Mechanistic studies of the toxicity of zinc gluconate in the olfactory neuronal cell line Odora

Hsieh, H; Vignesh, KS; Deepe, GS; Choubey, D; Shertzer, HG; Genter, MB

HERO ID

4302320

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2016

Language

English

PMID

27179668

HERO ID 4302320
In Press No
Year 2016
Title Mechanistic studies of the toxicity of zinc gluconate in the olfactory neuronal cell line Odora
Authors Hsieh, H; Vignesh, KS; Deepe, GS; Choubey, D; Shertzer, HG; Genter, MB
Journal Toxicology In Vitro
Volume 35
Page Numbers 24-30
Abstract Zinc is both an essential and potentially toxic metal. It is widely believed that oral zinc supplementation can reduce the effects of the common cold; however, there is strong clinical evidence that intranasal (IN) zinc gluconate (ZG) gel treatment for this purpose causes anosmia, or the loss of the sense of smell, in humans. Using the rat olfactory neuron cell line, Odora, we investigated the molecular mechanism by which zinc exposure exerts its toxic effects on olfactory neurons. Following treatment of Odora cells with 100 and 200μM ZG for 0-24h, RNA-seq and in silico analyses revealed up-regulation of pathways associated with zinc metal response, oxidative stress, and ATP production. We observed that Odora cells recovered from zinc-induced oxidative stress, but ATP depletion persisted with longer exposure to ZG. ZG exposure increased levels of NLRP3 and IL-1β protein levels in a time-dependent manner, suggesting that zinc exposure may cause an inflammasome-mediated cell death, pyroptosis, in olfactory neurons.
Doi 10.1016/j.tiv.2016.05.003
Pmid 27179668
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English