Woods James S, Heyer Nicholas J, Russo Joan E, Martin Michael D, Pillai Pradeep B, Farin Federico M
Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Neurotoxicol Teratol. 2013 Sep-Oct;39:36-44. doi: 10.1016/j.ntt.2013.06.004. Epub 2013 Jul 1.
Mercury (Hg) is neurotoxic, and children may be particularly susceptible to this effect. A current major challenge is the identification of children who may be uniquely susceptible to Hg toxicity because of genetic disposition. We examined the hypothesis that genetic variants of metallothionein (MT) that are reported to affect Hg toxicokinetics in adults would modify the neurotoxic effects of Hg in children. Five hundred seven children, 8-12 years of age at baseline, participated in a clinical trial to evaluate the neurobehavioral effects of Hg from dental amalgam tooth fillings. Subjects were evaluated at baseline and at 7 subsequent annual intervals for neurobehavioral performance and urinary Hg levels. Following the completion of the clinical trial, we performed genotyping assays for variants of MT isoforms MT1M (rs2270837) and MT2A (rs10636) on biological samples provided by 330 of the trial participants. Regression modeling strategies were employed to evaluate associations between allelic status, Hg exposure, and neurobehavioral test outcomes. Among girls, few significant interactions or independent main effects for Hg exposure and either of the MT gene variants were observed. In contrast, among boys, numerous significant interaction effects between variants of MT1M and MT2A, alone and combined, with Hg exposure were observed spanning multiple domains of neurobehavioral function. All dose-response associations between Hg exposure and test performance were restricted to boys and were in the direction of impaired performance. These findings suggest increased susceptibility to the adverse neurobehavioral effects of Hg among children with relatively common genetic variants of MT, and may have important public health implications for future strategies aimed at protecting children and adolescents from the potential health risks associated with Hg exposure. We note that because urinary Hg reflects a composite exposure index that cannot be attributed to a specific source, these findings do not support an association between Hg in dental amalgams specifically and the adverse neurobehavioral outcomes observed.
汞(Hg)具有神经毒性,儿童可能对此影响尤为敏感。当前的一个主要挑战是识别因遗传倾向而可能对汞毒性特别敏感的儿童。我们检验了这样一个假设:据报道在成年人中会影响汞毒代动力学的金属硫蛋白(MT)基因变异会改变汞对儿童的神经毒性作用。507名基线年龄为8至12岁的儿童参与了一项临床试验,以评估牙科汞合金补牙材料中的汞对神经行为的影响。在基线以及随后的7个年度间隔对受试者进行神经行为表现和尿汞水平评估。在临床试验完成后,我们对330名试验参与者提供的生物样本进行了MT同工型MT1M(rs2270837)和MT2A(rs10636)变异的基因分型检测。采用回归建模策略来评估等位基因状态、汞暴露与神经行为测试结果之间的关联。在女孩中,未观察到汞暴露与任何一种MT基因变异之间有显著的相互作用或独立的主要效应。相比之下,在男孩中,观察到MT1M和MT2A变异单独及联合与汞暴露之间在多个神经行为功能领域存在众多显著的相互作用效应。汞暴露与测试表现之间的所有剂量反应关联均限于男孩,且表现为功能受损的趋势。这些发现表明,具有相对常见的MT基因变异的儿童对汞的不良神经行为影响更为敏感,这可能对未来旨在保护儿童和青少年免受与汞暴露相关潜在健康风险的策略具有重要的公共卫生意义。我们注意到,由于尿汞反映的是一个无法归因于特定来源的综合暴露指数,这些发现并不支持牙科汞合金中的汞与所观察到的不良神经行为结果之间存在关联。