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Microprobe XRF Mapping and XAS Investigations of the Intracellular Metabolism of Arsenic for Understanding Arsenic-Induced Toxicity. Chemical research in toxicology [Chem Res Toxicol] Journal article

 
Munro KL, Mariana A, Klavins AI, Foster AJ, Lai B, Vogt S, Cai Z, Harris HH, Dillon CT 
Microprobe XRF Mapping and XAS Investigations of the Intracellular Metabolism of Arsenic for Understanding Arsenic-Induced Toxicity. [JOURNAL ARTICLE]
Chem Res Toxicol 2008 Jul 3.


Arsenic (As) is responsible for mass-poisonings worldwide following the ingestion of As-contaminated drinking water. Importantly, however, As toxicity is exploited in the antileukemia drug, Trisenox (As 2O 3), which successfully cures 65-80% of patients suffering relapsed acute promyelocytic leukemia. In an effort to determine the intracellular organelle and biomolecular targets of As, microprobe X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) analyses were performed on HepG2 cells following their exposure to high doses of arsenite (1 mM) or arsenate (20 mM). Microprobe XRF elemental mapping of thin-sectioned cells showed As accumulation in the euchromatin region of the cell nucleus (following arsenite exposure) synonymous with As targeting of DNA or proteins involved in DNA transcription. X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy (XANES) and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) analysis of arsenite-treated cells, however, showed the predominance of an As tris-sulfur species, providing increased credence to As interactions with nuclear proteins as a key factor in As-induced toxicity.



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