- Identification of 4-S-Cysteinyltetrodotoxin from the liver of the puffer fish, Fugu pardalis, and formation of thiol adducts of tetrodotoxin from 4,9-anhydrotetrodotoxin.
Identification of 4-S-Cysteinyltetrodotoxin from the liver of the puffer fish, Fugu pardalis, and formation of thiol adducts of tetrodotoxin from 4,9-anhydrotetrodotoxin.
The metabolic pathway of tetrodotoxin (TTX), a powerful and specific voltage-gated sodium channel blocker, has not been well-clarified either in TTX-poisoned patients or in puffer fish. 4-S-CysteinylTTX (4-CysTTX) was isolated from the liver of the puffer fish, Fugu pardalis, as the first adduct of TTX with thiol. The structure was fully characterized by electrospray ionization-MS and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. The configuration of Cys in this compound was confirmed to be S (L-Cys) by application of the Marfey's method to cystine obtained from 4-CysTTX by iodine oxidation. We also found that 4-CysTTX was derived from 4,9-anhydroTTX by incubation with a large excess of Cys in aqueous buffer (pH 8.0) for 90 min at 40 degrees C in 33% yield by HPLC. GSH also reacted with 4,9-anhydroTTX to form 4-S-glutathionylTTX (4-GSTTX) in 39% yield under the same conditions, whereas TTX scarcely reacted with Cys and GSH. These reactions were strictly pH-dependent, giving the highest yield at pH 8.0. 4-GSTTX was converted to 4,9-anhydroTTX in 0.8 M sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.0) at 25 degrees C. Its half-life was approximately 4 h. The minimum lethal doses of 4-CysTTX and 4-GSTTX to mice by ip injection were more than 140 and 860 microg/kg (n = 2), which were 14- and 86-fold larger than the LD(50) of TTX, respectively. 4-GSTTX was hydrolyzed to 4-CysTTX by gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (Sigma, catalog no. G9270), which was supposed to contain cysteinylglycine dipeptidase. We also examined the effect of Cys or GSH coinjection (ip) with TTX to mice for detoxification of TTX and concluded that these coinjections did not reduce the toxicity of TTX.