Investigation of Drug-Induced Hepatotoxicity and Its Remediation Pathway with Reaction-Based Fluorescent Probes.
Dan ChengWang XuLin YuanXiao-Bing ZhangPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2017)
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is considered a serious problem related to public health, due to its unpredictability and acute response. The level of peroxynitrite (ONOO-) generated in liver has long been regarded as a biomarker for the prediction and measurement of DILI. Herein we present two reaction-based fluorescent probes (Naph-ONOO- and Rhod-ONOO-) for ONOO- through a novel and universally applicable mechanism: ONOO--mediated deprotection of α-keto caged fluorophores. Among them, Rhod-ONOO- can selectively accumulate and react in mitochondria, one of the main sources of ONOO-, with a substantial lower nanomolar sensitivity of 43 nM. The superior selectivity and sensitivity of two probes enable real-time imaging of peroxynitrite generation in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated live cells, with a remarkable difference from cells doped with other interfering reactive oxygen species, in either one- or two-photon imaging modes. More importantly, we elucidated the drug-induced hepatotoxicity pathway with Rhod-ONOO- and revealed that CYP450/CYP2E1-mediated enzymatic metabolism of acetaminophen leads to ONOO- generation in liver cells. This is the first time to showcase the drug-induced hepatotoxicity pathways by use of a small-molecule fluorescent probe. We hence conclude that fluorescent probes can engender a deeper understanding of reactive species and their pathological revelations. The reaction-based fluorescent probes will be a potentially useful chemical tool to assay drug-induced hepatotoxicity.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- living cells
- liver injury
- fluorescent probe
- small molecule
- induced apoptosis
- single molecule
- public health
- cell cycle arrest
- reactive oxygen species
- high resolution
- adverse drug
- quantum dots
- photodynamic therapy
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- emergency department
- nitric oxide
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- electron transfer
- mass spectrometry
- respiratory failure
- nucleic acid
- endoplasmic reticulum
- mechanical ventilation