Genetic Aspects of Susceptibility to Mercury Toxicity: An Overview
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Mechanisms of Toxicity
3. Health Effects and Clinical Presentation
4. The Role of the Genetic Background in Mediating Individual Mercury Susceptibility
5. Search Strategy and Study Selection
6. Gene Classes of Interest and Related Polymorphisms
6.1. Inter-Individual Variability and Mercury Body Burden
6.1.1. The Glutathione System
6.1.2. The Metallothioneins Superfamily
6.1.3. The Selenoproteins Family
6.1.4. The Xenobiotic Transporter Proteins Superfamilies
6.2. Genetic Susceptibility and Neurodevelopmental Mercury Outcomes
6.3. Genetic Susceptibility and Cardiovascular Mercury Outcomes
7. Discussion
- Understanding of the underlying biological Hg mechanisms;
- Clarification of the variability and critical windows of susceptibility in the development of Hg-related health outcomes;
- Implementation potential preventive measures, and treatment;
- Improved Hg risk assessments and decision-making;
- Reduced global health disparities;
- Enhanced quality of life of all people.
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Human Organ System | Exposure Pathway | Marker | Associated Outcome |
---|---|---|---|
Nervous system | Transplacental for maternal occupational settings or dietary intake. Breast-feeding and ingestion of contaminated food. Inhalation, for occupational exposure. Use of thimerosal in vaccines. Cultural or religious practices. Dermal exposure. Chronic exposure from amalgam dental fillings. Inhalation, for occupational exposure or dental amalgams replacement. Ingestion of contaminated food, particularly in fish eating populations. | Cord blood. Maternal milk, hair and blood. Child blood, hair and urine. Adult urine, blood and hair. | Infants/Children: Deficit in language (late talking) and memory, deficit in attention, decrements in infant cognition and neurobehavioral deficits. Adults: Depression, paranoia, extreme irritability, hallucinations, inability to concentrate, memory loss, tremors of the hands, head, lips, tongue and eyelids, low body temperature, drowsiness, headaches, weight loss, insomnia, fatigue, blindness, optic neuropathy, retinopathy, hearing loss, sensory, neurological and behavioral dysfunctions. |
Motor system | Pre and post-natal exposure. Ingestion, for fish eating populations. Inhalation, for gold mining activities. | Maternal hair. Adult blood, hair and urine | Motor dysfunctions, increased tiredness, reduction in muscle strength and twitching, late walking. |
Cardiovascular system | Chronic exposure, attributed to fish consumption and gold mining activities. | Adult hair, toenail, plasma and urine | Cardiomyopathy, hypertension, coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction, cardiac arrhythmias, cerebro-vascular accident, ischemic heart disease, generalized atherosclerosis. |
Pulmonary system | Inhalation, for chronic exposure of volatilized vapors. Inhalation, for burning of Hg-containing material. | Adult urine | Chemical pneumonitis, necrotizing bronchitis, pulmonary fibrosis, cough, dyspnea, chest tightness, asthmatic disorders. |
Renal system | Occupational contact, for abuse of skin lightening cosmetics or Hg-containing compounds. Chronic exposure, related to the number of dental amalgam fillings. Chronic dietary exposure, for fish consumption. | Adult urine, hair and blood. | Glomerular disease whit oliguria or anuria, increased plasma creatinine level and proteinuria. Subacute-onset nephrotic syndrome, nephritic syndrome, tubular dysfunction, glomerulonephritis. |
Endocrine/Reproductive system | Prenatal exposure for maternal amalgam fillings/replacement. Chronic exposure from amalgam dental fillings. Exposure to occupational routes | Child urine and blood. Adult urine, hair and blood. | Adrenal hyperplasia and atrophy. Hypothyroidism, thyroid inflammation, and depression. Pancreatic dysfunction. Decreases rate of fertility in both males and females. Birth of abnormal offsprings. |
Immune/Hematological system | Chronic dietary exposure. Clinical hypersensitivity for Hg-containing amalgam. Prolonged exposure in clinically asymptomatic workers. | Adult urine. Lympho/monocyte stimulation tests. | Induction and exacerbation of autoimmune and allergic diseases in susceptible populations. Decreased immunity of the body. Hemolytic anemia, aplastic anemia. |
Embrional system | Maternal occupational settings. Maternal dietary exposure. Maternal amalgam fillings/replacement. | Cord blood. Fetal blood. Maternal hair. | Hypoplasia of the cerebellum, decreased number of nerve cells in the cerebral cortex, decreased total brain weight, abnormal neuron migration. Spontaneous abortions, stillbirth, low birth weights. |
Gene | Protein Function | Polymorphism | “In vitro” Functional Activity | Estimated Interactions | Mercury Metabolism |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GSTM1 | Hg-binding modulation by GSH conjugation | + > – Deletion | Null gene expression and impaired catalytic activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg 1 [31] |
Hair+ Blood Hg levels | Me-Hg 2 [9] | ||||
Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [33,34] | ||||
Maternal hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [38] | ||||
Cord blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [38] | ||||
Plasma/Blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [10] | ||||
GSTT1 | Hg-binding modulation by GSH conjugation | + > – Deletion | Null gene expression and impaired catalytic activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [6,7] |
Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [33,34] | ||||
Cord blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [38] | ||||
GSTP1 | Hg-binding modulation by GSH conjugation | 105 Ile > Val (rs1695) | Decreased catalytic efficiency and protein activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [31,32,33,34,35,36] |
Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34] | ||||
114Ala > Val (rs1138272) | Erythrocyte Hg levels | Me-Hg [30,31,32] | |||
Plasma Hg levels | Me-Hg [10] | ||||
GSTA1 | Hg-binding modulation by GSH conjugation | 3′UTR (rs3957356) | Lower transcriptional activation and decreased enzyme activity | Blood Hg levels? | Me-Hg [34] |
GSS | Hg-binding modulation by GSH synthesis | 5’UTR (rs3761144) | Decreased gene expression | Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [6] |
GCLC | Hg-binding modulation by GSH synthesis | 5′ near gene (rs17883901) | Suppressed gene induction and promoter activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [31] |
Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [33,34] | ||||
Intron 9 (rs1555903) * | Erythrocyte Hg levels | Me-Hg [30] | |||
Blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36] | ||||
Cord blood Hg levels * | Me-Hg [39] | ||||
GCLM | Hg-binding modulation by GSH synthesis | 5’ near gene (rs41303970) | Decrease promoter activity and gene expression | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31] |
Hair, Blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [9,30,37] | ||||
Plasma, Blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [10] | ||||
Erythrocyte Hg levels | Me-Hg [32] | ||||
Plasma Hg levels | I-Hg [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31] | ||||
MT1M | Hg-binding and detoxifying capacity | 3′UTR (rs2270837) * | Altered transcriptional activity | Urinary Hg levels * | I-Hg [40] |
3′UTR (rs2270836) * | Hair, Blood Hg levels * | Me-Hg [36] | |||
3′UTR (rs9936471) * | Hair Hg levels * | Me-Hg [40] | |||
MT2A | Hg-binding and detoxifying capacity | 3′UTR (rs10636) | Altered transcriptional activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [40] |
MT1A | Hg-binding and detoxifying capacity | 51 Lys > Arg (rs8052394) | Altered transcriptional activity and protein structure | Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [40] |
27 Thr > Asn (rs11640851) | |||||
MT4 | Hg-binding and detoxifying capacity | 48 Gly > Asp (rs11643815) | Altered transcriptional activity and protein structure | Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [34] |
Hair, Blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [36] | ||||
GPX1 GPX4 | Hg-detoxification and modulation by GSH metabolism | 200 Pro > Leu (rs1050450) | Defective gene expression and reduced protein activity | Undefined | None |
Undefined | None | ||||
3′UTR (rs713041) | |||||
SEPP1 | Hg-detoxification and distribution by Se-P synthesis | 3′UTR (rs7579) | Impaired gene expression and protein synthesis | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [6] |
Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [6] | ||||
ABCC2 (MRP2) | Hg-transport and elimination | 5′UTR (rs1885301) * (rs717620) * | Defective promoter sites activity and altered protein | Urinary Hg levels * | I-Hg [5] |
Maternal hair Hg levels * | Me-Hg [41] | ||||
Cord blood Hglevels * | Me-Hg [42] | ||||
417 Val > Ile (rs2273697) * | |||||
ABCB1 (MDR1) | Hg-transport and elimination | 893 Ala > Ser (rs2032582) * | Impaired protein structure and enzyme activity | Cord blood Hg levels | Me-Hg [42] |
Maternal hair Hg levels * | Me-Hg [41] | ||||
3′UTR (rs12076499) * (rs1202169) * | |||||
ABCC1 (MRP1) | Hg-transport and elimination | Intron 1 (rs11075290) * | Defective transcription factor binding sites | Cord blood Hg levels * | Me-Hg [42] |
Maternal hair Hg levels * | Me-Hg [41] | ||||
5′UTR (rs212093) * (rs215088) * | |||||
SLC7A5 (LAT1) | Hg-uptake and distribution | 5′UTR (rs33916661) | Altered transcriptional activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [5] |
SLC22A6 (OAT1) | Hg-uptake and distribution | 5′UTR (rs4149170) | Altered transcriptional activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [5] |
SLC22A8 (OAT3) | Hg-uptake and distribution | 5′UTR (rs4149182) | Altered transcriptional activity | Urinary Hg levels | I-Hg [5] |
ATP7B | Hg-transport? | 832 Lys > Arg (rs1061472) | Altered mechanism of copper transport | Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [36] |
952 Arg > Lys (rs732774) | |||||
BDNF | Hg-neurotoxicity? | 66 Val > Met (rs6265) | Altered survival of striatal neurons in the brain | Hair Hg levels | Me-Hg [36] |
Gene | SNP | Age Class/Place of Origin | Main Outcomes | Estimated Interactions | Exposure |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
APOE | * rs7412 | Children (2 years of age)/Taiwan | Adverse effects on cognition, behavior and whole neuro- development in pre-school children carrying the ε4 allele | Cord blood Hg levels | Prenatal MeHg exposure [59,60] |
rs429358 | Children (8–12 years of age)/Portugal | Impaired neurobehavioral functions, related to working and learning memory, among boys with ε4 allele | Urinary Hg levels | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [61] | |
BDNF | rs6265 rs2049046 | Children (8–12 years of age)/Portugal Adult (Dentists and dental assistants)/USA Children (8 years of age)/UK | Increased risk of neuro-behavioral deficits associated with learning &memory | Urinary Hg levels | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [61] |
Altered cognitive flexibility, working & visual memory. Potential decline of cognitive & motor performance with increased neuro-behavioral symptoms, and mood | Urinary Hg levels | Occupational elemental Hg exposure [62,63] | |||
Decreased performance IQ, and verbal scores with cognitive involvement in children at school age | Umbilical cord Hg levels | Prenatal MeHg exposure [39] | |||
COMT | rs4680 rs4633 rs4618 rs6269 | Children (8–12 years of age)/Portugal Adult (Dental assistants)/USA | Impaired neurobehavioral test performance affecting attentional control, working and learning memory, visual spatial acuity (boys); attention control, learning memory, and executive functions (girls) | Urinary Hg levels | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [61] |
Some mood states (tension, depression, fatigue, and confusion) among female assistants | Urinary Hg levels | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [64,65] | |||
CPOX | rs1131857 (CPOX4) | Children (8–12 years of age)/Portugal | Altered performance on multiple neurobehavioral tests within neurological domains (attention, learning &memory, executive function, visual spatial acuity and motor function) (boys); impaired performance affecting learning & memory, executive function (girls) | Urinary Hg levels | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [61,66] |
rs1729995 (CPOX5) | Adult (Dentists and dental assistants)/USA | Deficits in neuropsychological performance within neuro-behavioral (male dentists) and visuomotor (female dental assistants) domains, symptoms and mood | Urinary Hg levels | Occupational elemental Hg exposure [65,67,68] | |
MTIM | rs2270837 | Children (8–12 years of age)/Portugal | Impaired behavioral performance involving the domains of visual spatial acuity and learning & memory, with some additional impacts on attention and motor function (boys); learning & memory (girls) | Urinary Hg level | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [47,61] |
MT2A | rs10636 | Children (8–12 years of age)/Portugal | Modulation of adverse effects on neurobehavioral (attention, visual spatial acuity, learning & memory), and motor functions (boys) | Urinary Hg level | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [47,61] |
Children (8 years of age)/UK | Increased cognitive consequences in children at school age | Umbilical cord Hg levels | Prenatal MeHg exposure [39] | ||
PON1 | rs662 | Children (8 years of age)/UK | Cognitive deficit, associated with total and performance IQ, involving children at school age | Umbilical cord Hg levels | Prenatal MeHg exposure [39] |
PGR | rs1042838 | Children (8 years of age)/UK | Cognitive deficit, associated with total and verbal IQ, involving children at school age | Umbilical cord Hg levels | Prenatal MeHg exposure [39] |
SLC6A4 44bp (5-HTTLPR) Ins/Del | Children (8–12 years of age)/Portugal | Compromised neurobehavioral test performance affecting atten-tional control, and learning & memory (boys) | Urinary Hg levels | Postnatal inorganic Hg exposure [61] | |
Adult (Dental assistants)/USA | Deteriorated cognitive skills for prolonged attention-memory, and psychomotor skills for cognitive flexibility, manual coordination (male dentists); attention, working memory, and manual coordination (female dental assistants). Increased mood scales between the two gender groups | Urinary Hg levels | Occupational elemental Hg exposure [69,70] | ||
TF | rs3811647 | Children (8 years of age)/UK | Decreased Performance IQ among children at school age | Umbilical cord Hg levels | Prenatal MeHg exposure [39] |
ABCC1 rs11075290 | Infants (20 months of age)/Republic of Seychelles | Compromised neuro-developmental test performance, affecting both mental and psychomotor development | Maternal hair Hg levels | Prenatal MeHg exposure [41] |
Gene | Variant | Study Population/Location | Probable Genetic Impact on Cardiovascular Status/Estimated Interactions | Mercury Form |
---|---|---|---|---|
GCLM | 5′near gene (* rs4130397) | Matched case-control subjects (age range: 30–77 years)/Northern Sweden | Increased risk of first ever-myocardial infarction, in people without cardiovascular disease/Erythrocyte Hg levels | MeHg [37] |
MMP-2 | 5′near gene (rs243865) | Exposed subjects, through fish intake (15–87 years of age)/Brazilian Amazon | Potential risk of clinically relevant events, involving acute myocardial infarction, unstable or stable angina, and hypertension/Plasma Hg levels | MeHg [83] |
MMP-9 | Promoter (CA)n repeats (rs3222264) | Exposed subjects, through fish intake (15–87 years of age)/Brazilian Amazon | Increased susceptibility to rapid coronary artery disease progression, fatal cardiovascular events or hypertension/Plasma Hg levels | MeHg [82] |
NOS3 | Intron 4 a/b (27 bpVNTR) | Fish eating populations (>18 years old)/Amazon region, Brazil | Increased systolic and diastolic blood pressures, with probable predisposition to hypertension, thrombosis, vasospasm, and atherosclerosis/Plasma and blood nitrile levels Hg-related | MeHg [84] MeHg [85] |
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Andreoli, V.; Sprovieri, F. Genetic Aspects of Susceptibility to Mercury Toxicity: An Overview. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14010093
Andreoli V, Sprovieri F. Genetic Aspects of Susceptibility to Mercury Toxicity: An Overview. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2017; 14(1):93. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14010093
Chicago/Turabian StyleAndreoli, Virginia, and Francesca Sprovieri. 2017. "Genetic Aspects of Susceptibility to Mercury Toxicity: An Overview" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 14, no. 1: 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14010093
APA StyleAndreoli, V., & Sprovieri, F. (2017). Genetic Aspects of Susceptibility to Mercury Toxicity: An Overview. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 14(1), 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14010093