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1.
Chem Biol Interact ; 369: 110285, 2023 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36442613

ABSTRACT

Oximes play an essential role in the therapy of organophosphorus compound (OP) poisoning by reactivating inhibited acetylcholinesterase. Impairment of liver function was observed in OP poisoning and associated with obidoxime treatment by some reports. In this study human three-dimensional HepaRG spheroids were used as complex in vitro model to investigate oxime-induced liver toxicity. In this context, cold storage of liver spheroids at 4 °C in standard culture medium and in optimized tissue preservation solutions of up to 72 h was assessed. Cold storage in standard culture medium resulted in a complete loss of viability whereas an optimized tissue preservation solution preserved viability. Separately from that liver spheroids were exposed to the four oximes pralidoxime, obidoxime, HI-6, MMB-4 and cytotoxicity (effective concentration, EC50) was determined with an ATP-based assay at several time points. The release of aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and albumin secretion was measured in supernatants. The same parameters were assessed with diclofenac as positive hepatotoxic control and with the OP pesticides malathion and malaoxon alone or in the presence of obidoxime. All individual tested oximes and OP showed a low cytotoxicity with effective concentrations mostly >2,000 µM. In contrast, the exposure to malaoxon in the presence of 1,000 µM obidoxime resulted in a marked decrease of viability and an increased release of AST indicating risk of liver injury only if oxime antidotes are strongly overdosed.


Subject(s)
Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury , Cholinesterase Reactivators , Organophosphate Poisoning , Humans , Obidoxime Chloride/pharmacology , Cholinesterase Reactivators/pharmacology , Acetylcholinesterase , Cholinesterase Inhibitors/toxicity , Pyridinium Compounds/pharmacology , Oximes/pharmacology , Antidotes/pharmacology
2.
Acta Neuropathol Commun ; 8(1): 199, 2020 11 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33228789

ABSTRACT

The highly neurotropic rabies virus (RABV) enters peripheral neurons at axon termini and requires long distance axonal transport and trans-synaptic spread between neurons for the infection of the central nervous system (CNS). Recent 3D imaging of field RABV-infected brains revealed a remarkably high proportion of infected astroglia, indicating that highly virulent field viruses are able to suppress astrocyte-mediated innate immune responses and virus elimination pathways. While fundamental for CNS invasion, in vivo field RABV spread and tropism in peripheral tissues is understudied. Here, we used three-dimensional light sheet and confocal laser scanning microscopy to investigate the in vivo distribution patterns of a field RABV clone in cleared high-volume tissue samples after infection via a natural (intramuscular; hind leg) and an artificial (intracranial) inoculation route. Immunostaining of virus and host markers provided a comprehensive overview of RABV infection in the CNS and peripheral nerves after centripetal and centrifugal virus spread. Importantly, we identified non-neuronal, axon-ensheathing neuroglia (Schwann cells, SCs) in peripheral nerves of the hind leg and facial regions as a target cell population of field RABV. This suggests that virus release from axons and infected SCs is part of the RABV in vivo cycle and may affect RABV-related demyelination of peripheral neurons and local innate immune responses. Detection of RABV in axon-surrounding myelinating SCs after i.c. infection further provided evidence for anterograde spread of RABV, highlighting that RABV axonal transport and spread of infectious virus in peripheral nerves is not exclusively retrograde. Our data support a new model in which, comparable to CNS neuroglia, SC infection in peripheral nerves suppresses glia-mediated innate immunity and delays antiviral host responses required for successful transport from the peripheral infection sites to the brain.


Subject(s)
Axonal Transport , Brain/virology , Immunity, Innate/immunology , Neuroglia/virology , Neurons/virology , Peripheral Nerves/virology , Rabies virus/pathogenicity , Viral Tropism , Animals , Axons/metabolism , Axons/pathology , Axons/virology , Brain/immunology , Brain/pathology , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Mice , Microscopy, Confocal , Neuroglia/immunology , Neuroglia/pathology , Neurons/metabolism , Neurons/pathology , Peripheral Nerves/immunology , Peripheral Nerves/pathology , RNA, Viral , Rabies , Schwann Cells/immunology , Schwann Cells/pathology , Schwann Cells/virology
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