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Amatoxin Information

Amatoxins are a subgroup of at least eight toxic compounds found in several genera of poisonous mushrooms, most notably Amanita phalloides and several other members of the genus Amanita, as well as some Conocybe, Galerina and Lepiota mushroom species.

Contents

Structure

The compounds have a similar structure, that of eight amino-acid residues arranged in a conserved macrobicyclic motif (an overall pentacyclic structure when counting the rings inherent in the proline and tryptophan-derived residues); they were isolated in 1941 by Heinrich O. Wieland and Rudolf Hallermayer of the University of Munich.[1] All amatoxins are oligopeptides that are synthesized as 35-amino-acids-long proproteins, from which the final eight amino acids are cleaved by a prolyl oligopeptidase.[2]

The backbone structure (black) is the same in all the amatoxins and five variable groups (red) determine the specific compound.

There are currently ten known amatoxins:[3]

Name R1 R2 R3 R4 R5
α-Amanitin OH OH NH2 OH OH
β-Amanitin OH OH OH OH OH
γ-Amanitin H OH NH2 OH OH
ε-Amanitin H OH OH OH OH
Amanullin H H NH2 OH OH
Amanullinic acid H H OH OH OH
Amaninamide OH OH NH2 H OH
Amanin OH OH OH H OH
Proamanullin H H NH2 OH H

δ-Amanitin has been reported, but its chemical structure has not been determined.

Mechanism

Their major toxic mechanism is the inhibition of RNA polymerase II, a vital enzyme in the synthesis of messenger RNA (mRNA), microRNA, and small nuclear RNA (snRNA). Without mRNA, essential protein synthesis, and hence cell metabolism, grind to a halt and the cell dies.[4]

Clinical symptoms

The liver is the principal organ affected, as it is the organ which is first encountered after absorption in the gastrointestinal tract, though other organs, especially the kidneys, are susceptible.[5] The RNA polymerase of Amanita phalloides is insensitive to the effects of amatoxins; thus, the mushroom does not poison itself.[6]

The estimated minimum lethal dose is 0.1 mg/kg or 7 mg of toxin in adults. Their swift intestinal absorption coupled with their thermostability leads to rapid development of toxic effects in a relatively short period of time. The most severe effects are toxic hepatitis with centrolobular necrosis and hepatic steatosis, as well as acute tubulointerstitial nephropathy, which altogether induce a severe hepatorenal syndrome.

Treatment

Treatment involves high dose penicillin as well as supportive care in cases of hepatic and renal injury. Silibinin, a product found in milk thistle, is a potential antidote to amatoxin poisoning, although more data needs to be collected. Cautious attention is given to maintaining hemodynamic stability, although if hepatorenal syndrome has developed the prognosis is guarded at best.[7]

Detection

Presence of amatoxins in mushroom samples may be detected by the Meixner Test (also known as the Wieland Test). The amatoxins may be quantitated in plasma or urine using chromatographic techniques to confirm a diagnosis of poisoning in hospitalized patients and in postmortem tissues to aid in a medicolegal investigation of a suspected fatal overdosage.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Litten, W. (March 1975). "The most poisonous mushrooms". Scientific American 232 (3): 90–101. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0375-90. PMID 1114308.
  2. ^ H. E. Hallen, H. Luo, J. S. Scott-Craig, and J. D. Walton (2007). "Gene family encoding the major toxins of lethal Amanita mushrooms". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 104 (48): 19097–19101. doi:10.1073/pnas.0707340104. PMC 2141914. PMID 18025465. http://www.pnas.org/content/104/48/19097.long.
  3. ^ K. Baumann, K. Muenter, and H. Faulstich (1993). "Identification of structural features involved in binding of α-amanitin to a monoclonal antibody". Biochemistry 32 (15): 4043–4050. doi:10.1021/bi00066a027. PMID 8471612. http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bi00066a027.
  4. ^ Karlson-Stiber C, Persson H (2003). "Cytotoxic fungi - an overview". Toxicon 42 (4): 339–49. doi:10.1016/S0041-0101(03)00238-1. PMID 14505933.
  5. ^ Benjamin.p217
  6. ^ Horgen, Paul A.; Allan C. Vaisius and Joseph F. Ammirati (1978). "The insensitivity of mushroom nuclear RNA polymerase activity to inhibition by amatoxins". Archives of Microbiology 118 (3): 317–9. doi:10.1007/BF00429124. PMID 567964.
  7. ^ Piqueras J. (1989). "Hepatotoxic mushroom poisoning: diagnosis and management". Mycopathologia 105 (2): 99–110. PMID 2664527.
  8. ^ R. Baselt, Disposition of Toxic Drugs and Chemicals in Man, 8th edition, Biomedical Publications, Foster City, CA, 2008, pp. 52–54.
Poisoning from Amanitas
sect. Amanita
Species
Compounds
sect. Phalloidea
Species
Destroying angels
Other members
Compounds
Amatoxins
Phallotoxins
  • Phallacidin
  • Phallacin
  • Phallisacin
  • Phallisin
  • Phalloidin
  • Phalloin
  • Prophalloin
Other compounds
sect. Lepidella
Species
Compounds
  • Allenic norleucine (2-amino-4,5-hexadienoic acid)
  • Propargylglycine
sect. Validae
Species
Compounds
  • Rubescenslysin
Toxins (enterotoxin/neurotoxin/hemotoxin/cardiotoxin/phototoxin)
Bacterial toxins
Exotoxin
Gram positive
Bacilli

Clostridium: tetani (Tetanospasmin) · perfringens (Alpha toxin, Enterotoxin) · difficile (A, B) · botulinum (Botox)

other: Anthrax toxin · Listeriolysin O
Cocci Streptolysin · Leukocidin (Panton-Valentine leukocidin) · Staphylococcus (Staphylococcus aureus alpha/beta/delta, Exfoliatin, Toxic shock syndrome toxin, SEB)
Actinobacteria Cord factor · Diphtheria toxin
Gram negative Shiga toxin · Verotoxin/shiga-like toxin (E. coli) · E. coli heat-stable enterotoxin/enterotoxin · Cholera toxin · Pertussis toxin · Pseudomonas exotoxin · Extracellular adenylate cyclase
By mechanism type I (Superantigen) · type II (Pore forming toxins) · type III (AB toxin/AB5)
Endotoxin Lipopolysaccharide (Lipid A) · Bacillus thuringiensis delta endotoxin
Virulence factor Clumping factor A · Fibronectin binding protein A
Mycotoxins Aflatoxin · Amatoxin (alpha-amanitin, beta-amanitin, gamma-amanitin, epsilon-amanitin) · Citrinin · Cytochalasin · Ergotamine · Fumonisin (Fumonisin B1, Fumonisin B2) · Gliotoxin · Ibotenic acid · Muscimol · Ochratoxin · Patulin · Phalloidin · Sterigmatocystin · Trichothecene · Vomitoxin · Zeranol · Zearalenone
Invertebrates arthropod: scorpion: Charybdotoxin, Maurotoxin, Agitoxin, Margatoxin, Slotoxin, Scyllatoxin, Hefutoxin, Lq2, Birtoxin, Bestoxin, BmKAEP, Phaiodotoxin · spider: Latrotoxin (Alpha-latrotoxin) · Stromatoxin · PhTx3 mollusca: Conotoxin · Eledoisin · Onchidal · Saxitoxin · Tetrodotoxin
Vertebrates

fish: Ciguatera · Tetrodotoxin

amphibian: (+)-Allopumiliotoxin 267A · Batrachotoxin · Bufotoxins (Arenobufagin, Bufotalin, Bufotenin · Cinobufagin, Marinobufagin) · Epibatidine · Histrionicotoxin · Pumiliotoxin 251D · Tarichatoxin

reptile/snake venom: Bungarotoxin (Alpha-Bungarotoxin, Beta-Bungarotoxin) · Calciseptine · Taicatoxin · Calcicludine · Cardiotoxin III
note: some toxins are produced by lower species and pass through intermediate species

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