- Inhibition of acetylcholinesterase by metabolites of copper pyrithione (CuPT) and its possible involvement in vertebral deformity of a CuPT-exposed marine teleostean fish.
Inhibition of acetylcholinesterase by metabolites of copper pyrithione (CuPT) and its possible involvement in vertebral deformity of a CuPT-exposed marine teleostean fish.
In a previous study, we demonstrated that exposure to an antifouling biocide, copper pyrithione (CuPT), early during life induced vertebral deformity in the larvae of a marine fish, the mummichog (Fundulus heteroclitus). Skeletal deformities may be caused by inhibition by of acetylcholiensterase (AChE) activity, and to elucidate the mechanism underlying the CuPT-associated vertebral deformity, we first examined whether CuPT, zinc pyrithione (ZnPT), and their degradation products could inhibit AChE activity in the fish. Two of the degradation products, 2,2'-dipyridyldisulfide [(PS)(2)] and 2,2'-dithiobispyridine-N-oxide [(PT)(2)], but neither CuPT nor ZnPT, exhibited prominent AChE-inhibiting activity. Secondly, thin-layer chromatography revealed that mummichog hepatic microsomes metabolized CuPT to produce (PS)(2) in a microsome-dependent manner. The AChE inhibition induced in CuPT-exposed fish is likely due to (PS)(2) that was produced through metabolism of acquired CuPT. (PS)(2) may cause therefore skeletal deformity in CuPT-exposed fish by means of its neuromuscular blocking properties, through a mechanism similar to that proposed for animals exposed to organophosphorous pesticides.