotrine produces dehydromonocrotaline, dehyroriddelliine, and dehydroheliotrine, respectively, as primary reactive metabolites. In this study, we report that reaction of dehydromonocrotaline with valine generated four highly unstable 6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP)-derived valine (DHP-valine) adducts. For structural elucidation, DHP-valine adducts were derivatized with phenyl isothiocyanate (PITC) to DHP-valine-PITC products. After HPLC separation, their structures were characterized by mass spectrometry, UV-visible spectrophotometry, (1)H NMR, and (1)H-(1)H COSY NMR spectral analysis. Two DHP-valine-PITC adducts, designated as DHP-valine-PITC-1 and DHP-valine-PITC-3, had the amino group of valine linked to the C7 position of the necine base, and the other two DHP-valine-PITC products, DHP-valine-PITC-2 and DHP-valine-PITC-4, linked to the C9 position of the necine base. DHP-valine-PITC-1 was interconvertible with DHP-valine-PITC-3, and DHP-valine-PITC-2 was interconvertible with DHP-valine-PITC-4. Reaction of dehydroriddelliine and dehydroheliotrine with valine provided similar results. However, reaction of valine and dehydroretronecine (DHR) under similar experimental conditions did not produce DHP-valine adducts. Reaction of dehydromonocrotaline with rat hemoglobin followed by derivatization with PITC also generated the same four DHP-valine-PITC adducts. This represents the first full structural elucidation of protein conjugated pyrrolic adducts formed from reaction of dehydropyrrolizidine alkaloids with an amino acid (valine). In addition, it was found that DHP-valine-2 and DHP-valine-4, with the valine amino group linked at the C7 position of the necine base, can lose the valine moiety to form DHP.

    Topics: Alkaloids; Animals; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Female; Hemoglobins; Isothiocyanates; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Monocrotaline; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Tandem Mass Spectrometry; Valine

2014
Metabolic activation of retronecine and retronecine N-oxide - formation of DHP-derived DNA adducts.
    Toxicology and industrial health, 2008, Volume: 24, Issue:3

    We have previously reported that metabolism of a series of pyrrolizidine alkaloids in vitro and in vivo generated a set of (+/-)6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP)-derived DNA adducts. It has also been shown that the levels of the DHP-derived DNA adduct formation correlated closely with the tumorigenic potencies of the mice fed with different doses of riddelliine. Retronecine is the necine base and the structurally smallest chemical of the retronecine-type pyrrolizidine alkaloids. Although it has been reported that microsomal metabolism of retronecine generated DHP as a metabolite, it was yet not known whether metabolism of retronecine in vivo could generate DHP-derived DNA adducts and if formed, whether or not the levels of DNA adducts were comparable with those formed from the other tumorigenic retronecine-type pyrrolizidine alkaloids, such as riddelliine, retrorsine, and monocrotaline. In this investigation, the in-vitro and in-vivo metabolic activation of retronecine was studied. Rat liver microsomal metabolism of retronecine in the presence of calf thymus DNA resulted in the formation of a set of DHP-DNA adducts. The metabolism of retronecine N-oxide under similar conditions also formed the similar set of DHP-DNA adducts. The level of DNA adducts from retronecine was enhanced when metabolism by liver microsomes from phenobarbital (PB)-induced rats were used. The DHP-DNA adducts were also found in the liver DNA of female F344 rats treated with retronecine or retronecine N-oxide. The highest level of the total DHP-DNA adducts was found in liver DNA from the rats treated with dehydroretronecine (DHR). The order of the levels of DNA adducts in the liver DNA samples from rats treated with various pyrrolizidine alkaloids was: DHR > riddelliine > riddelliine N-oxide >> retronecine > retronecine N-oxide. The results indicate that 1) retronecine can be metabolized to form DHP by rat liver microsomal enzymes and interacts with DNA to produce DHP-DNA adducts and 2) retronecine N-oxide undergoes the biotransformation to the parent compound, retronecine. The results from this and our previous findings strongly suggest that formation of DHP-DNA adducts may be a potential biomarker for pyrrolizidine alkaloid carcinogenesis.

    Topics: Animals; Biotransformation; Cyclic N-Oxides; DNA; DNA Adducts; Female; Liver; Microsomes, Liver; Monocrotaline; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344

2008
Formation of DHP-derived DNA adducts from metabolic activation of the prototype heliotridine-type pyrrolizidine alkaloid, heliotrine.
    Toxicology letters, 2008, May-05, Volume: 178, Issue:2

    Pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing plants are widespread in the world and may be the most common poisonous plants affecting livestock, wildlife, and humans. Pyrrolizidine alkaloids require metabolism to exert their genotoxicity and tumorigenicity. Our mechanistic studies have determined that metabolism of the retronecine-type (riddelliine, retrorsine, and monocrotaline), heliotridine-type (lasiocarpine), and otonecine-type (clivorine) tumorigenic pyrrolizidine alkaloids in vivo and/or in vitro all generates a common set of 6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP)-derived DNA adducts responsible for tumor induction. All the pyrrolizidine alkaloids studied previously are diesters with an ester linkage at the C7 and C9 positions of the necine base. In this study, we report that F344 rat liver microsomal metabolism of heliotrine, a tumorigenic monoester bearing a hydroxyl group at the C7 of the necine base, resulted in the formation of the dehydroheliotridine (DHH) metabolite. When incubations of heliotrine were carried out in the presence of calf thymus DNA, the same set of DHP-derived DNA adducts was formed. These results support that DHP-derived DNA adducts are potential common biomarkers of pyrrolizidine alkaloid exposure and tumorigenicity. For comparison, the dehydroretronecine (DHR)-derived DNA adducts formed from metabolism of riddleiine, retrorsine, monocrotaline, riddelleiine N-oxide, and retrorsine N-oxide were measured in parallel; the levels of DHP-derived DNA adduct formation were in the order: riddelliine approximately retrorsine>monocrotaline>retrorsine N-oxide>or=riddelliine N-oxide>heliotrine.

    Topics: Animals; Biomarkers; Biotransformation; Cattle; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Circular Dichroism; DNA; DNA Adducts; In Vitro Techniques; Isotope Labeling; Male; Microsomes, Liver; Monocrotaline; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Stereoisomerism; Thymus Gland

2008
Human liver microsomal reduction of pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides to form the corresponding carcinogenic parent alkaloid.
    Toxicology letters, 2005, Mar-15, Volume: 155, Issue:3

    Retronecine-based pyrrolizidine alkaloids, such as riddelliine, retrorsine, and monocrotaline, are toxic to domestic livestock and carcinogenic to laboratory rodents. Previous in vitro metabolism studies showed that (+/-)6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-(hydroxymethyl)-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP) and pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides were the major metabolites of these compounds. DHP is the reactive metabolite of pyrrolizidine alkaloids and pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides are generally regarded as detoxification products. However, a previous study of rat liver microsomal metabolism of riddelliine N-oxide demonstrated that DHP and its parent compound, riddelliine, were generated as the major metabolites of riddelliine N-oxide. In this study the metabolic activation of the three retronecine-based pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides by human liver microsomes is investigated under oxidative and hypoxic conditions. Results shows that both the DHP and the corresponding parent pyrrolizidine alkaloids are the major metabolites of the human liver microsomal metabolism of pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides. Under oxidative conditions, reduction of the N-oxide to pyrrolizidine alkaloid is inhibited and while under hypoxic conditions, DHP formation is dramatically decreased. The oxidative and reductive products generated from the metabolism of pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides are substrate-, enzyme- and time-dependent. In the presence of troleandomycin, a microsomal CYP3A inhibitor, DHP formation is inhibited by more than 70%, while the N-oxide reduction was not affected. The level of microsomal enzyme activity in human liver is comparable with rats. The rate of in vitro metabolism by either human and rat liver microsomes follows the order of riddelliine > or = retrorsine > monocrotaline, and DHP-derived DNA adducts are detected and quantified by 32P-postlabeling/HPLC analysis. Similar DHP-derived DNA adducts are found in liver DNA of F344 rats gavaged with the pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides (1.0 mg/kg). The levels of in vivo DHP-DNA adduct formation is correlated with the level of in vitro DHP formation. Our results indicate that pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides may be hepatocarcinogenic to rats through a genotoxic mechanism via the conversion of the N-oxides to their corresponding parent pyrrolizidine alkaloids, and these results may be relevant to humans.

    Topics: Animals; Aryl Hydrocarbon Hydroxylases; Biotransformation; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A; DNA Adducts; Female; Humans; Microsomes, Liver; Monocrotaline; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxidoreductases, N-Demethylating; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344

2005
Identification of DNA adducts derived from riddelliine, a carcinogenic pyrrolizidine alkaloid.
    Chemical research in toxicology, 2003, Volume: 16, Issue:9

    Riddelliine is a naturally occurring carcinogenic pyrrolizidine alkaloid that produces liver tumors in experimental animals. Riddelliine requires metabolic activation to dehydroriddelliine and 6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP) to exert its toxicity. Previously, (32)P-postlabeling HPLC was used to detect a set of eight DHP-derived adduct peaks from DNA modified both in vitro and in vivo. Among these DHP-derived DNA adducts, two were identified as epimers of DHP-2'-deoxyguanosine 3'-monophosphate. In this study, the remaining adducts have been characterized as DHP-modified dinucleotides. A series of dinucleotides, TpGp, ApGp, TpCp, ApCp, TpAp, ApAp, TpTp, and ApTp, were obtained by enzymatic digestion of calf thymus DNA with micrococcal nuclease (MN) and spleen phosphodiesterase (SPD) followed by HPLC separation and structural identification by negative ion electrospray tandem mass spectrometry (ES/MS/MS). Incubation of individual dinucleotides with DHP produced DHP-modified dinucleotide adducts that were also characterized using LC-ES/MS/MS. A parallel analysis of the isolated DHP-modified dinucleotides using (32)P-postlabeling recapitulated the series of unidentified adduct peaks that we previously reported from DHP-modified calf thymus DNA in vitro and rat liver DNA in vivo. Intact calf thymus DNA was also reacted with DHP and then digested by MN/SPD under the same conditions. The adduct profile obtained from LC-ES/MS/MS analysis was similar to that observed from the isolated dinucleotides. Structural analysis using LC-ES/MS/MS showed that DHP bound covalently to both 3'- and 5'-guanine, -adenine, and -thymine bases (but not cytosine) of dinucleotides to produce two or more isomers of each DHP-dinucleotide adduct. By comparing adduct formation at dissimilar bases within individual dinucleotides, the relative reactivity of DHP with individual bases was determined to be guanine > adenine approximately thymine. Identification of the entire set of DHP-derived DNA adducts further validates the conclusion that riddelliine is a genotoxic carcinogen and enhances the applicability of these biomarkers for assessing carcinogenic risks from exposure to pyrrolizidine alkaloids.

    Topics: Adenine Nucleotides; Administration, Oral; Animals; Carcinogens; Cattle; DNA; DNA Adducts; Guanine Nucleotides; Isomerism; Liver; Micrococcal Nuclease; Monocrotaline; Phosphorus Radioisotopes; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization; Spleen; Thymine Nucleotides; Thymus Gland

2003
Riddelliine N-oxide is a phytochemical and mammalian metabolite with genotoxic activity that is comparable to the parent pyrrolizidine alkaloid riddelliine.
    Toxicology letters, 2003, Dec-10, Volume: 145, Issue:3

    Pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) and their N-oxide derivatives are naturally-formed genotoxic phytochemicals that are widely distributed throughout the world. Although, the quantities of PAs and PA N-oxides in plants are nearly equal, the biological and genotoxic activities of PA N-oxides have not been studied extensively. PA N-oxides are major metabolites of PAs and are generally regarded as detoxification products. However, in this study, we report that rat liver microsomes converted riddelliine N-oxide to the genotoxic 6,7-dihydro-7-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-5H-pyrrolizine (DHP) metabolite. Metabolism of riddelliine N-oxide by rat liver microsomes under hypoxic conditions (argon) generated predominantly the parent PA, riddelliine. The reduction of riddelliine N-oxide to riddelliine was diminished, when the metabolism of riddelliine N-oxide with rat liver microsomes was conducted aerobically. Rat liver microsomal incubations of riddelliine N-oxide in the presence of calf thymus DNA produced a set of DHP-derived DNA adducts as detected and quantified by 32P-postlabeling/HPLC. The same DHP-derived DNA adducts were also found in liver DNA of F344 rats fed riddelliine N-oxide or riddelliine. When rats received doses of 1.0 mg/kg riddelliine N-oxide for three consecutive days, the level of DNA adducts was 39.9 +/- 0.6 adducts/10(7) nucleotides, which was 2.6-fold less than that measured in rats treated with riddelliine at the same dose. We have previously shown that these DHP-derived DNA adducts are produced by chronic feeding of riddelliine and that the adduct levels correlated with liver tumor formation. Results presented in this paper indicate that riddelliine N-oxide, through its conversion to riddelliine, is also a potential genotoxic hepatocarcinogen.

    Topics: Animals; Cattle; DNA; DNA Adducts; Female; Microsomes, Liver; Monocrotaline; Mutagens; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Thymus Gland

2003
Metabolic activation of the tumorigenic pyrrolizidine alkaloid, riddelliine, leading to DNA adduct formation in vivo.
    Chemical research in toxicology, 2001, Volume: 14, Issue:1

    Riddelliine is a representative naturally occurring genotoxic pyrrolizidine alkaloid. We have studied the mechanism by which riddelliine induces hepatocellular tumors in vivo. Metabolism of riddelliine by liver microsomes of F344 female rats generated riddelliine N-oxide and dehydroretronecine (DHR) as major metabolites. Metabolism was enhanced when liver microsomes from phenobarbital-treated rats were used. Metabolism in the presence of calf thymus DNA resulted in eight DNA adducts that were identical to those obtained from the reaction of DHR with calf thymus DNA. Two of these adducts were identified as DHR-modified 7-deoxyguanosin-N(2)-yl epimers (DHR-3'-dGMP); the other six were DHR-derived DNA adducts, but their structures were not characterized. A similar DNA adduct profile was detected in the livers of female F344 rats fed riddelliine, and a dose-response relationship was obtained for the level of the total (eight) DHR-derived DNA adducts and the level of the DHR-3'-dGMP adducts. These results suggest that riddelliine induces liver tumors in rats through a genotoxic mechanism and the eight DHR-derived DNA adducts are likely to contribute to liver tumor development.

    Topics: Animals; Biotransformation; Carcinogens; Cattle; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; DNA; DNA Adducts; Female; Isotope Labeling; Liver; Liver Neoplasms, Experimental; Microsomes, Liver; Monocrotaline; Phosphorus Radioisotopes; Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344

2001