Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States; Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States.
Department of Physiological Sciences, Center for Environmental and Human Toxicology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States.
Int Rev Neurobiol. 2019;145:211-238. doi: 10.1016/bs.irn.2019.05.003. Epub 2019 Jun 11.
Dichloroacetate (DCA) has been the focus of research by both environmental toxicologists and biomedical scientists for over 50 years. As a product of water chlorination and a metabolite of certain industrial chemicals, DCA is ubiquitous in our biosphere at low μg/kg body weight daily exposure levels without obvious adverse effects in humans. As an investigational drug for numerous congenital and acquired diseases, DCA is administered orally or parenterally, usually at doses of 10-50mg/kg per day. As a therapeutic, its principal mechanism of action is to inhibit pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK). In turn, PDK inhibits the key mitochondrial energy homeostat, pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC), by reversible phosphorylation. By blocking PDK, DCA activates PDC and, consequently, the mitochondrial respiratory chain and ATP synthesis. A reversible sensory/motor peripheral neuropathy is the clinically limiting adverse effect of chronic DCA exposure and experimental data implicate the Schwann cell as a toxicological target. It has been postulated that stimulation of PDC and respiratory chain activity by DCA in normally glycolytic Schwann cells causes uncompensated oxidative stress from increased reactive oxygen species production. Additionally, the metabolism of DCA interferes with the catabolism of the amino acids phenylalanine and tyrosine and with heme synthesis, resulting in accumulation of reactive molecules capable of forming adducts with DNA and proteins and also resulting in oxidative stress. Preliminary evidence in rodent models of peripheral neuropathy suggest that DCA-induced neurotoxicity may be mitigated by naturally occurring antioxidants and by a specific class of muscarinic receptor antagonists. These findings generate a number of testable hypotheses regarding the etiology and treatment of DCA peripheral neuropathy.
二氯乙酸 (DCA) 作为一种水氯化的产物和某些工业化学品的代谢物,在我们的生物圈中无处不在,其每日暴露水平在低μg/kg 体重时对人体没有明显的不良影响,因此,它一直是环境毒理学家和生物医学科学家研究的焦点,已经超过 50 年了。作为许多先天性和获得性疾病的研究药物,DCA 通过口服或肠胃外给药,通常每天以 10-50mg/kg 的剂量给药。作为一种治疗药物,其主要作用机制是抑制丙酮酸脱氢酶激酶 (PDK)。反过来,PDK 通过可逆磷酸化抑制关键的线粒体能量稳态酶——丙酮酸脱氢酶复合物 (PDC)。通过阻断 PDK,DCA 激活 PDC,进而激活线粒体呼吸链和 ATP 合成。可逆的感觉运动周围神经病是慢性 DCA 暴露的临床限制不良效应,实验数据表明施万细胞是一个毒性作用靶点。据推测,DCA 刺激正常糖酵解施万细胞中的 PDC 和呼吸链活性,导致活性氧物质产生增加,引起代偿性氧化应激。此外,DCA 的代谢会干扰氨基酸苯丙氨酸和酪氨酸的分解代谢以及血红素合成,导致能够与 DNA 和蛋白质形成加合物的反应性分子的积累,从而导致氧化应激。周围神经病啮齿动物模型中的初步证据表明,DCA 诱导的神经毒性可能通过天然存在的抗氧化剂和特定类别的毒蕈碱受体拮抗剂来减轻。这些发现产生了一些关于 DCA 周围神经病病因和治疗的可检验假设。