We are exposed to a growing number of chemicals in our environment, most of which have not been characterized in terms of their toxicological potential or mechanisms. Here, we employ a chemoproteomic platform to map the cysteine reactivity of environmental chemicals using reactivity-based probes to mine for hyper-reactive hotspots across the proteome. We show that environmental contaminants such as monomethylarsonous acid and widely used pesticides such as chlorothalonil and chloropicrin possess common reactivity with a distinct set of proteins. Many of these proteins are involved in key metabolic processes, suggesting that these targets may be particularly sensitive to environmental electrophiles. We show that the widely used fungicide chlorothalonil specifically inhibits several metabolic enzymes involved in fatty acid metabolism and energetics, leading to dysregulated lipid metabolism in mice. Our results underscore the utility of using reactivity-based chemoproteomic platforms to uncover novel mechanistic insights into the toxicity of environmental chemicals.
Acetanilide herbicides are among the most widely used pesticides in the United States, but their toxicological potential and mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we have used chemoproteomic platforms to map proteome-wide cysteine reactivity of acetochlor (AC), the most widely used acetanilide herbicide, in vivo in mice. We show that AC directly reacts with >20 protein targets in vivo in mouse liver, including the catalytic cysteines of several thiolase enzymes involved in mitochondrial and peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation. We show that the fatty acids that are not oxidized, due to impaired fatty acid oxidation, are instead diverted into other lipid pathways, resulting in heightened free fatty acids, triglycerides, cholesteryl esters, and other lipid species in the liver. Our findings show the utility of chemoproteomic approaches for identifying novel mechanisms of toxicity associated with environmental chemicals like acetanilide herbicides.
Lipid and lipid metabolite profiling
are important parameters in
understanding the pathogenesis of many diseases. Alkynylated polyunsaturated
fatty acids are potentially useful probes for tracking the fate of
fatty acid metabolites. The nonenzymatic and enzymatic oxidations
of ω-alkynyl linoleic acid and ω-alkynyl arachidonic acid
were compared to that of linoleic and arachidonic acid. There was
no detectable difference in the primary products of nonenzymatic oxidation,
which comprised cis,trans-hydroxy
fatty acids. Similar hydroxy fatty acid products were formed when
ω-alkynyl linoleic acid and ω-alkynyl arachidonic acid
were reacted with lipoxygenase enzymes that introduce oxygen at different
positions in the carbon chains. The rates of oxidation of ω-alkynylated
fatty acids were reduced compared to those of the natural fatty acids.
Cyclooxygenase-1 and -2 did not oxidize alkynyl linoleic but efficiently
oxidized alkynyl arachidonic acid. The products were identified as
alkynyl 11-hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acid, alkynyl 11-hydroxy-8,9-epoxy-eicosatrienoic
acid, and alkynyl prostaglandins. This deviation from the metabolic
profile of arachidonic acid may limit the utility of alkynyl arachidonic
acid in the tracking of cyclooxygenase-based lipid oxidation. The
formation of alkynyl 11-hydroxy-8,9-epoxy-eicosatrienoic acid compared
to alkynyl prostaglandins suggests that the ω-alkyne group causes
a conformational change in the fatty acid bound to the enzyme, which
reduces the efficiency of cyclization of dioxalanyl intermediates
to endoperoxide intermediates. Overall, ω-alkynyl linoleic acid
and ω-alkynyl arachidonic acid appear to be metabolically competent
surrogates for tracking the fate of polyunsaturated fatty acids when
looking at models involving autoxidation and oxidation by lipoxygenases.
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