4.7 Article

A target fishing study to spot possible biological targets of fusaric acid: Inhibition of protein kinase-A and insights on the underpinning mechanisms

Journal

FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY
Volume 159, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2021.112663

Keywords

Fusaric acid; Target fishing; PKA; Mycotoxins; Mechanism of action; Fusarium sp

Funding

  1. Core Facility Multimodal Imaging of the Faculty of Chemistry (University of Vienna)

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Fusaric acid, a secondary metabolite produced by Fusarium fungi, has been described as phytotoxic and cytotoxic, but its molecular mechanisms are not fully understood. This study used computational and experimental methods to identify fusaric acid's inhibitory effects on protein kinase-A and its potential impact on mitochondrial and cell membrane in intestinal cells.
Fusaric acid is a secondary metabolite produced by various Fusarium fungi, present with relatively high incidence in Fusarium-contaminated foods. It was already described as phytotoxic and cytotoxic. However, the understanding of its molecular mechanisms is still fragmentary and further data are needed to ensure an informed assessment of the risk related to its presence in food. This work applied an integrated in silico/in vitro approach to reveal novel potential biological activities of fusaric acid and to investigate the underpinning mechanisms. An in silico reverse screening was used to identify novel biological targets for fusaric acid. Computational results indicated as target protein kinase-A, which was confirmed with biochemical cell-free assays providing evidence of its actual inhibitory potential. Cell-based experiments on intestinal cells (HCEC-1CT cells) identified the mitochondrial network and cell membranes as potentially affected organelles, possibly resulting from PKA inhibition. The integration of 3D molecular modeling supported the plausibility of fusaric acid-dependent inhibition. From the hazard identification perspective, considering the Low Observed Adverse Effect Level described here (0.1 mM) and the possible level of contamination in food, fusaric acid might raise concern from a food safety standpoint and the gastrointestinal tract was described as a meaningful system to investigate with priority.

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