Cargando…

Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin

Of late, a consirable interest has grown in literature on early development of arsenicosis and untimely death in humans after exposure to iAs in drinking water in utero or during the childhood. The mechanism of this kind of intrauterine arsenic poisoning is not known; however it is often suggested t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Poojan, Shiv, Kumar, Sushil, Verma, Vikas, Dhasmana, Anupam, Lohani, Mohtashim, Verma, Mukesh K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4666640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26624291
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142818
_version_ 1782403732354367488
author Poojan, Shiv
Kumar, Sushil
Verma, Vikas
Dhasmana, Anupam
Lohani, Mohtashim
Verma, Mukesh K.
author_facet Poojan, Shiv
Kumar, Sushil
Verma, Vikas
Dhasmana, Anupam
Lohani, Mohtashim
Verma, Mukesh K.
author_sort Poojan, Shiv
collection PubMed
description Of late, a consirable interest has grown in literature on early development of arsenicosis and untimely death in humans after exposure to iAs in drinking water in utero or during the childhood. The mechanism of this kind of intrauterine arsenic poisoning is not known; however it is often suggested to involve stem cells. We looked into this possibility by investigating in mice the influence of chronic in utero exposure to arsenical drinking water preliminarily on multipotent adult stem cell and progenitor cell counts at the beginning of neonatal age. We found that repeated intake of 42.5 or 85ppm iAs in drinking water by pregnant BALB/c mice substantially changed the counts of EpASCs, the progenitor cells, and the differentiated cells in epidermis of their zero day old neonates. EpASCs counts decreased considerably and the differentiated / apoptosed cell counts increased extensively whereas the counts of progenitor cell displayed a biphasic effect. The observed trend of response was dose-dependent and statistically significant. These observations signified a disruption in stem cell homeostasis. The disorder was in parallel with changes in expression of biomarkers of stem cell and progenitor (TA) cell besides changes in expression of pro-inflammatory and antioxidant molecules namely Nrf2, NFkB, TNF-α, and GSH. The biological monitoring of exposure to iAs and the ensuing transplacental toxicity was verifiable correspondingly by the increase in iAs burden in hair, kidney, skin, liver of nulliparous female mice and the onset of chromosomal aberrations in neonate bone marrow cells. The combined intake of selenite and curcumin in utero was found to prevent the disruption of homeostasis and associated biochemical changes to a great extent. The mechanism of prevention seemed possibly to involve (a) curcumin and Keap-1 interaction, (b) consequent escalated de novo GSH biosynthesis, and (c) the resultant toxicant disposition. These observations are important with respect to the development of vulnerability to arsenicosis and other morbidities later in life after repeated in utero or postnatal exposure to iAs in drinking water that may occur speculatively through impairment of adult stem cell dependent innate tissue repair mechanism.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4666640
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46666402015-12-10 Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin Poojan, Shiv Kumar, Sushil Verma, Vikas Dhasmana, Anupam Lohani, Mohtashim Verma, Mukesh K. PLoS One Research Article Of late, a consirable interest has grown in literature on early development of arsenicosis and untimely death in humans after exposure to iAs in drinking water in utero or during the childhood. The mechanism of this kind of intrauterine arsenic poisoning is not known; however it is often suggested to involve stem cells. We looked into this possibility by investigating in mice the influence of chronic in utero exposure to arsenical drinking water preliminarily on multipotent adult stem cell and progenitor cell counts at the beginning of neonatal age. We found that repeated intake of 42.5 or 85ppm iAs in drinking water by pregnant BALB/c mice substantially changed the counts of EpASCs, the progenitor cells, and the differentiated cells in epidermis of their zero day old neonates. EpASCs counts decreased considerably and the differentiated / apoptosed cell counts increased extensively whereas the counts of progenitor cell displayed a biphasic effect. The observed trend of response was dose-dependent and statistically significant. These observations signified a disruption in stem cell homeostasis. The disorder was in parallel with changes in expression of biomarkers of stem cell and progenitor (TA) cell besides changes in expression of pro-inflammatory and antioxidant molecules namely Nrf2, NFkB, TNF-α, and GSH. The biological monitoring of exposure to iAs and the ensuing transplacental toxicity was verifiable correspondingly by the increase in iAs burden in hair, kidney, skin, liver of nulliparous female mice and the onset of chromosomal aberrations in neonate bone marrow cells. The combined intake of selenite and curcumin in utero was found to prevent the disruption of homeostasis and associated biochemical changes to a great extent. The mechanism of prevention seemed possibly to involve (a) curcumin and Keap-1 interaction, (b) consequent escalated de novo GSH biosynthesis, and (c) the resultant toxicant disposition. These observations are important with respect to the development of vulnerability to arsenicosis and other morbidities later in life after repeated in utero or postnatal exposure to iAs in drinking water that may occur speculatively through impairment of adult stem cell dependent innate tissue repair mechanism. Public Library of Science 2015-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4666640/ /pubmed/26624291 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142818 Text en © 2015 Poojan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Poojan, Shiv
Kumar, Sushil
Verma, Vikas
Dhasmana, Anupam
Lohani, Mohtashim
Verma, Mukesh K.
Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin
title Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin
title_full Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin
title_fullStr Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin
title_full_unstemmed Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin
title_short Disruption of Skin Stem Cell Homeostasis following Transplacental Arsenicosis; Alleviation by Combined Intake of Selenium and Curcumin
title_sort disruption of skin stem cell homeostasis following transplacental arsenicosis; alleviation by combined intake of selenium and curcumin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4666640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26624291
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142818
work_keys_str_mv AT poojanshiv disruptionofskinstemcellhomeostasisfollowingtransplacentalarsenicosisalleviationbycombinedintakeofseleniumandcurcumin
AT kumarsushil disruptionofskinstemcellhomeostasisfollowingtransplacentalarsenicosisalleviationbycombinedintakeofseleniumandcurcumin
AT vermavikas disruptionofskinstemcellhomeostasisfollowingtransplacentalarsenicosisalleviationbycombinedintakeofseleniumandcurcumin
AT dhasmanaanupam disruptionofskinstemcellhomeostasisfollowingtransplacentalarsenicosisalleviationbycombinedintakeofseleniumandcurcumin
AT lohanimohtashim disruptionofskinstemcellhomeostasisfollowingtransplacentalarsenicosisalleviationbycombinedintakeofseleniumandcurcumin
AT vermamukeshk disruptionofskinstemcellhomeostasisfollowingtransplacentalarsenicosisalleviationbycombinedintakeofseleniumandcurcumin