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Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids

Methylimidazolium ionic liquids (MILs) are solvent chemicals used in industry. Recent work suggests that MILs are beginning to contaminate the environment and lead to exposure in the general population. In this study, the potential for MILs to cause cardiac toxicity has been examined. The effects of...

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Autores principales: Abdelghany, Tarek M., Hedya, Shireen A., De Santis, Carol, Abd El-Rahman, Sahar S., Gill, Jason H., Abdelkader, Noha F., Wright, Matthew C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10262066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37272551
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2022.114439
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author Abdelghany, Tarek M.
Hedya, Shireen A.
De Santis, Carol
Abd El-Rahman, Sahar S.
Gill, Jason H.
Abdelkader, Noha F.
Wright, Matthew C.
author_facet Abdelghany, Tarek M.
Hedya, Shireen A.
De Santis, Carol
Abd El-Rahman, Sahar S.
Gill, Jason H.
Abdelkader, Noha F.
Wright, Matthew C.
author_sort Abdelghany, Tarek M.
collection PubMed
description Methylimidazolium ionic liquids (MILs) are solvent chemicals used in industry. Recent work suggests that MILs are beginning to contaminate the environment and lead to exposure in the general population. In this study, the potential for MILs to cause cardiac toxicity has been examined. The effects of 5 chloride MIL salts possessing increasing alkyl chain lengths (2 C, EMI; 4 C, BMI; 6 C; HMI, 8 C, M8OI; 10 C, DMI) on rat neonatal cardiomyocyte beat rate, beat amplitude and cell survival were initially examined. Increasing alkyl chain length resulted in increasing adverse effects, with effects seen at 10(−5) M at all endpoints with M8OI and DMI, the lowest concentration tested. A limited sub-acute toxicity study in rats identified potential cardiotoxic effects with longer chain MILs (HMI, M8OI and DMI) based on clinical chemistry. A 5 month oral/drinking water study with these MILs confirmed cardiotoxicity based on histopathology and clinical chemistry endpoints. Since previous studies in mice did not identify the heart as a target organ, the likely cause of the species difference was investigated. qRT-PCR and Western blotting identified a marked higher expression of p-glycoprotein-3 (also known as ABCB4 or MDR2) and the breast cancer related protein transporter BCRP (also known as ABCG2) in mouse, compared to rat heart. Addition of the BCRP inhibitor Ko143 – but not the p-glycoproteins inhibitor cyclosporin A - increased mouse cardiomyocyte HL-1 cell sensitivity to longer chain MILs to a limited extent. MILs therefore have a potential for cardiotoxicity in rats. Mice may be less sensitive to cardiotoxicity from MILs due in part, to increased excretion via higher levels of cardiac BCRP expression and/or function. MILs alone, therefore may represent a hazard in man in the future, particularly if use levels increase. The impact that MILs exposure has on sensitivity to cardiotoxic drugs, heart disease and other chronic diseases is unknown.
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spelling pubmed-102620662023-06-15 Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids Abdelghany, Tarek M. Hedya, Shireen A. De Santis, Carol Abd El-Rahman, Sahar S. Gill, Jason H. Abdelkader, Noha F. Wright, Matthew C. Ecotoxicol Environ Saf Article Methylimidazolium ionic liquids (MILs) are solvent chemicals used in industry. Recent work suggests that MILs are beginning to contaminate the environment and lead to exposure in the general population. In this study, the potential for MILs to cause cardiac toxicity has been examined. The effects of 5 chloride MIL salts possessing increasing alkyl chain lengths (2 C, EMI; 4 C, BMI; 6 C; HMI, 8 C, M8OI; 10 C, DMI) on rat neonatal cardiomyocyte beat rate, beat amplitude and cell survival were initially examined. Increasing alkyl chain length resulted in increasing adverse effects, with effects seen at 10(−5) M at all endpoints with M8OI and DMI, the lowest concentration tested. A limited sub-acute toxicity study in rats identified potential cardiotoxic effects with longer chain MILs (HMI, M8OI and DMI) based on clinical chemistry. A 5 month oral/drinking water study with these MILs confirmed cardiotoxicity based on histopathology and clinical chemistry endpoints. Since previous studies in mice did not identify the heart as a target organ, the likely cause of the species difference was investigated. qRT-PCR and Western blotting identified a marked higher expression of p-glycoprotein-3 (also known as ABCB4 or MDR2) and the breast cancer related protein transporter BCRP (also known as ABCG2) in mouse, compared to rat heart. Addition of the BCRP inhibitor Ko143 – but not the p-glycoproteins inhibitor cyclosporin A - increased mouse cardiomyocyte HL-1 cell sensitivity to longer chain MILs to a limited extent. MILs therefore have a potential for cardiotoxicity in rats. Mice may be less sensitive to cardiotoxicity from MILs due in part, to increased excretion via higher levels of cardiac BCRP expression and/or function. MILs alone, therefore may represent a hazard in man in the future, particularly if use levels increase. The impact that MILs exposure has on sensitivity to cardiotoxic drugs, heart disease and other chronic diseases is unknown. Elsevier 2023-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10262066/ /pubmed/37272551 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2022.114439 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Abdelghany, Tarek M.
Hedya, Shireen A.
De Santis, Carol
Abd El-Rahman, Sahar S.
Gill, Jason H.
Abdelkader, Noha F.
Wright, Matthew C.
Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids
title Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids
title_full Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids
title_fullStr Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids
title_full_unstemmed Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids
title_short Potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids
title_sort potential for cardiac toxicity with methylimidazolium ionic liquids
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10262066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37272551
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2022.114439
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