White L D, Cory-Slechta D A, Gilbert M E, Tiffany-Castiglioni E, Zawia N H, Virgolini M, Rossi-George A, Lasley S M, Qian Y C, Basha Md Riyaz
National Center for Environmental Assessment, US Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2007 Nov 15;225(1):1-27. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2007.08.001. Epub 2007 Aug 16.
Lead (Pb) is a xenobiotic metal with no known essential function in cellular growth, proliferation, or signaling. Decades of research characterizing the toxicology of Pb have shown it to be a potent neurotoxicant, especially during nervous system development. New concepts in the neurotoxicology of Pb include advances in understanding the mechanisms and cellular specificity of Pb. Experimental studies have shown that stress can significantly alter the effects of Pb, effects that could potentially be mediated through alterations in the interactions of glucocorticoids with the mesocorticolimbic dopamine system of the brain. Elevated stress, with corresponding elevated glucocorticoid levels, has been postulated to contribute to the increased levels of many diseases and dysfunctions in low socioeconomic status populations. Cellular models of learning and memory have been utilized to investigate the potential mechanisms of Pb-induced cognitive deficits. Examination of long-term potentiation in the rodent hippocampus has revealed Pb-induced increases in threshold, decreases in magnitude, and shorter retention times of synaptic plasticity. Structural plasticity in the form of adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus is also impacted by Pb exposure. The action of Pb on glutamate release, NMDA receptor function, or structural plasticity may underlie perturbations in synaptic plasticity and contribute to learning impairments. In addition to providing insight into potential mechanisms of Pb-induced cognitive deficits, cellular models offer an opportunity to investigate direct effects of Pb on isolated biological substrates. A target of interest is the 78-kDa molecular chaperone glucose-regulated protein (GRP78). GRP78 chaperones the secretion of the cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) by astrocytes. In vitro evidence shows that Pb strongly binds to GRP78, induces GRP78 aggregation, and blocks IL-6 secretion in astroglial cells. These findings provide evidence for a significant chaperone deficiency in Pb-exposed astrocytes in culture. In the long term, chaperone deficiency could underlie protein conformational diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Lead exposure in early life has been implicated in subsequent progression of amyloidogenesis in rodents during old age. This exposure resulted in an increase in proteins associated with AD pathology viz., beta-amyloid precursor protein (beta-APP), and beta-amyloid (Abeta). These four new lines of research comprise compelling evidence that exposures to Pb have adverse effects on the nervous system, that environmental factors increase nervous system susceptibility to Pb, and that exposures in early life may cause neurodegeneration in later life.
铅(Pb)是一种外源性金属,在细胞生长、增殖或信号传导中没有已知的基本功能。数十年来对铅毒理学的研究表明,它是一种强效神经毒剂,尤其是在神经系统发育期间。铅神经毒理学的新概念包括在理解铅的作用机制和细胞特异性方面取得的进展。实验研究表明,应激可显著改变铅的影响,这些影响可能通过糖皮质激素与大脑中脑边缘多巴胺系统相互作用的改变来介导。应激增加以及相应的糖皮质激素水平升高,被认为是导致社会经济地位较低人群中许多疾病和功能障碍水平增加的原因。学习和记忆的细胞模型已被用于研究铅诱导认知缺陷的潜在机制。对啮齿动物海马体中长时程增强的研究表明,铅会导致阈值升高、幅度降低以及突触可塑性的保留时间缩短。海马体中成年神经发生形式的结构可塑性也受到铅暴露的影响。铅对谷氨酸释放、NMDA受体功能或结构可塑性的作用可能是突触可塑性紊乱的基础,并导致学习障碍。除了深入了解铅诱导认知缺陷的潜在机制外,细胞模型还提供了一个机会来研究铅对分离的生物底物的直接影响。一个感兴趣的靶点是78 kDa分子伴侣葡萄糖调节蛋白(GRP78)。GRP78协助星形胶质细胞分泌细胞因子白细胞介素-6(IL-6)。体外证据表明,铅与GRP78强烈结合,诱导GRP78聚集,并阻断星形胶质细胞中IL-6的分泌。这些发现为培养的铅暴露星形胶质细胞中存在显著的伴侣蛋白缺陷提供了证据。从长远来看,伴侣蛋白缺陷可能是蛋白质构象疾病如阿尔茨海默病(AD)的基础。早年接触铅与啮齿动物老年期淀粉样蛋白生成的后续进展有关。这种接触导致与AD病理学相关的蛋白质增加,即β-淀粉样前体蛋白(β-APP)和β-淀粉样蛋白(Aβ)。这四条新的研究路线提供了令人信服的证据,表明铅暴露对神经系统有不良影响,环境因素会增加神经系统对铅的易感性,并且早年暴露可能在晚年导致神经退行性变。