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Review
. 2012 Dec;120(12):1650-7.
doi: 10.1289/ehp.1205432. Epub 2012 Oct 11.

Molecular mechanism of acrylamide neurotoxicity: lessons learned from organic chemistry

Affiliations
Review

Molecular mechanism of acrylamide neurotoxicity: lessons learned from organic chemistry

Richard M LoPachin et al. Environ Health Perspect. 2012 Dec.

Abstract

Background: Acrylamide (ACR) produces cumulative neurotoxicity in exposed humans and laboratory animals through a direct inhibitory effect on presynaptic function.

Objectives: In this review, we delineate how knowledge of chemistry provided an unprecedented understanding of the ACR neurotoxic mechanism. We also show how application of the hard and soft, acids and bases (HSAB) theory led to the recognition that the α,β-unsaturated carbonyl structure of ACR is a soft electrophile that preferentially forms covalent bonds with soft nucleophiles.

Methods: In vivo proteomic and in chemico studies demonstrated that ACR formed covalent adducts with highly nucleophilic cysteine thiolate groups located within active sites of presynaptic proteins. Additional research showed that resulting protein inactivation disrupted nerve terminal processes and impaired neurotransmission.

Discussion: ACR is a type-2 alkene, a chemical class that includes structurally related electrophilic environmental pollutants (e.g., acrolein) and endogenous mediators of cellular oxidative stress (e.g., 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal). Members of this chemical family produce toxicity via a common molecular mechanism. Although individual environmental concentrations might not be toxicologically relevant, exposure to an ambient mixture of type-2 alkene pollutants could pose a significant risk to human health. Furthermore, environmentally derived type-2 alkenes might act synergistically with endogenously generated unsaturated aldehydes to amplify cellular damage and thereby accelerate human disease/injury processes that involve oxidative stress.

Conclusions: These possibilities have substantial implications for environmental risk assessment and were realized through an understanding of ACR adduct chemistry. The approach delineated here can be broadly applied because many toxicants of different chemical classes are electrophiles that produce toxicity by interacting with cellular proteins.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no actual or potential competing financial interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Line structures for several conjugated α,β-unsaturated carbonyl derivatives of the type-2 alkene chemical class. For each chemical, the electrophilic index (ω) is provided and the full chemical name is indicated in the parentheses.

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