Despite the frequent infection of agricultural crops by Alternaria spp., their toxic secondary metabolites and potential food contaminants lack comprehensive metabolic characterization. In this study, we investigated their bioavailability, metabolism, and excretion in vivo. A complex Alternaria culture extract (50 mg/kg body weight) containing 11 known toxins and the isolated lead toxin altertoxin II (0.7 mg/kg body weight) were administered per gavage to groups of 14 Sprague Dawley rats each. After 3 h and 24 h, plasma, urine and feces were collected to determine toxin recoveries. For reliable quantitation, an LC-MS/MS method for the simultaneous detection of 20 Alternaria toxins and metabolites was developed and optimized for either biological matrix. The obtained results demonstrated efficient excretion of alternariol (AOH) and its monomethyl ether (AME) via feces (> 89%) and urine (> 2.6%) after 24 h, while the majority of tenuazonic acid was recovered in urine (20 and 87% after 3 and 24 h, respectively). Moreover, modified forms of AOH and AME were identified in urine and fecal samples confirming both, mammalian phase-I (4-hydroxy-AOH) and phase-II (sulfates) biotransformation in vivo. Despite the comparably high doses, perylene quinones were recovered only at very low levels (altertoxin I, alterperylenol, < 0.06% in urine and plasma, < 5% in feces) or not at all (highly genotoxic, epoxide-holding altertoxin II, stemphyltoxin III). Interestingly, altertoxin I was detected in all matrices of rats receiving altertoxin II and suggests enzymatic de-epoxidation in vivo. In conclusion, the present study contributes valuable information to advance our understanding of the emerging Alternaria mycotoxins and their relevance on food safety.
Obesity-induced white adipose tissue (WAT) hypertrophy
is associated with elevated adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) content. Overexpression
of the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) reportedly
increases adiposity, worsening health. Paradoxically, using insulin resistance,
elevated fat mass and hypercholesterolemia as hallmarks of unhealthy obesity, a
recent report demonstrated ATM-expressed TREM2 promoted health. Here, we
identified that in mice TREM2 deficiency aggravated diet-induced insulin
resistance and hepatic steatosis independently of fat and cholesterol levels.
Metabolomics linked TREM2 deficiency with elevated obesity-instigated serum
ceramides that correlated with impaired insulin sensitivity. Remarkably, while
inhibiting ceramide synthesis exerted no influences on TREM2-dependent ATM
remodeling, inflammation or lipid load, it restored insulin tolerance,
reversing adipose hypertrophy and secondary hepatic steatosis of
TREM2-deficient animals. Bone marrow transplantation experiments revealed
unremarkable influences of immune cell-expressed TREM2 on health instead
demonstrating that WAT-intrinsic mechanisms impinging on sphingolipid
metabolism dominate in TREM2’s systemic protective effects on metabolic health.
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