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  • Comparison of the toxicokin...
    Pressly, Brandon; Vasylieva, Natalia; Barnych, Bogdan; Singh, Vikrant; Singh, Latika; Bruun, Donald A.; Hwang, Sung Hee; Chen, Yi-Je; Fettinger, James C.; Johnnides, Stephanie; Lein, Pamela J.; Yang, Jun; Hammock, Bruce D.; Wulff, Heike

    Archives of toxicology, 06/2020, Letnik: 94, Številka: 6
    Journal Article

    Acute intoxication with picrotoxin or the rodenticide tetramethylenedisulfotetramine (TETS) can cause seizures that rapidly progress to status epilepticus and death. Both compounds inhibit γ-aminobutyric acid type-A (GABA A ) receptors with similar potency. However, TETS is approximately 100 × more lethal than picrotoxin. Here, we directly compared the toxicokinetics of the two compounds following intraperitoneal administration in mice. Using LC/MS analysis we found that picrotoxinin, the active component of picrotoxin, hydrolyses quickly into picrotoxic acid, has a short in vivo half-life, and is moderately brain penetrant (brain/plasma ratio 0.3). TETS, in contrast, is not metabolized by liver microsomes and persists in the body following intoxication. Using both GC/MS and a TETS-selective immunoassay we found that mice administered TETS at the LD 50 of 0.2 mg/kg in the presence of rescue medications exhibited serum levels that remained constant around 1.6 μM for 48 h before falling slowly over the next 10 days. TETS showed a similar persistence in tissues. Whole-cell patch-clamp demonstrated that brain and serum extracts prepared from mice at 2 and 14 days after TETS administration significantly blocked heterologously expressed α 2 β 3 γ 2 GABA A -receptors confirming that TETS remains pharmacodynamically active in vivo . This observed persistence may contribute to the long-lasting and recurrent seizures observed following human exposures. We suggest that countermeasures to neutralize TETS or accelerate its elimination should be explored for this highly dangerous threat agent.