Speciation of Potentially Carcinogenic Trace Nickel(II) Ion Levels in Human Saliva: A Sequential Metabolomics-Facilitated High-Field 1H NMR Investigation.

IF 3.7 3区 生物学 Q2 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Metabolites Pub Date : 2024-12-30 DOI:10.3390/metabo15010004
Kayleigh Hunwin, Georgina Page, Mark Edgar, Mohammed Bhogadia, Martin Grootveld
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Abstract

Introduction/Objectives: Since the biological activities and toxicities of 'foreign' and/or excess levels of metal ions are predominantly determined by their precise molecular nature, here we have employed high-resolution 1H NMR analysis to explore the 'speciation' of paramagnetic Ni(II) ions in human saliva, a potentially rich source of biomolecular Ni(II)-complexants/chelators. These studies are of relevance to the in vivo corrosion of nickel-containing metal alloy dental prostheses (NiC-MADPs) in addition to the dietary or adverse toxicological intake of Ni(II) ions by humans. Methods: Unstimulated whole-mouth human saliva samples were obtained from n = 12 pre-fasted (≥8 h) healthy participants, and clear whole-mouth salivary supernatants (WMSSs) were obtained from these via centrifugation. Microlitre aliquots of stock aqueous Ni(II) solutions were sequentially titrated into WMSS samples via micropipette. Any possible added concentration-dependent Ni(II)-mediated pH changes therein were experimentally controlled. 1H NMR spectra were acquired on a JEOL JNM-ECZ600R/S1 spectrometer. Results: Univariate and multivariate (MV) metabolomics and MV clustering analyses were conducted in a sequential stepwise manner in order to follow the differential effects of increasing concentrations of added Ni(II). The results acquired showed that important Ni(II)-responsive biomolecules could be clustered into distinguishable patterns on the basis of added concentration-dependent responses of their resonance intensities and line widths. At low added concentrations (71 µmol/L), low-WMSS-level N-donor amino acids (especially histidine) and amines with relatively high stability constants for this paramagnetic metal ion were the most responsive (severe resonance broadenings were observed). However, at higher Ni(II) concentrations (140-670 µmol/L), weaker carboxylate O-donor ligands such as lactate, formate, succinate, and acetate were featured as major Ni(II) ligands, a consequence of their much higher WMSS concentrations, which were sufficient for them to compete for these higher Ni(II) availabilities. From these experiments, the metabolites most affected were found to be histidine ≈ methylamines > taurine ≈ lactate ≈ succinate > formate > acetate ≈ ethanol ≈ glycine ≈ N-acetylneuraminate, although they predominantly comprised carboxylato oxygen donor ligands/chelators at the higher added Ni(II) levels. Removal of the interfering effects arising from the differential biomolecular compositions of the WMSS samples collected from different participants and those from the effects exerted by a first-order interaction effect substantially enhanced the statistical significance of the differences observed between the added Ni(II) levels. The addition of EDTA to Ni(II)-treated WMSS samples successfully reversed these resonance modifications, an observation confirming the transfer of Ni(II) from the above endogenous complexants to this exogenous chelator to form the highly stable diamagnetic octahedral [Ni(II)-EDTA] complex (Kstab = 1.0 × 1019 M-1). Conclusions: The results acquired demonstrated the value of linking advanced experimental design and multivariate metabolomics/statistical analysis techniques to 1H NMR analysis for such speciation studies. These provided valuable molecular information regarding the identities of Ni(II) complexes in human saliva, which is relevant to trace metal ion speciation and toxicology, the in vivo corrosion of NiC-MADPs, and the molecular fate of ingested Ni(II) ions in this biofluid. The carcinogenic potential of these low-molecular-mass Ni(II) complexes is discussed.

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人类唾液中潜在致癌的痕量镍(II)离子水平的形成:一个顺序代谢组学促进的高场1H NMR研究。
介绍/目的:由于“外来”和/或过量金属离子的生物活性和毒性主要由其精确的分子性质决定,在这里,我们采用高分辨率1H NMR分析来探索人类唾液中顺磁性Ni(II)离子的“物种形成”,这是生物分子Ni(II)络合物/螯合剂的潜在丰富来源。这些研究与含镍金属合金牙科修复体(NiC-MADPs)的体内腐蚀有关,也与人类饮食或不良毒理学摄入Ni(II)离子有关。方法:从n = 12名预禁食(≥8 h)的健康参与者中获得未受刺激的全口唾液样本,并通过离心从中获得清晰的全口唾液上清(wmss)。通过微移液管将微量的Ni(II)水溶液依次滴定到WMSS样品中。任何可能的添加浓度依赖于Ni(II)介导的pH变化都被实验控制。用JEOL JNM-ECZ600R/S1谱仪获取1H NMR谱图。结果:为了跟踪添加Ni(II)浓度增加的差异效应,以顺序逐步的方式进行了单变量和多变量代谢组学和MV聚类分析。结果表明,重要的Ni(II)响应生物分子可以根据其共振强度和线宽的浓度依赖性响应聚集成可区分的模式。在低添加浓度(71 μ mol/L)下,低wmss水平的n -供体氨基酸(尤其是组氨酸)和对顺磁性金属离子具有较高稳定常数的胺反应最灵敏(观察到严重的共振增宽)。然而,在较高的Ni(II)浓度(140-670µmol/L)下,较弱的羧酸o供体配体(如乳酸盐、甲酸盐、琥珀酸盐和乙酸盐)成为主要的Ni(II)配体,这是由于它们的WMSS浓度要高得多,这足以让它们竞争这些较高的Ni(II)可用性。从这些实验中发现,受影响最大的代谢物是组氨酸≈甲胺>牛磺酸≈乳酸≈琥珀酸>甲酸>乙酸≈乙醇≈甘氨酸≈n -乙酰神经胺酸盐,尽管它们主要由羧基氧供体配体/螯合剂组成,在较高的Ni(II)添加水平。去除来自不同参与者的WMSS样品的不同生物分子组成引起的干扰效应和来自一阶相互作用效应的干扰效应,大大增强了添加的Ni(II)水平之间观察到的差异的统计显著性。在Ni(II)处理的WMSS样品中加入EDTA成功地逆转了这些共振修饰,观察结果证实了Ni(II)从上述内源性络合物转移到外源性螯合剂中,形成高度稳定的抗磁性八面体[Ni(II)-EDTA]络合物(Kstab = 1.0 × 1019 M-1)。结论:获得的结果证明了将先进的实验设计和多元代谢组学/统计分析技术与1H NMR分析相结合对此类物种形成研究的价值。这为人类唾液中Ni(II)络合物的特性提供了有价值的分子信息,这与微量金属离子的形态和毒理学、Ni - madps的体内腐蚀以及摄入的Ni(II)离子在这种生物流体中的分子命运有关。讨论了这些低分子质量Ni(II)配合物的致癌潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Metabolites
Metabolites Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Biology
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
7.30%
发文量
1070
审稿时长
17.17 days
期刊介绍: Metabolites (ISSN 2218-1989) is an international, peer-reviewed open access journal of metabolism and metabolomics. Metabolites publishes original research articles and review articles in all molecular aspects of metabolism relevant to the fields of metabolomics, metabolic biochemistry, computational and systems biology, biotechnology and medicine, with a particular focus on the biological roles of metabolites and small molecule biomarkers. Metabolites encourages scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. Therefore, there is no restriction on article length. Sufficient experimental details must be provided to enable the results to be accurately reproduced. Electronic material representing additional figures, materials and methods explanation, or supporting results and evidence can be submitted with the main manuscript as supplementary material.
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