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Toxicity of Acetaldehyde with Oxygen Radicals Heather Bolstad Mentor: Joseph S. Beckman, Ph.D. August 28, 2003 A Model for Alcohol Toxicity Ethanol (CH3CH2OH) is oxidized to acetaldehyde (CH3CHO) in the liver by the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase Oxygen radicals produced in cells via electron-transfer processes and respiration Formed from the reduction of molecular oxygen Highly reactive due to an unpaired electron, represented by a ˙ Goodsell, David S. Protein Data Bank Molecule of the Month: Alcohol Dehydrogenase.” <www.rcsb.org/pdb/molecules/pdb13_1.html> Motivation for the Assay Studies concerning the bacterial toxicity of extracellular oxygen radicals have yielded conflicting results Rosen and Klebanoff (1979, 1981) found that the enzyme xanthine oxidase (XO) generated a substance toxic to Staphylococcus aureus with 10 mM acetaldehyde as the substrate “Crystal Structure of Xanthine Oxidase from Bovine Milk.” Protein Data Bank. 4 Aug. 2000. http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/cgi/explore.cgi?job=graphics;pdbId=1FIQ &bio=1&opt=show&size=250. Xanthine Oxidase (XO) Mechanism XO XO Xanthine Hypoxanthine O2 O 2 ˙- Uric acid O2 O 2 ˙- H2O2 H2O 2 Metal Catalyst Metal Catalyst 2 HO˙ 2 HO˙ Alternative XO Mechanism XO acetaldehyde acetic acid O2 1-hydroperoxyethanol oxidation ˙ O2 - H2O2 peracetic acid bacteria killed! Acetaldehyde and H2O2 Reactions Unclear whether toxicity was due to the products of XO (O2˙-, H2O2) or from the acetaldehyde/H2O2 adduct: CH3CHO + H2O2 acetaldehyde OH CH3-C-O-OH H oxidation 1-hydroperoxyethanol O CH3-C-O-OH peracetic acid Dr. Beckman’s Research (1984) Acetaldehyde plus H2O2 was bactericidal (P. fluorescens) Acetaldehyde, H2O2 not toxic individually Toxicity inhibited by catalase or SOD XO reaction (P. fluorescens and S. aureus) Toxic with 10 mM acetaldehyde Not toxic with xanthine Superoxide and hydroxyl radical formation detected so they must not be toxic Toxic with 1 mM acetaldehyde plus xanthine Toxicity inhibited by SOD or catalase Not toxic when substrates were tested separately Conclusions: Acetaldehyde and H2O2 involved in toxicity The Goal: To determine the toxicity of acetaldehyde with the oxygen radicals 1. superoxide, O2˙2. hydrogen peroxide, H2O2 3. hydroxyl radical, HO˙ Hypothesis Acetaldehyde forms toxic adducts with superoxide radical, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radical The number of E. coli colonies that survive will be used to determine the toxicity of the adduct Procedure Early log-phase E. coli washed 2X and resuspended in buffer Titer of ~107 cells/mL made in buffer Cells, DTPA, and test reagents incubated in buffer at room temp. 1:10 1:10 1:10 Microdrops onto LB agar plates Incubated overnight at 37 C Colonies counted/averaged; % survival determined Acetaldehyde Dose-Response Curve: JM 109 E. coli Incubation time: 60 minutes % Survival 100 0 mM and 0.1 mM acetaldehyde 10 1 0 2 4 6 8 Acetaldehyde (mM) 10 Hydrogen Peroxide Dose-Response Curve: JM 109 E. coli Incubation time: 60 minutes 100 % Survival 10 1 0.1 0.01 0 500 1000 1500 Hydrogen peroxide (uM) 2000 Bactericidal Activity of 50 uM Acetaldehyde with Hydrogen Peroxide: JM 109 E. coli Incubation time: 60 minutes 50 uM Acetaldehyde with Hydrogen Peroxide Hydrogen peroxide dose response % survival 100 10 1 0.1 0.01 0 50 100 Hydrogen peroxide (uM) 150 200 Modifications to Assay Hydrogen peroxide solutions were checked with a UV spectrophotometer New cell line, E. coli B, substituted for E. coli JM 109 MgSO4 added to stabilize bacterial membranes Used pH 5.0 buffer instead of pH 7.4 Hydrogen Peroxide Dose Response: JM 109 vs. B E. coli Incubation time: 60 minutes % survival of JM 109 100 % survival of B % survival 10 1 0.1 0.01 -50 0 50 100 150 200 Hydrogen peroxide (uM) 250 Toxicity of the Xanthine Oxidase Reaction Percent survival Experiment P. fluorescens S. aureus E. coli B Xanthine 100 (0.1 mM) 100 (0.1 mM) 99.8 (0.2 mM) Acetaldehyde 0.05 (10 mM) 0.3 (10 mM) 95.5 (10 mM) 0.08 (1 mM/0.1 uM) <0.01 (1 mM/0.1 uM) 99.0 (10 mM/1 mM) Acetaldehyde + Xanthine P. fluorescens and S. aureus exposure for 60 min.; E. coli B exposure for 20 min. (number is average over time course). Future Experiments Test P. fluorescens and compare to E. coli Test pure peracetic acid on both species Modify washing procedure to prevent growth of bacteria throughout assays Acknowledgements Howard Hughes Medical Institute Joseph S. Beckman, Ph.D. Linus Pauling Institute Patrick Reardon Kevin Ahern, Ph.D. Environmental Health Sciences Center Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics