4.7 Article

Dieldrin-induced oxidative stress and neurochemical changes contribute to apoptotic cell death in dopaminergic cells

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 31, Issue 11, Pages 1473-1485

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0891-5849(01)00726-2

Keywords

dieldrin; PC12 cells; oxidative stress; dopamine; superoxide; apoptosis; Parkinson's disease; free radicals

Funding

  1. NIEHS NIH HHS [ES 10586] Funding Source: Medline

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We examined the acute toxicity of dieldrin, a possible environmental risk factor of Parkinson's disease, in a dopaminergic cell model, PC12 cells, to determine early cellular events underlying the pesticide-induced degenerative processes. EC50 for 1 h dieldrin exposure was 143 muM for PC12 cells, whereas EC50 for non-dopaminergic cells was 292-351 muM, indicating that dieldrin is more toxic to dopaminergic cells. Dieldrin also induced rapid, dose-dependent releases of dopamine and its metabolite, DOPAC, resulting in depletion of intracellular dopamine. Additionally, dieldrin exposure caused depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential in a dose-dependent manner. Flow cytometric analysis showed generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) within 5 min of dieldrin treatment, and significant increases in lipid peroxidation were also detected following 1 h exposure. ROS generation was remarkably inhibited in the presence of SOD. Dieldrin-induced apoptosis was significantly attenuated by both SOD and MnTBAP (SOD mimetic), suggesting that dieldrin-induced superoxide radicals serve as important signals in initiation of apoptosis. Furthermore, pretreatment with deprenyl (MAO-inhibitor) or alpha -methyl-L-p-tyro sine (TH-inhibitor) also suppressed dieldrin-induced ROS generation and DNA fragmentation. Taken together, these results suggest that rapid release of dopamine and generation of ROS are early cellular events that may account for dieldrin-induced apoptotic cell death in dopaminergic cells. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc.

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