Daily Trust Sunday

‘Insecticid­es mimic melatonin, creating higher risk for diabetes’

- Source: sciencedai­ly.com https://www.

Synthetic chemicals commonly found in insecticid­es and garden products bind to the receptors that govern our biological clocks, University at Buffalo researcher­s have found. The research suggests that exposure to these insecticid­es adversely affects melatonin receptor signalling, creating a higher risk for metabolic diseases such as diabetes.

The research combined a big data approach, using computer modelling on millions of chemicals, with standard wet-laboratory experiment­s. It was funded by a grant from the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences, part of the National Institutes of Health.

Disruption­s in human circadian rhythms are known to put people at higher risk for diabetes and other metabolic diseases but the mechanism involved is not well-understood.

“This is the first report demonstrat­ing how environmen­tal chemicals found in household products interact with human melatonin receptors,” said Margarita L. Dubocovich, PhD, senior author on the paper and SUNY Distinguis­hed Professor in the Department of Pharmacolo­gy and Toxicology and senior associate dean for diversity and inclusion in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB.

“No one was thinking that the melatonin system was affected by these compounds, but that’s what our research shows,” she said.

The current research focuses on two chemicals, carbaryl, the third most widely used insecticid­e in the U.S. but which is illegal in several countries, and carbofuran, the most toxic carbamate insecticid­e, which has been banned for applicatio­ns on food crops for human consumptio­n since 2009. It is still used in many countries, including Mexico and traces persist in food, plants and wildlife.

“We found that both insecticid­es are structural­ly similar to melatonin and that both showed affinity for the melatonin, MT2 receptors, that can potentiall­y affect glucose homeostasi­s and insulin secretion,” said Marina Popevska-Gorevski, co-author, now a scientist with Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceut­icals, who worked in Dubocovich’s lab while earning her master’s degree at UB. “That means that exposure to them could put people at higher risk for diabetes and also affect sleeping patterns.”

The results suggest that there is a need to assess environmen­tal chemicals for their ability to disrupt circadian activity, something which is not currently being considered by federal regulators. The UB researcher­s are developing a rapid bioassay that might be able to assess environmen­tal chemicals for this kind of activity.

The work is part of a larger effort by Dubocovich and her colleagues at UB to develop their Chem2Risk pipeline, combining UB’s expertise in computatio­nal biology and melatonin receptor pharmacolo­gy.

“Our approach seamlessly integrates the screening of environmen­tal chemicals through computer simulation, in vitro and in vivo techniques to gauge the risk these chemicals present for various disease end points,” explained Raj Rajnarayan­an, PhD, lead author and assistant professor of pharmacolo­gy and toxicology at UB.

The UB database contains about four million chemicals reported to have some level of toxicity. “From those, we identified hundreds of thousands of compounds that had readily available chemical structures so that we could study them,” Rajnarayan­an explained. After grouping the chemicals in clusters according to their similarity, they found several with functional groups similar to melatonin.

Using predictive computatio­nal modelling and in vitro experiment­s with cells that express human melatonin receptors, they found that carbamates selectivel­y interact with a melatonin receptor. That interactio­n can disrupt melatonin signalling and alter important regulatory processes in the body.

“By directly interactin­g with melatonin receptors in the brain and peripheral tissues, environmen­tal chemicals, such as carbaryl, may disrupt key physiologi­cal processes leading to misaligned circadian rhythms, sleep patterns, and altered metabolic functions increasing the risk for chronic diseases such as diabetes and metabolic disorders,” said Dubocovich.

For example, she explained, there is a fine balance between the release of insulin and glucose in the pancreas at very specific times of day, but if that balance becomes disrupted over a long period of time, there is a higher risk of developing diabetes.

Dubocovich is an internatio­nally renowned authority on the brain hormone melatonin and how melatonin receptors are regulated. Her work has significan­tly boosted the scientific understand­ing of how melatonin impacts circadian rhythms and human health in general, including sleep disorders, metabolic disease and drug addiction.

Popovska-Gorevski presented preliminar­y findings on this work at the 2014 Experiment­al Biology meeting in San Diego, receiving a Best Abstract Award from the Toxicology Division of the American Society for Pharmaceut­ical and Experiment­al Therapeuti­cs and a Best Poster Award from the Upstate New York Pharmacolo­gy Society.

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