Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 http://www.ewg.org/reports/autism/execsumm.php Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 14, 2004 Report Share Posted December 14, 2004 The implications of these findings extend well beyond thimerosal and autism. Reduced antioxidant defense may characterize a group of individuals who are demonstrably more sensitive to the effects of a range of toxic chemical exposures, and shed light on increasing rates of related learning and behavioral disorders. My son was a participant in the follow up studies, not autistic, yet had apraxia, major sensory issues, coordination problems, the nutritional interventions he was given/supplements, reversed all of his issues, this is a fact.So this goes way beyond just autism, a friends child with CAPD,ADD was also a participant and he too is now without any diagnosis of CAPD/ADD. Colleen > > http://www.ewg.org/reports/autism/execsumm.php > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2004 Report Share Posted December 27, 2004 Hello Everyone and Hello Colleen, This EWG report is astonishing and I am surprised that the list didn't go crazy over this very important finding which could affect all of us on this list. My impression is that we need a serious discussion of the report and its possible bearing on apraxia. The report -- like all the ground-breaking research -- centers on autism, but it states several times that it relates to other neurodevelopmental disorders. It sounds like it could provide THE KEY for the vast majority of our apraxic children. It explains so much -- the reason why so many kids with all kinds of neurodevelopmental learning disorders live in the same neighborhoods (for example, why three of the four children I know who were adopted from the same orphanage in Bethlehem all have neurodevelopmental learning disorders), why there has been such an explosion of neurodevelopmental learning disorders over the past decades, why so many neurodevelopmental learning disorders overlap and are co-morbid, why non-autistic children have been helped and sometimes cured through biomedical protocols designed for autistic children. I need no convincing -- I believe that in a great number of cases, the various disorders (the autism spectrum disorders, ADD/ADHD, apraxia, sensory issues, some forms of cerebral palsy, some forms of brain damage, some forms of microcephaly, etc.) are related and that the glutathione/heavy metal connection is central. I don't need to wait for the double-blind clinical trials to go out now and try this new glutathione and methylcobalamin S. Jill protocol. When Colleen says that her son was cured of his apraxia, sensory issues and coordination problems, that another child was cured of CAPD and ADD, we should all be clamoring to hear where we can sign up. This is INCREDIBLE, and if you read the report, all the " Aha! Yes! This is IT! " bells will go off in your head. At least for a great number of children suffering from these neurodevelopmental disorders. No, not all, but just very possibly a majority. Colleen, is there any way that we can get from you the protocol that Dr. followed? I want to know just what she did in the follow- up study your son paricipated in. There is a little bit of information in the last appendix of the 2004 second edition of Children with Starving Brains by McCandless, but not really enough to show to a doctor and say " Do this, please. " I'm particularly interested in getting the protocol because I live in the Netherlands now and have to basically " teach " a willing doctor here what to do. How many parents on this list have followed a DAN! protocol for their non-autistic child? How many have had their child tested for heavy metal poisoning -- with a hair strand test AND a pre- and post- challenge urine test (challenge with a chelator)? How many have chelated their children? How many have read the autism or ADHD biomedical literature even though their child is nowhere near autistic or ADHD? There will of course be different issues for different kids and different disorders, but if the biomedical protocol involves evaluation and testing first and only then treating and healing as indicated by the tests, then it can be as individual as you need it to be. And maybe that's why some children respond immediately to ProEFA, and others don't. Other unresolved issues get in the way of the ProEFA, or detract from what it could be doing. Okay, I hope that everyone's holidays were and will be fantastic. I just really want to talk about all this, because it could actually hold out hope for my beloved Lulu (who turned 2 years old yesterday and began making cow, rooster and cat sounds for the first time -- yippee! Yes, they all sound kind of the same, but we and she know they're not). Lots of love to you and all your children, Theresa -- In , " deverelementary " <kearneysix@a...> wrote: > > > The implications of these findings extend well beyond thimerosal and > autism. Reduced antioxidant defense may characterize a group of > individuals who are demonstrably more sensitive to the effects of a > range of toxic chemical exposures, and shed light on increasing rates > of related learning and behavioral disorders. > > > My son was a participant in the follow up studies, not autistic, yet > had apraxia, major sensory issues, coordination problems, the > nutritional interventions he was given/supplements, reversed all of > his issues, this is a fact.So this goes way beyond just autism, a > friends child with CAPD,ADD was also a participant and he too is now > without any diagnosis of CAPD/ADD. > > Colleen > > > > http://www.ewg.org/reports/autism/execsumm.php > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2004 Report Share Posted December 27, 2004 I would also be very appreciative of this information ,I finally have a ped that is " somewhat " openminded perhaps this will persuade her.All four of my kids are on the gfcfsf diet and take NN compete.2 have ASD,1 probably add,and the baby at 8 months was showing some asd traits and had little verbal skills.3 of the are doing really ,really well.The baby now 19 months talks in 3 and 4 word sentences and is sleeping much better,he also has had no vaccs since 4 months of age,If I can find a safe way to get him immunized I will ,until then,no way.This was one reason I fired my last ped,she had no time to discuss biomedical issues but would spend 20 minutes trying to pressure me into vaccinating my baby.On my last visit with her I said sure,give him the shots and since they are so safe sign that you will be financially responsible for him if he becomes autistic,funny,she did not want to sign it Also a Theresa [ ] Re:EWG Report ---- Autism report news release 12.13.04 Hello Everyone and Hello Colleen, This EWG report is astonishing and I am surprised that the list didn't go crazy over this very important finding which could affect all of us on this list. My impression is that we need a serious discussion of the report and its possible bearing on apraxia. The report -- like all the ground-breaking research -- centers on autism, but it states several times that it relates to other neurodevelopmental disorders. It sounds like it could provide THE KEY for the vast majority of our apraxic children. It explains so much -- the reason why so many kids with all kinds of neurodevelopmental learning disorders live in the same neighborhoods (for example, why three of the four children I know who were adopted from the same orphanage in Bethlehem all have neurodevelopmental learning disorders), why there has been such an explosion of neurodevelopmental learning disorders over the past decades, why so many neurodevelopmental learning disorders overlap and are co-morbid, why non-autistic children have been helped and sometimes cured through biomedical protocols designed for autistic children. I need no convincing -- I believe that in a great number of cases, the various disorders (the autism spectrum disorders, ADD/ADHD, apraxia, sensory issues, some forms of cerebral palsy, some forms of brain damage, some forms of microcephaly, etc.) are related and that the glutathione/heavy metal connection is central. I don't need to wait for the double-blind clinical trials to go out now and try this new glutathione and methylcobalamin S. Jill protocol. When Colleen says that her son was cured of his apraxia, sensory issues and coordination problems, that another child was cured of CAPD and ADD, we should all be clamoring to hear where we can sign up. This is INCREDIBLE, and if you read the report, all the " Aha! Yes! This is IT! " bells will go off in your head. At least for a great number of children suffering from these neurodevelopmental disorders. No, not all, but just very possibly a majority. Colleen, is there any way that we can get from you the protocol that Dr. followed? I want to know just what she did in the follow- up study your son paricipated in. There is a little bit of information in the last appendix of the 2004 second edition of Children with Starving Brains by McCandless, but not really enough to show to a doctor and say " Do this, please. " I'm particularly interested in getting the protocol because I live in the Netherlands now and have to basically " teach " a willing doctor here what to do. How many parents on this list have followed a DAN! protocol for their non-autistic child? How many have had their child tested for heavy metal poisoning -- with a hair strand test AND a pre- and post- challenge urine test (challenge with a chelator)? How many have chelated their children? How many have read the autism or ADHD biomedical literature even though their child is nowhere near autistic or ADHD? There will of course be different issues for different kids and different disorders, but if the biomedical protocol involves evaluation and testing first and only then treating and healing as indicated by the tests, then it can be as individual as you need it to be. And maybe that's why some children respond immediately to ProEFA, and others don't. Other unresolved issues get in the way of the ProEFA, or detract from what it could be doing. Okay, I hope that everyone's holidays were and will be fantastic. I just really want to talk about all this, because it could actually hold out hope for my beloved Lulu (who turned 2 years old yesterday and began making cow, rooster and cat sounds for the first time -- yippee! Yes, they all sound kind of the same, but we and she know they're not). Lots of love to you and all your children, Theresa -- In , " deverelementary " <kearneysix@a...> wrote: > > > The implications of these findings extend well beyond thimerosal and > autism. Reduced antioxidant defense may characterize a group of > individuals who are demonstrably more sensitive to the effects of a > range of toxic chemical exposures, and shed light on increasing rates > of related learning and behavioral disorders. > > > My son was a participant in the follow up studies, not autistic, yet > had apraxia, major sensory issues, coordination problems, the > nutritional interventions he was given/supplements, reversed all of > his issues, this is a fact.So this goes way beyond just autism, a > friends child with CAPD,ADD was also a participant and he too is now > without any diagnosis of CAPD/ADD. > > Colleen > > > > http://www.ewg.org/reports/autism/execsumm.php > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2004 Report Share Posted December 27, 2004 > > Colleen, is there any way that we can get from you the protocol that > Dr. followed? I want to know just what she did in the follow- > up study your son paricipated in. There is a little bit of > information in the last appendix of the 2004 second edition of > Children with Starving Brains by McCandless, but not > really enough to show to a doctor and say " Do this, please. " I'm > particularly interested in getting the protocol because I live > in the Netherlands now and have to basically " teach " a willing doctor > here what to do. Theresa, No problem, strict gf/cf/soyfree/preservative,egg,chocolate,corn, corn syrup,peanut,sugar, color/dye free,fluoride free for one month, second month begin nutritional supplements: Nuthera 2 capsules a day one am one pm TMG one am one pm Folinic Acid(folinic NOT folic) two capsules a day one am one pm The above are the supplements to drastically increase glutathione (MAJOR anti-oxidant in the body, boys have less than females, illness lowers it, so do environmental assaults ie,vaccines, car exhaust,pesticides in foods, etc) Diet wise second month challenge foods, sugar in excess for a day, watch for reactions,reactions may last as long as 3 days, ANY change is significant, looser stools,firmer stools, sleepy,hyper, red eyes,red ears,behavior. If no reaction challenge another food, say dyes, give kool aid in excess, the mix you make with regular sugar one food item you already challenged and had no reaction to.Wait 3 days, then do say, preservatives, let them eat a hot dog that has preservatives(major offender BHT, MSG) Once you are aware of what causes issues, you just don't let them eat it, meanwhile still gf/cf. As time goes on and body/heatlh is improving, a little skittles here or there, or starburst is ok. Major to the improvements is getting bowel movements daily, we were told to use:(42 pound 6 year old) Magnessium citrate one teaspoon daily (1/2 am 1/2 pm) Zinc one teaspoon daily at bedtime (away from food, doesn't absorb well w/food in stomach. ProEFA 3 caps daily, on it's own Month 3 we added methyl b 12 every other day, steady balance/coordintaion improvements the longer we gave this beynd the 3 month study dictates. N-AC was added to the mix in month 4 huge nurturing/affctionate skills came with this one, reading ability skyrocketed, major handwriting improvements/neatness/speed.Teacher told me at last parent teacher conference (November, he is way ahead of the other children (mainstream 1st grade, no IEP, no speech, no OT/PT)in all areas, reading, spelling, math. I was speechless, but had noticed it all at home with his ability to read his sisters pleasure books, Lemony snickets series.) Teacher said, he is ALWAYS focused and in tune, she said she wished the whole class would do what he is doing. Turn the clock back one year ago, he was crying in class,unable to pronounce letters, or sounds of them, chewing his clothing,(came home many a day with missing shirt buttons), sppech therapy twice a weeek, one step foward two backwards. no consistancy with progress, same as for PT/OT, one day ability was there, the next day gone. Consistantly inconsistant. We are still in the study, and as mentioned above it is what we are doing, now in the process, of cutting down on the m b12, to see what his right fit is, it is not a deficiency of b12 that drives this, it is the inablity of the body to use the form it has, so more of a dependancy of mb12, so we are trying to find his lowest dose of need, and on we go.. Just a point of note, DIET is major here, you really can't do one without the other, it is a sensitivity issue, any inflammation impedes the nutritional uptake of what the child needs, and the most common offenders are gluten/casein.The immune system is totally regulated in the gut, it is where glutathione is formed with the liver/intestines/stomach being the sources of this process. The things she measured that would indicate reduced ability to detox would be a low methionine level, low homocysteine, low cysteine level.these numbers were accross the board with AD/ADHD, autism, CAPD the numbers were not any different among the children, the only thing different was the childs response to these numbers, they are all affected differently. She did a thiol profile, which measures other detox pathways in the body, I believe there are six pathways she tested for, but the most prevalent, (which is according to researchers, about 40% of caucasions)is the MTHFR gene, some of the others she tested came in around 20-30% some only 10-15% so that is what McCAndeles mentions is the appendix of children with starving brains, most common and TMG/Folinic/Mb12 does the trick.Unfortunately Jill lab is the only lab in the country doing the blood testing, at this point. Being homozygous for MTHFR you have a 60 % reduced ability to detox toxins, heterozygous a 30% reduced ability, we are heterozygous all 6 of us at our household.And my son (I have 3 girls also) is the only one that has had a problem, I do see some things in my girls but not affecting them cognitively, and my youngest wont be getting anymore vaccines, just to be on the safe side. I have sent 9 people to get tested(not related to me in anyway) and all 9 are positive, and they all have kids that have various issues, CAPD, AD/ADHD, speech disorders, PDD, autism.And their kids are all positive also, so pretty statistically significant if you are a numbers person. One thing to note, a starting point bllod work wise, my son's blood was the only one from our house that was sent to Jill because of his cognitive issues, doctor sent our bloods to regular lab, for Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductse (MTHFR) Homocysteine, serum b12, rbc folate b6 As far as brand of supplements for the study, they were all Kirkmans, and Proefa was Nordic Naturals. Not pushing any Kirkmans products but was part of the study for research purposes, no variables. So, Theresa, that is most of it in a LONG nut shell, I hope this helps you get to where we are, and you are way ahead of the game, she is sooooo young, the younger the better.Good luck, and e-mail me when ever you have any questions, be so glad to help if I can, the results are amazing to say the least. Colleen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2004 Report Share Posted December 28, 2004 Colleen, Thank you for posting this,I have been trying to find this specific info for awhile.May I ask you a few more questions?What did you use to replace the sugar?Are multi-vits ok in month 1?Like polyvisol.Also if you were or are doing yeast/and or viral treatments do you stop?And lastly do you have to get a script for the b-12?Where is it recommended to obtain it?Did you also use the lipo/gsh everyone is so pleased with. Thank you so much also a theresa but not same you replied to mom to 5 2 asd [ ] Re:EWG Report ---- Autism report news release 12.13.04 > > Colleen, is there any way that we can get from you the protocol that > Dr. followed? I want to know just what she did in the follow- > up study your son paricipated in. There is a little bit of > information in the last appendix of the 2004 second edition of > Children with Starving Brains by McCandless, but not > really enough to show to a doctor and say " Do this, please. " I'm > particularly interested in getting the protocol because I live > in the Netherlands now and have to basically " teach " a willing doctor > here what to do. Theresa, No problem, strict gf/cf/soyfree/preservative,egg,chocolate,corn, corn syrup,peanut,sugar, color/dye free,fluoride free for one month, second month begin nutritional supplements: Nuthera 2 capsules a day one am one pm TMG one am one pm Folinic Acid(folinic NOT folic) two capsules a day one am one pm The above are the supplements to drastically increase glutathione (MAJOR anti-oxidant in the body, boys have less than females, illness lowers it, so do environmental assaults ie,vaccines, car exhaust,pesticides in foods, etc) Diet wise second month challenge foods, sugar in excess for a day, watch for reactions,reactions may last as long as 3 days, ANY change is significant, looser stools,firmer stools, sleepy,hyper, red eyes,red ears,behavior. If no reaction challenge another food, say dyes, give kool aid in excess, the mix you make with regular sugar one food item you already challenged and had no reaction to.Wait 3 days, then do say, preservatives, let them eat a hot dog that has preservatives(major offender BHT, MSG) Once you are aware of what causes issues, you just don't let them eat it, meanwhile still gf/cf. As time goes on and body/heatlh is improving, a little skittles here or there, or starburst is ok. Major to the improvements is getting bowel movements daily, we were told to use:(42 pound 6 year old) Magnessium citrate one teaspoon daily (1/2 am 1/2 pm) Zinc one teaspoon daily at bedtime (away from food, doesn't absorb well w/food in stomach. ProEFA 3 caps daily, on it's own Month 3 we added methyl b 12 every other day, steady balance/coordintaion improvements the longer we gave this beynd the 3 month study dictates. N-AC was added to the mix in month 4 huge nurturing/affctionate skills came with this one, reading ability skyrocketed, major handwriting improvements/neatness/speed.Teacher told me at last parent teacher conference (November, he is way ahead of the other children (mainstream 1st grade, no IEP, no speech, no OT/PT)in all areas, reading, spelling, math. I was speechless, but had noticed it all at home with his ability to read his sisters pleasure books, Lemony snickets series.) Teacher said, he is ALWAYS focused and in tune, she said she wished the whole class would do what he is doing. Turn the clock back one year ago, he was crying in class,unable to pronounce letters, or sounds of them, chewing his clothing,(came home many a day with missing shirt buttons), sppech therapy twice a weeek, one step foward two backwards. no consistancy with progress, same as for PT/OT, one day ability was there, the next day gone. Consistantly inconsistant. We are still in the study, and as mentioned above it is what we are doing, now in the process, of cutting down on the m b12, to see what his right fit is, it is not a deficiency of b12 that drives this, it is the inablity of the body to use the form it has, so more of a dependancy of mb12, so we are trying to find his lowest dose of need, and on we go.. Just a point of note, DIET is major here, you really can't do one without the other, it is a sensitivity issue, any inflammation impedes the nutritional uptake of what the child needs, and the most common offenders are gluten/casein.The immune system is totally regulated in the gut, it is where glutathione is formed with the liver/intestines/stomach being the sources of this process. The things she measured that would indicate reduced ability to detox would be a low methionine level, low homocysteine, low cysteine level.these numbers were accross the board with AD/ADHD, autism, CAPD the numbers were not any different among the children, the only thing different was the childs response to these numbers, they are all affected differently. She did a thiol profile, which measures other detox pathways in the body, I believe there are six pathways she tested for, but the most prevalent, (which is according to researchers, about 40% of caucasions)is the MTHFR gene, some of the others she tested came in around 20-30% some only 10-15% so that is what McCAndeles mentions is the appendix of children with starving brains, most common and TMG/Folinic/Mb12 does the trick.Unfortunately Jill lab is the only lab in the country doing the blood testing, at this point. Being homozygous for MTHFR you have a 60 % reduced ability to detox toxins, heterozygous a 30% reduced ability, we are heterozygous all 6 of us at our household.And my son (I have 3 girls also) is the only one that has had a problem, I do see some things in my girls but not affecting them cognitively, and my youngest wont be getting anymore vaccines, just to be on the safe side. I have sent 9 people to get tested(not related to me in anyway) and all 9 are positive, and they all have kids that have various issues, CAPD, AD/ADHD, speech disorders, PDD, autism.And their kids are all positive also, so pretty statistically significant if you are a numbers person. One thing to note, a starting point bllod work wise, my son's blood was the only one from our house that was sent to Jill because of his cognitive issues, doctor sent our bloods to regular lab, for Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductse (MTHFR) Homocysteine, serum b12, rbc folate b6 As far as brand of supplements for the study, they were all Kirkmans, and Proefa was Nordic Naturals. Not pushing any Kirkmans products but was part of the study for research purposes, no variables. So, Theresa, that is most of it in a LONG nut shell, I hope this helps you get to where we are, and you are way ahead of the game, she is sooooo young, the younger the better.Good luck, and e-mail me when ever you have any questions, be so glad to help if I can, the results are amazing to say the least. Colleen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2004 Report Share Posted December 28, 2004 Colleen, Thanks so much for posting this information! Did you supplement methyl b12 orally or through injections? Dina In a message dated 12/28/2004 1:24:03 PM Eastern Standard Time, writes: Month 3 we added methyl b 12 every other day Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2004 Report Share Posted December 29, 2004 Colleen and Everyone, Thanks so fantastically much for this! I'm going to digest it all and will probably ask some clarifying questions based on what I know from the Children with Starving Brains book, which basically sets out what Binstock told me was a " middle of the road " DAN! protocol. I know, for example, that testing and evaluation is important, so I will want to know if the tests you included hee are the only tests that were run, rather than all the standard ones first, etc. As a frist reaction, how did you implement this diet? Wow, I have tons of work to do just to get started on it! I've been figuring out how to implement the GF/CF, but to add soy, egg and corn to the banned list takes away many of my substitute foods! Anyone know of an asian cookbook for kids? But I am in jest -- we will figure it all out, not to worry -- I'm just venting in a vaguely humorous way! Do you know if there is a way for me to get more information on the S Jill study you are part of, other articles by her, contact information for her? I would very much like the docotor (and associated laboratory - the European Laboratory of Nutrients) we have contacted here and who has attended several DAN! conferences in the US to contact her about this. Perhaps she can give us more information for our docotors here on the protocol for the study you are with. Can you tell me or point me to infomration on what the working hypothesis of the study you're with is, why it included non-autistic children, etc? Is this a published clinical trial or something? If so, there is probably a website that announces it. Anything you can give me would be great as I must get most of my info through the internet. I am still in a transition period and will hopefully be moving today into our temporary housing today (3 months) as we await our furniture's arrival by ship. It MAY take me several days to get online again, I just don't know. Please bear with my silence if I don't respond immediately. I am very excited about this and feel very strongly that it could help us. I hope that others will try it, too. Much love and peace to all of you and Happy New Year, Theresa Colleen, is Message: 6 Date: Tue, 28 Dec 2004 05:56:28 -0000 From: " deverelementary " Subject: Re:EWG Report ---- Autism report news release 12.13.04 Theresa, No problem, strict gf/cf/soyfree/preservative,egg,chocolate,corn, corn syrup,peanut,sugar, color/dye free,fluoride free for one month, second month begin nutritional supplements: Nuthera 2 capsules a day one am one pm TMG one am one pm Folinic Acid(folinic NOT folic) two capsules a day one am one pm The above are the supplements to drastically increase glutathione (MAJOR anti-oxidant in the body, boys have less than females, illness lowers it, so do environmental assaults ie,vaccines, car exhaust,pesticides in foods, etc) Diet wise second month challenge foods, sugar in excess for a day, watch for reactions,reactions may last as long as 3 days, ANY change is significant, looser stools,firmer stools, sleepy,hyper, red eyes,red ears,behavior. If no reaction challenge another food, say dyes, give kool aid in excess, the mix you make with regular sugar one food item you already challenged and had no reaction to.Wait 3 days, then do say, preservatives, let them eat a hot dog that has preservatives(major offender BHT, MSG) Once you are aware of what causes issues, you just don't let them eat it, meanwhile still gf/cf. As time goes on and body/heatlh is improving, a little skittles here or there, or starburst is ok. Major to the improvements is getting bowel movements daily, we were told to use:(42 pound 6 year old) Magnessium citrate one teaspoon daily (1/2 am 1/2 pm) Zinc one teaspoon daily at bedtime (away from food, doesn't absorb well w/food in stomach. ProEFA 3 caps daily, on it's own Month 3 we added methyl b 12 every other day, steady balance/coordintaion improvements the longer we gave this beynd the 3 month study dictates. N-AC was added to the mix in month 4 huge nurturing/affctionate skills came with this one, reading ability skyrocketed, major handwriting improvements/neatness/speed.Teacher told me at last parent teacher conference (November, he is way ahead of the other children (mainstream 1st grade, no IEP, no speech, no OT/PT)in all areas, reading, spelling, math. I was speechless, but had noticed it all at home with his ability to read his sisters pleasure books, Lemony snickets series.) Teacher said, he is ALWAYS focused and in tune, she said she wished the whole class would do what he is doing. Turn the clock back one year ago, he was crying in class,unable to pronounce letters, or sounds of them, chewing his clothing,(came home many a day with missing shirt buttons), sppech therapy twice a weeek, one step foward two backwards. no consistancy with progress, same as for PT/OT, one day ability was there, the next day gone. Consistantly inconsistant. We are still in the study, and as mentioned above it is what we are doing, now in the process, of cutting down on the m b12, to see what his right fit is, it is not a deficiency of b12 that drives this, it is the inablity of the body to use the form it has, so more of a dependancy of mb12, so we are trying to find his lowest dose of need, and on we go.. Just a point of note, DIET is major here, you really can't do one without the other, it is a sensitivity issue, any inflammation impedes the nutritional uptake of what the child needs, and the most common offenders are gluten/casein.The immune system is totally regulated in the gut, it is where glutathione is formed with the liver/intestines/stomach being the sources of this process. The things she measured that would indicate reduced ability to detox would be a low methionine level, low homocysteine, low cysteine level.these numbers were accross the board with AD/ADHD, autism, CAPD the numbers were not any different among the children, the only thing different was the childs response to these numbers, they are all affected differently. She did a thiol profile, which measures other detox pathways in the body, I believe there are six pathways she tested for, but the most prevalent, (which is according to researchers, about 40% of caucasions)is the MTHFR gene, some of the others she tested came in around 20-30% some only 10-15% so that is what McCAndeles mentions is the appendix of children with starving brains, most common and TMG/Folinic/Mb12 does the trick.Unfortunately Jill lab is the only lab in the country doing the blood testing, at this point. Being homozygous for MTHFR you have a 60 % reduced ability to detox toxins, heterozygous a 30% reduced ability, we are heterozygous all 6 of us at our household.And my son (I have 3 girls also) is the only one that has had a problem, I do see some things in my girls but not affecting them cognitively, and my youngest wont be getting anymore vaccines, just to be on the safe side. I have sent 9 people to get tested(not related to me in anyway) and all 9 are positive, and they all have kids that have various issues, CAPD, AD/ADHD, speech disorders, PDD, autism.And their kids are all positive also, so pretty statistically significant if you are a numbers person. One thing to note, a starting point bllod work wise, my son's blood was the only one from our house that was sent to Jill because of his cognitive issues, doctor sent our bloods to regular lab, for Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductse (MTHFR) Homocysteine, serum b12, rbc folate b6 As far as brand of supplements for the study, they were all Kirkmans, and Proefa was Nordic Naturals. Not pushing any Kirkmans products but was part of the study for research purposes, no variables. So, Theresa, that is most of it in a LONG nut shell, I hope this helps you get to where we are, and you are way ahead of the game, she is sooooo young, the younger the better.Good luck, and e-mail me when ever you have any questions, be so glad to help if I can, the results are amazing to say the least. Colleen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2004 Report Share Posted December 29, 2004 Theresa, We never had viral issues,Thank god, nor yeast, if we did have yeast it was a minor player, others however have major yeast/viral issues, I know of one child that has a latent rubella virus in her brain(humm how did that get there, yes she had all her vaccines on time)As for sugar replacements, pure maple syrup*the expensive stuff), or honey is ok,I also used pure maple sugar, sold at Whole foods, my son is/wasn't a sugarholic so I used it infrequently. I would guess any multi vit is ok, anything w/o sugar or dyes,we used no multi at all the first month, but we had to follow the trial. and definitelly NO FLOURIDE< of any shape or form, not in drops or toothpaste. Remember flouride is a metal, and if someone can't get rid of metals, (like my son) fluoride will go right to to bones, (fluorosis).Our (remember it is methyl b12 not hydro or cynocobalamin) there is a difference. ) was an injection as part of the protocol. We got ours from ped allergist/immunologist, And it is a script item, however many others have had really good results with the sublingual mb12, Thorne research has a TMG/Folinic/mb12 supplement can be ordered on line, also kirkmans carries a product also. As far as the lipo/gsh, we never needed it, his glutathione numbers went up with the tmg/folinic/mb12, so I can't say one way or the other, but others use it and see really good things with it.Hope this helps Colleen > > > > Colleen, is there any way that we can get from you the protocol > that > > Dr. followed? I want to know just what she did in the follow- > > up study your son paricipated in. There is a little bit of > > information in the last appendix of the 2004 second edition of > > Children with Starving Brains by McCandless, but not > > really enough to show to a doctor and say " Do this, please. " I'm > > particularly interested in getting the protocol because I > live > > in the Netherlands now and have to basically " teach " a willing > doctor > > here what to do. > > > Theresa, > > No problem, strict gf/cf/soyfree/preservative,egg,chocolate,corn, > corn syrup,peanut,sugar, color/dye free,fluoride free for one month, > second month begin nutritional supplements: > Nuthera 2 capsules a day one am one pm > TMG one am one pm > Folinic Acid(folinic NOT folic) two capsules a day one am one pm > The above are the supplements to drastically increase glutathione > (MAJOR anti-oxidant in the body, boys have less than females, illness > lowers it, so do environmental assaults ie,vaccines, car > exhaust,pesticides in foods, etc) > > Diet wise second month challenge foods, sugar in excess for a day, > watch for reactions,reactions may last as long as 3 days, ANY change > is significant, looser stools,firmer stools, sleepy,hyper, red > eyes,red ears,behavior. > > If no reaction challenge another food, say dyes, give kool aid in > excess, the mix you make with regular sugar one food item you already > challenged and had no reaction to.Wait 3 days, then do say, > preservatives, let them eat a hot dog that has preservatives (major > offender BHT, MSG) > > Once you are aware of what causes issues, you just don't let them eat > it, meanwhile still gf/cf. As time goes on and body/heatlh is > improving, a little skittles here or there, or starburst is ok. > Major to the improvements is getting bowel movements daily, we were > told to use:(42 pound 6 year old) > Magnessium citrate one teaspoon daily (1/2 am 1/2 pm) > Zinc one teaspoon daily at bedtime (away from food, doesn't absorb > well w/food in stomach. > ProEFA 3 caps daily, on it's own > > Month 3 we added methyl b 12 every other day, steady > balance/coordintaion improvements the longer we gave this beynd the 3 > month study dictates. > N-AC was added to the mix in month 4 huge nurturing/affctionate > skills came with this one, reading ability skyrocketed, major > handwriting improvements/neatness/speed.Teacher told me at last > parent teacher conference (November, he is way ahead of the other > children (mainstream 1st grade, no IEP, no speech, no OT/PT)in all > areas, reading, spelling, math. I was speechless, but had noticed it > all at home with his ability to read his sisters pleasure books, > Lemony snickets series.) > > Teacher said, he is ALWAYS focused and in tune, she said she wished > the whole class would do what he is doing. > Turn the clock back one year ago, he was crying in class,unable to > pronounce letters, or sounds of them, chewing his clothing,(came home > many a day with missing shirt buttons), sppech therapy twice a weeek, > one step foward two backwards. no consistancy with progress, same as > for PT/OT, one day ability was there, the next day gone. Consistantly > inconsistant. > > We are still in the study, and as mentioned above it is what we are > doing, now in the process, of cutting down on the m b12, to see what > his right fit is, it is not a deficiency of b12 that drives this, it > is the inablity of the body to use the form it has, so more of a > dependancy of mb12, so we are trying to find his lowest dose of need, > and on we go.. > > Just a point of note, DIET is major here, you really can't do one > without the other, it is a sensitivity issue, any inflammation > impedes the nutritional uptake of what the child needs, and the most > common offenders are gluten/casein.The immune system is totally > regulated in the gut, it is where glutathione is formed with the > liver/intestines/stomach being the sources of this process. > > The things she measured that would indicate reduced ability to detox > would be a low methionine level, low homocysteine, low cysteine > level.these numbers were accross the board with AD/ADHD, autism, CAPD > the numbers were not any different among the children, the only thing > different was the childs response to these numbers, they are all > affected differently. > > She did a thiol profile, which measures other detox pathways in the > body, I believe there are six pathways she tested for, but the most > prevalent, (which is according to researchers, about 40% of > caucasions)is the MTHFR gene, some of the others she tested came in > around 20-30% some only 10-15% so that is what McCAndeles mentions is > the appendix of children with starving brains, most common and > TMG/Folinic/Mb12 does the trick.Unfortunately Jill lab is the > only lab in the country doing the blood testing, at this point. > > Being homozygous for MTHFR you have a 60 % reduced ability to detox > toxins, heterozygous a 30% reduced ability, we are heterozygous all 6 > of us at our household.And my son (I have 3 girls also) is the only > one that has had a problem, I do see some things in my girls but not > affecting them cognitively, and my youngest wont be getting anymore > vaccines, just to be on the safe side. > > I have sent 9 people to get tested(not related to me in anyway) and > all 9 are positive, and they all have kids that have various issues, > CAPD, AD/ADHD, speech disorders, PDD, autism.And their kids are all > positive also, so pretty statistically significant if you are a > numbers person. > > One thing to note, a starting point bllod work wise, my son's blood > was the only one from our house that was sent to Jill because > of his cognitive issues, doctor sent our bloods to regular lab, for > > Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductse (MTHFR) > Homocysteine, > serum b12, > rbc folate > b6 > > > As far as brand of supplements for the study, they were all Kirkmans, > and Proefa was Nordic Naturals. Not pushing any Kirkmans products but > was part of the study for research purposes, no variables. > > So, Theresa, that is most of it in a LONG nut shell, I hope this > helps you get to where we are, and you are way ahead of the game, she > is sooooo young, the younger the better.Good luck, and e-mail me when > ever you have any questions, be so glad to help if I can, the results > are amazing to say the least. > > Colleen > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2004 Report Share Posted December 29, 2004 Theresa: I agree with you, the EWG report seems remarkable. How we can find out more about the protocol that Dr. followed. It would be completely amazing, not short of a miracle if our children could be cured of apraxia... Does anyone in our group have more information regarding this EWG report and the protocol? I'm up for discussion on this important issue. G.-- Do you have any insight regarding the EWG Report and the protocol? What are your thoughts? Thanks, , Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2004 Report Share Posted December 29, 2004 To All: This is the journal article as it appeared in the Journal of Neurotoxicology, study by Jill et al. 1 of 18 NeuroToxicology Volume 26, Issue 1 , January 2005, Pages 1-8 This Document SummaryPlus Full Text + Links ·Full Size Images PDF (293 K) Actions E-mail Article doi:10.1016/j.neuro.2004.07.012 Copyright © 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Thimerosal Neurotoxicity is Associated with Glutathione Depletion: Protection with Glutathione Precursors S.J. 1, , , Slikker III2, Stepan Melnyk1, New2, Marta Pogribna2 and Stefanie Jernigan1 1Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute, Little Rock, AR 72202, USA 2Division of Biochemical Toxicology, National Center for Toxicological Research, Jefferson, AR 72079, USA Received 24 May 2004; accepted 28 July 2004. Available online 29 September 2004. Abstract Thimerosol is an antiseptic containing 49.5% ethyl mercury that has been used for years as a preservative in many infant vaccines and in flu vaccines. Environmental methyl mercury has been shown to be highly neurotoxic, especially to the developing brain. Because mercury has a high affinity for thiol (sulfhydryl (SH)) groups, the thiol-containing antioxidant, glutathione (GSH), provides the major intracellular defense against mercury-induced neurotoxicity. Cultured neuroblastoma cells were found to have lower levels of GSH and increased sensitivity to thimerosol toxicity compared to glioblastoma cells that have higher basal levels of intracellular GSH. Thimerosal- induced cytotoxicity was associated with depletion of intracellular GSH in both cell lines. Pretreatment with 100 & #956;M glutathione ethyl ester or N-acetylcysteine (NAC), but not methionine, resulted in a significant increase in intracellular GSH in both cell types. Further, pretreatment of the cells with glutathione ethyl ester or NAC prevented cytotoxicity with exposure to 15 & #956;M Thimerosal. Although Thimerosal has been recently removed from most children's vaccines, it is still present in flu vaccines given to pregnant women, the elderly, and to children in developing countries. The potential protective effect of GSH or NAC against mercury toxicity warrants further research as possible adjunct therapy to individuals still receiving Thimerosal-containing vaccinations. Keywords: Thimerosal; Neurotoxicity; Glutathione; N-acetylcysteine Article Outline INTRODUCTION MATERIALS AND METHODS Materials Cell Culture Cell Viability Assays Nutrient Supplementation Studies HPLC Sample Preparation HPLC with Coulometric Electrochemical Detection Statistics RESULTS Dose–Response Characteristics of Thimerosal in Glioblastoma and Neuroblastoma Cells Neuroprotective Effect of N-Acetylcysteine, Cystine, and Glutathione Ethyl Ester Glioblastoma Cells Neuroblastoma Cells Glutathione Depletion with Thimerosal Exposure: Preservation of Intracellular GSH with Nutritional Supplementation DISCUSSION References INTRODUCTION Thimerosal (sodium ethylmercurithiosalicylate) was developed by Eli Lilly in the 1930s as a effective bacteriostatic and fungistatic preservative and has been widely used in multidose vials of vaccines and in ophthalmic, otic, nasal, and topical products. Until the removal of Thimerosal from most pediatric vaccines in 2001, the largest human exposure in the US ( & #956;g/kg body weight) was in children under 18 months of age undergoing routine childhood immunization schedules. Prior to 2001, a child may have received a cumulative dose of over 200 & #956;g/kg in the first 18 months of life (Ball et al., 2001). Although the neurotoxicity of methyl mercury has been relatively well studied, limited information is available on the relative neurodevelopmental toxicity of ethylmercury, the mercury metabolite of Thimerosal. Based on the known toxicity of methylmercury, the cumulative ethylmercury exposure to US pediatric populations in Thimerosal-containing vaccinations was re-examined in 1999 and found to exceed EPA recommended guidelines (Ball et al., 2001). Following recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the US Public Health Service (Public Health Service, 1999), Thimerosal was subsequently removed as a preservative from most children's vaccines in the US. However, influenza vaccines and Rho D immunoglobulin shots containing Thimerosal are still recommended to pregnant women, and many vaccines given to children in developing countries still contain Thimerosal. The present study was undertaken to better understand the mechanisms underlying Thimerosal toxicity to neurons and astrocytes, the primary CNS targets for organic mercury (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). A better understanding of the neurotoxic mechanism is a necessary prerequisite for the design of intervention strategies for prevention and for the identification of genetic variants that could increase sensitivity to Thimerosal. Previous mechanistic studies of methylmercury toxicity in astrocytes and neurons have implicated reactive oxygen species (ROS) and depletion of intracellular glutathione as major contributors to mercury-induced cytotoxicity (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). Organic mercury has a high affinity for the thiol (SH) group on glutathione, a tripeptide composed of cysteine, glutamate, and glycine (Sanfeliu et al., 2003). The cysteine moiety of glutathione carries the active thiol group that binds and detoxifies a variety of heavy metals, including organic and inorganic mercury. Normally, the intracellular concentration of glutathione is extremely high, in the mM range (Meister, 1995); however, with depletion of this essential antioxidant, excess free mercury is available to bind to cysteine thiol groups present in essential cellular proteins, leading to functional inactivation and cytotoxicity. The synthesis of glutathione in the brain is unique in that brain cells do not express cystathionine gamma lyase, an enzyme in the transsulfuration pathway involved in glutathione synthesis (Awata et al., 1995). As a result, brain cells cannot synthesize cysteine, the rate limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis. Thus, the brain is dependent on the liver to synthesize and export cysteine for uptake and utilization by astrocytes and neurons for adequate glutathione synthesis (Lu, 1998). In contrast to the brain, the liver expresses the complete transsulfuration pathway from methionine to cysteine and glutathione as diagrammed in Fig. 1. Glutathione synthesized in the liver is exported to the plasma where it is immediately degraded to cysteinylglycine and cysteine (Lu, 1998). Cysteine is converted to cystine in the oxidizing environment of the plasma and subsequently transported to the brain for intracellular glutathione synthesis (Fig. 2). (29K) Fig. 1. Pathways of glutathione synthesis. The liver expresses the complete pathway from methionine through homocysteine and cysteine to glutathione. Astrocytes and neurons do not express the enzyme cystathionine lyase and therefore are unable to synthesize cysteine. As a result, astrocytes and neurons are dependent on plasma cysteine derived primarily from the liver to synthesize glutathione. (6K) Fig. 2. Interaction between astrocytes and neurons for glutathione synthesis. Glutathione exported from the liver is hydrolyzed to cysteinylglycine and cysteine. In the plasma, cysteine is oxidized to cystine and transported across the BBB and taken up by astrocytes and used to synthesize glutathione. Astrocytes export glutathione into the extracellular space where it is hydrolyzed to cysteine and taken up by neurons for glutathione synthesis. Abbreviations: GGT: gamma glutamyl synthetase; BBB: blood–brain barrier. A second unusual aspect of glutathione synthesis in the brain is the unique metabolic interaction between astrocytes and neurons regarding uptake of cysteine, the rate-limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis (Dringen and Hirrlinger, 2003 and Kranich et al., 1996). Astrocytes and neurons have different affinities for the uptake of oxidized and reduced forms of cysteine for glutathione synthesis (Dringen et al., 2000b). Neurons are unable to take up cystine (oxidized plasma form of cysteine) but can readily transport reduced cysteine for glutathione synthesis. In contrast, oxidized cystine is readily taken up by astrocytes and converted to glutathione as diagrammed in Fig. 2 (Kranich et al., 1998 and Wang and Cynader, 2000). Because cysteine is the rate-limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis, the relative availability of extracellular cystine and cysteine determines intracellular glutathione concentrations and resistance to mercury toxicity in astrocytes and neurons, respectively. The purpose of the present study was to determine the relative sensitivity of astrocytes and neurons to Thimerosal (ethyl mercury) cytotoxicity in vitro and to determine whether Thimerosal neurotoxicity was associated with depletion of glutathione in cultured human cells as previously reported for methylmercury (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). Acute high dose exposures to Thimerosal ( & #956;mol/L) in cultured cells were used to study mechanistic aspects of Thimerosal toxicity and not intended to mimic exposures of developing brain cells in vivo to Thimerosal in vaccines (nmol/kg). MATERIALS AND METHODS Materials Culture flasks, 96-well plates, and pipettes were obtained from Falcon (lin Lakes, NJ, USA). F-12K and MEM culture media were purchased from ATCC (Manassas, VA, USA) and the RPMI 1640 culture media, streptomycin, and Dulbecco's Phosphate Buffered Saline were purchased from Gibco (Grand Island, NY, USA). The TACS™ MTT kit for cell viability assay was purchased from R & D systems (Minneapolis, MN, USA). Fetal bovine serum was purchased from HyClone (Logan, UT, USA). Thimerosal USP, glutathione ethyl ester, cysteine, cystine, N- acetyl-L-cysteine, L-methionine, and EDTA-trypsin were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). Cell Culture Human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y CRL 2266 cells and glioblastoma CRL 2020 cells were purchased from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC, Manassas, VA) and cultured in T-25 ml flasks in a humidified incubator at 37 °C with 5% CO2. The neuroblastoma cells were cultured in 50:50 F-12K media and MEM media containing 15% fetal calf serum and 1% penicillin/streptomycin. The glioblastoma cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 media with supplements recommended for this cell line by ATCC plus 15% fetal calf serum with 1% penicillin/streptomycin. Cell Viability Assays Cell viability before and after Thimerosal exposure was assessed using the MTT assay. Metabolically active mitochondrial dehydrogenases convert the tetrazolium salt, MTT, to insoluble purple formazan crystals at a rate that is proportional to cell viability. For the viability study with Thimerosal exposure, the cultured neuroblastoma and glioblastoma cells were harvested with 0.25% trypsin and replated in 96-well microtitre plates at a concentration of 6.5 × 105 cells/ml and 5 × 105 cells/ml, respectively, in a 100 & #956;l volume. After a 3-day culture period to reach confluency, 10 & #956;l of Thimerosal in PBS was added to achieve final concentrations of 2.5, 5, 10 or 20 & #956;mol/L in triplicate wells. Pilot studies conducted with increasing duration of exposure at 37 °C indicated that a 48 h incubation period was the threshold for toxicity in the glioblastoma cells whereas only a 3 h incubation was required to achieve similar cytotoxicity in the neuroblastoma cells (data not shown). At the end of the respective incubation periods, 10 & #956;l MTT solution (1:10 v/v) to each well for 1 h followed by 100 & #956;l of dimethylsulfoxide detergent solution to lyse the cells and solubilize the formazan crystals formed in the metabolically active (viable) cells. Triplicate untreated negative control cells were run together with the Thimerosal-treated cells. The optical density (OD) was read in the 96-well plate using the Thermo Max spectrophotometer (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA) set at 550 nm (with a reference wavelength of 650 nm). Triplicate wells with reagent only served as background controls. The results are expressed as the OD after background subtraction. Nutrient Supplementation Studies For the viability studies, cells were exposed to 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal with and without prior incubation with N-acetylcysteine, cystine, glutathione ethyl ester, or methionine at a final concentration of 100 & #956;mol/L each. N-Acetylcysteine is an acetylated analog of cysteine that easily crosses the cell membrane and is rapidly deacetylated inside the cell and utilized for GSH synthesis (Zafarullah et al., 2003). Glutathione ethyl ester is an esterified form of glutathione that is able to cross the cell membrane against the concentration gradient ( et al., 2004). Cystine is the disulfide (oxidized) form of cysteine that is readily taken up by astrocytes, but not neurons (Sagara et al., 1993). Since astrocytes are unable to synthesize GSH from methionine, the addition of methionine to the media served as a negative control. Triplicate aliquots of neuroblastoma and astroglial cells were plated in 96-well plates at concentrations of 8 × 105 cells/ml and 5 × 105 cells/ml, respectively. The supplements were added to the culture media 45 min before the addition of Thimerosal and were prepared as 10x concentrates and added in 10 & #956;L to the cell culture media. Cell viability after Thimerosal exposure was assessed with the MTT assay as described above. For HPLC analysis of intracellular glutathione levels, neuroblastoma and glioblastoma cells were plated in triplicate in 6-well plates at a density of 6.5 × 105 cells/well and 1 × 106 cells/well, respectively, and cultured for 4 days in order to generate sufficient cells for HPLC analysis. Triplicate wells were pooled for analysis. HPLC Sample Preparation Briefly, 106 cells were homogenized on ice in 200 & #956;L of phosphate- buffered saline. To reduce sulfhydryl (thiol) bonds, 50 & #956;l freshly prepared 1.43 M sodium borohydride solution containing 1.5 & #956;M EDTA, 66 mM NaOH and 10 & #956;l iso-amyl alcohol was added to the homogenate. After mixing, the solution was incubated in a 40 °C water bath for 30 min with gentle shaking. To precipitate proteins, 250 & #956;L ice cold 10% meta-phosphoric acid was added, mixed well, and the sample was incubated for 30 min on ice. After centrifugation at 18,000 × g for 15 min at 4 °C, the supernatant was filtered through a 0.2 & #956;m nylon membrane filter (PGC Scientific, Frederic, MD). A 20 & #956;l aliquot of cell extract was directly injected onto the column using Beckman Autosampler (model 507E). HPLC with Coulometric Electrochemical Detection The elution of glutathione was accomplished using HPLC with a Shimadzu solvent delivery system (ESA model 580) and a reverse phase C18 column (5 & #956;m; 4.6 mm × 150 mm, MCM Inc., Tokyo, Japan) obtained from ESA Inc. (Chemsford, MA). A 20 & #956;L aliquot of cell extract was directly injected onto the column using Beckman autosampler (model 507E). The mobile phase consisted of 50 mM sodium phosphate monobasic, monohydrate, 1.0 mM ion-pairing reagent octane sulfonic acid, 2% (v/v) acetonitrile adjusted to pH 2.7 with 85% phosphoric acid, with isocratic elution at ambient temperature at a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min and a pressure of 120–140 kgf/cm2 (1800–2100 psi). To assure standardization between sample runs, calibration standards and reference plasma samples were interspersed at intervals during each run. The metabolites were quantified using a model 5200A Coulochem II electrochemical detector (ESA Inc.) equipped with a dual analytical cell (model 5010) and a guard cell (model 5020). The concentration of intracellular glutathione was calculated from peak areas and standard calibration curves using HPLC software and expressed per mg protein. An aliquot of initial homogenate was used for protein determination using the BCA protein assay (Pierce Inc., Rockford, IL). Statistics Values are expressed as the mean ± standard deviation. One way ANOVA was used to determine significant differences between groups and the Bonferroni t-test for pairwise comparisons using Sigma Stat 2.0 software. Treatment related differences were considered to be significant at p < 0.05. RESULTS Dose–Response Characteristics of Thimerosal in Glioblastoma and Neuroblastoma Cells Fig. 3A and B shows the dose response characteristics of triplicate cultures of the glioblastoma and neuroblastoma cells, respectively. In both cell lines, a progressive increase in cytotoxicity (decrease in viability) was observed when Thimerosal dose was progressively doubled from 2.5 & #956;mol/L to 5, 10 and 20 & #956;mol/L. Viability was reduced more than 50% in both cell lines with exposure to 10 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal and less than 10% of cells survived a dose of 20 & #956;mol/L. Although the shape of the dose response is similar between the two cell types, the dose response curve for the neuroblastoma cells occurred with a only a 3 h exposure whereas the glioblastoma cell required 48 h to exhibit similar cytotoxic effects at the same dose. These results demonstrate that the neuroblastoma cells are much more sensitive to Thimerosal cytoxicity than are glioblastoma cells. (27K) Fig. 3. Viability of glioblastoma cells (A) and neuroblastoma cells ( with increasing concentrations of Thimerosal in the media. Asterisks indicate significant differences from control cells without Thimerosal treatment (n = 3, p < 0.01). Neuroprotective Effect of N-Acetylcysteine, Cystine, and Glutathione Ethyl Ester Based on the viability assays, 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal was selected as the dose for the supplementation studies since a significant level of toxicity was observed in both cell lines. Glioblastoma Cells Triplicate cultures were pretreated for 1 h with 100 & #956;mol/L N- acetylcysteine (NAC), glutathione ethyl ester, cystine, or methionine before addition of 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal to the culture medium. As shown in Fig. 4A, 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal alone induced approximately 3- fold decrease in cell viability whereas pretreatment with either cystine, glutathione, or NAC provided significant protection from cell death. The failure of methionine to provide precursors for GSH synthesis is consistent with the lack of cystathionine & #947; lyase activity in these cells. (44K) Fig. 4. Viability of glioblastoma cells (A) and neuroblastoma cells ( without (control) and with exposure to 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal alone for 48 h or Thimerosal treatment after a 45 min pretreatment with 100 & #956;mol/L of N-acetyl cysteine (NAC), glutathione ethyl ester (GSH) cystine, or methionine. Asterisks indicate significant differences between cells treated with Thimerosal alone and cells pretreated with indicated nutrients (n = 3, p < 0.05). Neuroblastoma Cells Triplicate cultures of neuroblastoma cells were pretreated for 1 h with the same supplements as the glioblastoma cells. Fig. 4B demonstrates that Thimerosal alone induced more than a 6-fold decrease in viability, confirming the increased vulnerability of neuroblastoma cells to Thimerosal relative to the glioblastoma cells. Both NAC and glutathione ethyl ester provided significant protection against cell death whereas cystine and methionine were without effect. The lack of effect of cystine is consistent with previous reports that neurons can take up cysteine, but not cystine (Sagara et al., 1993). As expected, methionine afforded no protection. Glutathione Depletion with Thimerosal Exposure: Preservation of Intracellular GSH with Nutritional Supplementation The baseline level of intracellular glutathione was 39 & #956;mol/L in the glioblastoma cells compared to only 26 & #956;mol/L in the neuroblastoma cells (Fig. 5A). Exposure to15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal for 1 h caused less than a 50% decrease in intracellular glutathione levels in the glioblastoma cells whereas the same exposure induced more than an 8- fold-decrease in the neuroblastoma cells. Pretreatment with NAC or glutathione ethyl ester completely prevented the Thimerosal-induced depletion in glutathione in neuroblastoma cells (Fig. 5B). In the glioblastoma cells, pretreatment with NAC completely prevented the Thimerosal-induced glutathione depletion and glutathione ethyl ester was partially protective. (40K) Fig. 5. Concentration of intracellular glutathione in 106 glioblastoma cells (A) and neuroblastoma cells ( without (control) and with 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal alone or Thimerosal after pretreatment with 100 & #956;mol/L of N-acetyl cysteine (NAC), glutathione ethyl ester (GSH) in a representative experiment that was repeated with similar results. DISCUSSION Considerable concern has been expressed recently over the cumulative dose of mercury given to children through routine immunizations given in the 1990s. The source of mercury in vaccines is the antimicrobial preservative, Thimerosal, containing 49.9% ethyl mercury by weight. All forms of mercury are well known to be neurotoxic, especially during early brain development (Costa et al., 2004). The high affinity binding of mercuric compounds to the thiol (SH) group of cysteines in essential proteins is thought to be the basis for mercury-induced cytotoxicity. In vivo studies in rodents have shown that ethyl mercury is able to cross the cell membrane and then is converted intracellularly to inorganic mercury which accumulates preferentially in the brain and kidney (Magos et al., 1985). Intracellular accumulation of inorganic mercury was shown to be higher for ethyl compared to methylmercury with equimolar exposure, although the clearance rate of ethylmercury was faster than methylmercury (Magos et al., 1985). A recent in vitro study of Thimerosal exposure to fibroblasts and human cerebral cortical neuron cell lines demonstrated that short term exposure in concentrations similar to those used in the present study induced DNA strand breaks, membrane damage, caspase-3 activation, and cell death (Baskin et al., 2003). The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the mechanism of ethylmercury toxicity was similar to that previously reported for methylmercury. Human glioblastoma and neuroblastoma cell lines were used as surrogates for astrocytes and neurons, respectively, based on a previous study demonstrating similar dose– response profiles to methyl mercury between primary cultures and transformed cell lines (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). Glutathione provides the major intracellular defense against ROS and oxidative stress-induced cell damage and apoptosis (Meister, 1995). Agents or conditions that deplete mitochondrial glutathione will indirectly increase ROS levels and induce cell death in a variety of cell types ( et al., 2001 and Marchetti et al., 1997). Mercury and other heavy metals are well known to increase oxidative stress and deplete intracellular glutathione (Naganuma et al., 1990). A major unanswered question is whether mercury-induced depletion of glutathione precedes the increase in ROS or whether mercury-induced ROS induces glutathione depletion. In thymocytes, mitochondrial glutathione depletion was shown to precede the increase in ROS associated with loss of viability and apoptosis (Macho et al., 1997). Whether mercury-induced depletion of glutathione is the initiating factor for increased oxidative stress and cell death in brain cells has not yet been evaluated. A recent in vitro study of Thimerosal immunotoxicity using immortalized Jurkat T cells demonstrated an increase in reactive oxygen species and a decrease in intracellular glutathione with increasing concentrations of Thimerosal (Makani et al., 2002). Thimerosal, but not thiosalacylic acid (the non-mercury component of Thimerosal), induced apoptotic cell death in T cells in a concentration-dependent manner as evidenced by mitochondrial release of cytochrome c, apoptosis activating factor, and activation of caspases 9 and 3. Exogenous glutathione inhibited activation of these caspases and prevented cell death. These results suggest that, at least in T cells, Thimerosal induces oxidative stress and apoptosis by activating mitochondrial cell death pathways. A subsequent study using cultured human neuron and fibroblast cell lines similarly showed that low micromolar concentrations of Thimerosal induced DNA strand breaks, caspase-3 activation, membrane damage and cell death (Baskin et al., 2003). In the present study, we evaluated glioblastoma cells and neuroblastoma cells in culture to determine the relative sensitivity of each cell type to Thimerosal-induced oxidative stress and cell death. At equimolar concentrations of Thimerosal, the neurons were found to be much more sensitive to Thimerosal-induced cell death than the astrocytes. In the neuronal cell line, viability was significantly reduced in a concentration-dependent manner at 2.5, 5, 10, and 20 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal after only a 3 h exposure, whereas the astrocytes required a full 48 h exposure for a similar loss of viability (Fig. 3). These results duplicate observations in the same cell lines exposed to similar concentrations of methyl mercury and suggest that the mechanism of ethyl- and methylmercury neurotoxicity is similar. The addition of either N-acetylcysteine or gluthatione ethyl ester (100 & #956;mol/L) to the culture medium 1 h before adding 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal conferred significant protection against cytotoxicity in both cell lines (Fig. 4). It is likely that the extracellular NAC and glutathione provided partial protection by complexing with the Thimerosal in the culture medium as well as by increasing intracellular glutathione levels. The oxidized form of cysteine (cystine) was protective in astrocytes, but not neurons, consistent with facilitated membrane transport of cystine in astrocytes (Kranich et al., 1998). Neurons depend on glutathione synthesized in the astrocytes and released extracellularly where it is hydrolyzed to cysteinylglycine and cysteine by ectoenzymes to provide neurons with necessary precursors for intracellular gluthathione synthesis (Dringen et al., 1999). In both cell lines, methionine provided no protection against Thimerosal toxicity confirming the inability of either cell type to synthesize cysteine (and glutathione) from methionine. The intracellular concentration of glutathione before supplementation was 30% lower in neuroblastoma cells compared to the glioblastoma cells. The lower baseline glutathione concentration in the neuronal cell line was associated with increased sensitivity to Thimerosal cytotoxicity (Fig. 5). Thus, sensitivity to Thimerosal was directly proportional to the basal intracellular glutathione concentration. In co-culture studies, astrocytes have been shown to protect neurons against the toxicity of oxidative stress (Dringen et al., 2000a). The provision of glutathione precursors to neurons is a possible explanation for the protective effect of astrocytes. Recent results have confirmed the primary role of astrocytes in glutathione metabolism and antioxidant defense in the brain (Dringen, 2000). Depletion of astrocyte glutathione would therefore indirectly induce oxidative cell death in neurons by depletion of essential glutathione precursors. In summary, we have shown that human glioblastoma cells are more resistant to Thimerosal cytotoxicity than neuroblastoma cells at doses in the low micromolar range and that the resistance is correlated with higher intracellular levels of intracellular glutathione. The significant protection by NAC and glutathione ethyl ester against Thimerosal cytotoxicity suggests the possibility that supplementation with glutathione precursors might be protective against mercury exposures in vivo. Numerous clinical studies have demonstrated the efficacy of NAC in increasing intracellular glutathione levels and reducing oxidative stress in humans ( and Luo, 1998 and Badaloo et al., 2002). Since cytotoxicity with both ethyl- and methylmercury have been shown to be mediated by glutathione depletion, dietary supplements that increase intracellular glutathione could be envisioned as an effective intervention to reduce previous or anticipated exposure to mercury. This approach would be especially valuable in the elderly and in pregnant women before receiving flu vaccinations, in pregnant women receiving Rho D immunoglobulin shots, and individuals who regularly consume mercury-containing fish. REFERENCES et al., 2001 J.W. , G. Shanker and M. Aschner, Methylmercury inhibits the in vitro uptake of the glutathione precursor, cystine, in astrocytes, but not in neurons, Brain Res 894 (2001) (1), pp. 131–140. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (724 K) and Luo, 1998 M.E. and J.L. Luo, Glutathione therapy: from prodrugs to genes, Semin Liver Dis 18 (1998) (4), pp. 415–424. et al., 2004 M.F. , M. Nilsson and N.R. Sims, Glutathione monoethylester prevents mitochondrial glutathione depletion during focal cerebral ischemia, Neurochem Int 44 (2004) (3), pp. 153–159. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (161 K) Awata et al., 1995 S. Awata, K. Nakayama, I. Suzuki, K. Sugahara and H. Kodama, Changes in cystathionine gamma-lyase in various regions of rat brain during development, Biochem Mol Biol Int 35 (1995) (6), pp. 1331–1338. Badaloo et al., 2002 A. Badaloo, M. Reid, T. Forrester, W.C. Heird and F. Jahoor, Cysteine supplementation improves the erythrocyte glutathione synthesis rate in children with severe edematous malnutrition, Am J Clin Nutr 76 (2002) (3), pp. 646–652. Ball et al., 2001 L.K. Ball, R. Ball and R.D. Pratt, An assessment of thimerosal use in childhood vaccines, Pediatrics 107 (2001) (5), pp. 1147–1154. Baskin et al., 2003 D.S. Baskin, H. Ngo and V.V. Didenko, Thimerosal induces DNA breaks, caspase-3 activation, membrane damage, and cell death in cultured human neurons and fibroblasts, Toxicol Sci 74 (2003) (2), pp. 361–368. Costa et al., 2004 L.G. Costa, M. Aschner, A. Vitalone, T. Syversen and O.P. Soldin, Developmental neuropathology of environmental agents, Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol 44 (2004), pp. 87–110. Dringen, 2000 R. Dringen, Metabolism and functions of glutathione in brain, Progr Neurobiol 62 (2000) (6), pp. 649–671. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (286 K) Dringen et al., 2000a R. Dringen, J.M. Gutterer and J. Hirrlinger, Glutathione metabolism in brain metabolic interaction between astrocytes and neurons in the defense against reactive oxygen species, Eur J Biochem 267 (2000) (16), pp. 4912–4916. Dringen et al., 2000b R. Dringen, J.M. Gutterer and J. Hirrlinger, Glutathione metabolism in brain metabolic interaction between astrocytes and neurons in the defense against reactive oxygen species, Eur J Biochem 267 (2000) (16), pp. 4912–4916. Dringen and Hirrlinger, 2003 R. Dringen and J. Hirrlinger, Glutathione pathways in the brain, Biol Chem 384 (2003) (4), pp. 505– 516. Dringen et al., 1999 R. Dringen, B. Pfeiffer and B. Hamprecht, Synthesis of the antioxidant glutathione in neurons: supply by astrocytes of CysGly as precursor for neuronal glutathione, J Neurosci 19 (1999) (2), pp. 562–569. Kranich et al., 1998 O. Kranich, R. Dringen, M. Sandberg and B. Hamprecht, Utilization of cysteine and cysteine precursors for the synthesis of glutathione in astroglial cultures: preference for cystine, Glia 22 (1998) (1), pp. 11–18. Kranich et al., 1996 O. Kranich, B. Hamprecht and R. Dringen, Different preferences in the utilization of amino acids for glutathione synthesis in cultured neurons and astroglial cells derived from rat brain, Neurosci Lett 219 (1996) (3), pp. 211–214. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (81 K) Lu, 1998 S.C. Lu, Regulation of hepatic glutathione synthesis, Semin Liver Dis 18 (1998) (4), pp. 331–343. Macho et al., 1997 A. Macho, T. Hirsch, I. Marzo, P. Marchetti, B. Dallaporta and S.A. Susin et al., Glutathione depletion is an early and calcium elevation is a late event of thymocyte apoptosis, J Immunol 158 (1997) (10), pp. 4612–4619. Magos et al., 1985 L. Magos, A.W. Brown, S. Sparrow, E. , R.T. Snowden and W.R. Skipp, The comparative toxicology of ethyl- and methylmercury, Arch Toxicol 57 (1985) (4), pp. 260–267. Makani et al., 2002 S. Makani, S. Gollapudi, L. Yel, S. Chiplunkar and S. Gupta, Biochemical and molecular basis of thimerosal-induced apoptosis in T cells: a major role of mitochondrial pathway, Genes Immun 3 (2002) (5), pp. 270–278. Marchetti et al., 1997 P. Marchetti, D. Decaudin, A. Macho, N. Zamzami, T. Hirsch and S.A. Susin et al., Redox regulation of apoptosis: impact of thiol oxidation status on mitochondrial function, Eur J Immunol 27 (1997) (1), pp. 289–296. Meister, 1995 A. Meister, Glutathione metabolism, Methods Enzymol 251 (1995), pp. 3–7. Naganuma et al., 1990 A. Naganuma, M.E. and A. Meister, Cellular glutathione as a determinant of sensitivity to mercuric chloride toxicity. Prevention of toxicity by giving glutathione monoester, Biochem Pharmacol 40 (1990) (4), pp. 693–697. Public Health Service, 1999 Public Health Service, Department of Health and Human Services & American Academy of Pediatrics. Morb Mortal Weekly Rep 1999;48:563–4. Sagara et al., 1993 J.I. Sagara, K. Miura and S. Bannai, Maintenance of neuronal glutathione by glial cells, J Neurochem 61 (1993) (5), pp. 1672–1676. Sanfeliu et al., 2003 C. Sanfeliu, J. Sebastia, R. Cristofol and E. -Farre, Neurotoxicity of organomercurial compounds, Neurotox Res 5 (2003) (4), pp. 283–305. Sanfeliu et al., 2001 C. Sanfeliu, J. Sebastia and S.U. Ki, Methylmercury neurotoxicity in cultures of human neurons, astrocytes, neuroblastoma cells, Neurotoxicology 22 (2001) (3), pp. 317–327. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (624 K) Wang and Cynader, 2000 X.F. Wang and M.S. Cynader, Astrocytes provide cysteine to neurons by releasing glutathione, J Neurochem 74 (2000) (4), pp. 1434–1442. Zafarullah et al., 2003 M. Zafarullah, W.Q. Li, J. Sylvester and M. Ahmad, Molecular mechanisms of N-acetylcysteine actions, Cell Mol Life Sci 60 (2003) (1), pp. 6–20. Corresponding author. Tel.: +1 501 364 4665; fax: +1 501 364 5107. This Document SummaryPlus Full Text + Links ·Full Size Images PDF (293 K) Actions E-mail Article NeuroToxicology Volume 26, Issue 1 , January 2005, Pages 1-8 1 of 18 Feedback | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy Copyright © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. ScienceDirect® is a registered trademark of Elsevier B.V. > > > Theresa: > > I agree with you, the EWG report seems remarkable. How we can find > out more about the protocol that Dr. followed. > > It would be completely amazing, not short of a miracle if our > children could be cured of apraxia... > > Does anyone in our group have more information regarding this EWG > report and the protocol? I'm up for discussion on this important > issue. > > G.-- Do you have any insight regarding the EWG Report and the > protocol? What are your thoughts? > > Thanks, > > > > > , Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2004 Report Share Posted December 29, 2004 WOW!! Thank you, theresa looking for an interperter(SP?) I am taking this along with Colleen's great post to my ped [ ] Re:EWG Report ---- Autism report news release 12.13.04 To All: This is the journal article as it appeared in the Journal of Neurotoxicology, study by Jill et al. 1 of 18 NeuroToxicology Volume 26, Issue 1 , January 2005, Pages 1-8 This Document SummaryPlus Full Text + Links ·Full Size Images PDF (293 K) Actions E-mail Article doi:10.1016/j.neuro.2004.07.012 Copyright © 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Thimerosal Neurotoxicity is Associated with Glutathione Depletion: Protection with Glutathione Precursors S.J. 1, , , Slikker III2, Stepan Melnyk1, New2, Marta Pogribna2 and Stefanie Jernigan1 1Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute, Little Rock, AR 72202, USA 2Division of Biochemical Toxicology, National Center for Toxicological Research, Jefferson, AR 72079, USA Received 24 May 2004; accepted 28 July 2004. Available online 29 September 2004. Abstract Thimerosol is an antiseptic containing 49.5% ethyl mercury that has been used for years as a preservative in many infant vaccines and in flu vaccines. Environmental methyl mercury has been shown to be highly neurotoxic, especially to the developing brain. Because mercury has a high affinity for thiol (sulfhydryl (SH)) groups, the thiol-containing antioxidant, glutathione (GSH), provides the major intracellular defense against mercury-induced neurotoxicity. Cultured neuroblastoma cells were found to have lower levels of GSH and increased sensitivity to thimerosol toxicity compared to glioblastoma cells that have higher basal levels of intracellular GSH. Thimerosal- induced cytotoxicity was associated with depletion of intracellular GSH in both cell lines. Pretreatment with 100 & #956;M glutathione ethyl ester or N-acetylcysteine (NAC), but not methionine, resulted in a significant increase in intracellular GSH in both cell types. Further, pretreatment of the cells with glutathione ethyl ester or NAC prevented cytotoxicity with exposure to 15 & #956;M Thimerosal. Although Thimerosal has been recently removed from most children's vaccines, it is still present in flu vaccines given to pregnant women, the elderly, and to children in developing countries. The potential protective effect of GSH or NAC against mercury toxicity warrants further research as possible adjunct therapy to individuals still receiving Thimerosal-containing vaccinations. Keywords: Thimerosal; Neurotoxicity; Glutathione; N-acetylcysteine Article Outline INTRODUCTION MATERIALS AND METHODS Materials Cell Culture Cell Viability Assays Nutrient Supplementation Studies HPLC Sample Preparation HPLC with Coulometric Electrochemical Detection Statistics RESULTS Dose-Response Characteristics of Thimerosal in Glioblastoma and Neuroblastoma Cells Neuroprotective Effect of N-Acetylcysteine, Cystine, and Glutathione Ethyl Ester Glioblastoma Cells Neuroblastoma Cells Glutathione Depletion with Thimerosal Exposure: Preservation of Intracellular GSH with Nutritional Supplementation DISCUSSION References INTRODUCTION Thimerosal (sodium ethylmercurithiosalicylate) was developed by Eli Lilly in the 1930s as a effective bacteriostatic and fungistatic preservative and has been widely used in multidose vials of vaccines and in ophthalmic, otic, nasal, and topical products. Until the removal of Thimerosal from most pediatric vaccines in 2001, the largest human exposure in the US ( & #956;g/kg body weight) was in children under 18 months of age undergoing routine childhood immunization schedules. Prior to 2001, a child may have received a cumulative dose of over 200 & #956;g/kg in the first 18 months of life (Ball et al., 2001). Although the neurotoxicity of methyl mercury has been relatively well studied, limited information is available on the relative neurodevelopmental toxicity of ethylmercury, the mercury metabolite of Thimerosal. Based on the known toxicity of methylmercury, the cumulative ethylmercury exposure to US pediatric populations in Thimerosal-containing vaccinations was re-examined in 1999 and found to exceed EPA recommended guidelines (Ball et al., 2001). Following recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the US Public Health Service (Public Health Service, 1999), Thimerosal was subsequently removed as a preservative from most children's vaccines in the US. However, influenza vaccines and Rho D immunoglobulin shots containing Thimerosal are still recommended to pregnant women, and many vaccines given to children in developing countries still contain Thimerosal. The present study was undertaken to better understand the mechanisms underlying Thimerosal toxicity to neurons and astrocytes, the primary CNS targets for organic mercury (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). A better understanding of the neurotoxic mechanism is a necessary prerequisite for the design of intervention strategies for prevention and for the identification of genetic variants that could increase sensitivity to Thimerosal. Previous mechanistic studies of methylmercury toxicity in astrocytes and neurons have implicated reactive oxygen species (ROS) and depletion of intracellular glutathione as major contributors to mercury-induced cytotoxicity (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). Organic mercury has a high affinity for the thiol (SH) group on glutathione, a tripeptide composed of cysteine, glutamate, and glycine (Sanfeliu et al., 2003). The cysteine moiety of glutathione carries the active thiol group that binds and detoxifies a variety of heavy metals, including organic and inorganic mercury. Normally, the intracellular concentration of glutathione is extremely high, in the mM range (Meister, 1995); however, with depletion of this essential antioxidant, excess free mercury is available to bind to cysteine thiol groups present in essential cellular proteins, leading to functional inactivation and cytotoxicity. The synthesis of glutathione in the brain is unique in that brain cells do not express cystathionine gamma lyase, an enzyme in the transsulfuration pathway involved in glutathione synthesis (Awata et al., 1995). As a result, brain cells cannot synthesize cysteine, the rate limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis. Thus, the brain is dependent on the liver to synthesize and export cysteine for uptake and utilization by astrocytes and neurons for adequate glutathione synthesis (Lu, 1998). In contrast to the brain, the liver expresses the complete transsulfuration pathway from methionine to cysteine and glutathione as diagrammed in Fig. 1. Glutathione synthesized in the liver is exported to the plasma where it is immediately degraded to cysteinylglycine and cysteine (Lu, 1998). Cysteine is converted to cystine in the oxidizing environment of the plasma and subsequently transported to the brain for intracellular glutathione synthesis (Fig. 2). (29K) Fig. 1. Pathways of glutathione synthesis. The liver expresses the complete pathway from methionine through homocysteine and cysteine to glutathione. Astrocytes and neurons do not express the enzyme cystathionine lyase and therefore are unable to synthesize cysteine. As a result, astrocytes and neurons are dependent on plasma cysteine derived primarily from the liver to synthesize glutathione. (6K) Fig. 2. Interaction between astrocytes and neurons for glutathione synthesis. Glutathione exported from the liver is hydrolyzed to cysteinylglycine and cysteine. In the plasma, cysteine is oxidized to cystine and transported across the BBB and taken up by astrocytes and used to synthesize glutathione. Astrocytes export glutathione into the extracellular space where it is hydrolyzed to cysteine and taken up by neurons for glutathione synthesis. Abbreviations: GGT: gamma glutamyl synthetase; BBB: blood-brain barrier. A second unusual aspect of glutathione synthesis in the brain is the unique metabolic interaction between astrocytes and neurons regarding uptake of cysteine, the rate-limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis (Dringen and Hirrlinger, 2003 and Kranich et al., 1996). Astrocytes and neurons have different affinities for the uptake of oxidized and reduced forms of cysteine for glutathione synthesis (Dringen et al., 2000b). Neurons are unable to take up cystine (oxidized plasma form of cysteine) but can readily transport reduced cysteine for glutathione synthesis. In contrast, oxidized cystine is readily taken up by astrocytes and converted to glutathione as diagrammed in Fig. 2 (Kranich et al., 1998 and Wang and Cynader, 2000). Because cysteine is the rate-limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis, the relative availability of extracellular cystine and cysteine determines intracellular glutathione concentrations and resistance to mercury toxicity in astrocytes and neurons, respectively. The purpose of the present study was to determine the relative sensitivity of astrocytes and neurons to Thimerosal (ethyl mercury) cytotoxicity in vitro and to determine whether Thimerosal neurotoxicity was associated with depletion of glutathione in cultured human cells as previously reported for methylmercury (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). Acute high dose exposures to Thimerosal ( & #956;mol/L) in cultured cells were used to study mechanistic aspects of Thimerosal toxicity and not intended to mimic exposures of developing brain cells in vivo to Thimerosal in vaccines (nmol/kg). MATERIALS AND METHODS Materials Culture flasks, 96-well plates, and pipettes were obtained from Falcon (lin Lakes, NJ, USA). F-12K and MEM culture media were purchased from ATCC (Manassas, VA, USA) and the RPMI 1640 culture media, streptomycin, and Dulbecco's Phosphate Buffered Saline were purchased from Gibco (Grand Island, NY, USA). The TACST MTT kit for cell viability assay was purchased from R & D systems (Minneapolis, MN, USA). Fetal bovine serum was purchased from HyClone (Logan, UT, USA). Thimerosal USP, glutathione ethyl ester, cysteine, cystine, N- acetyl-L-cysteine, L-methionine, and EDTA-trypsin were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). Cell Culture Human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y CRL 2266 cells and glioblastoma CRL 2020 cells were purchased from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC, Manassas, VA) and cultured in T-25 ml flasks in a humidified incubator at 37 °C with 5% CO2. The neuroblastoma cells were cultured in 50:50 F-12K media and MEM media containing 15% fetal calf serum and 1% penicillin/streptomycin. The glioblastoma cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 media with supplements recommended for this cell line by ATCC plus 15% fetal calf serum with 1% penicillin/streptomycin. Cell Viability Assays Cell viability before and after Thimerosal exposure was assessed using the MTT assay. Metabolically active mitochondrial dehydrogenases convert the tetrazolium salt, MTT, to insoluble purple formazan crystals at a rate that is proportional to cell viability. For the viability study with Thimerosal exposure, the cultured neuroblastoma and glioblastoma cells were harvested with 0.25% trypsin and replated in 96-well microtitre plates at a concentration of 6.5 × 105 cells/ml and 5 × 105 cells/ml, respectively, in a 100 & #956;l volume. After a 3-day culture period to reach confluency, 10 & #956;l of Thimerosal in PBS was added to achieve final concentrations of 2.5, 5, 10 or 20 & #956;mol/L in triplicate wells. Pilot studies conducted with increasing duration of exposure at 37 °C indicated that a 48 h incubation period was the threshold for toxicity in the glioblastoma cells whereas only a 3 h incubation was required to achieve similar cytotoxicity in the neuroblastoma cells (data not shown). At the end of the respective incubation periods, 10 & #956;l MTT solution (1:10 v/v) to each well for 1 h followed by 100 & #956;l of dimethylsulfoxide detergent solution to lyse the cells and solubilize the formazan crystals formed in the metabolically active (viable) cells. Triplicate untreated negative control cells were run together with the Thimerosal-treated cells. The optical density (OD) was read in the 96-well plate using the Thermo Max spectrophotometer (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA) set at 550 nm (with a reference wavelength of 650 nm). Triplicate wells with reagent only served as background controls. The results are expressed as the OD after background subtraction. Nutrient Supplementation Studies For the viability studies, cells were exposed to 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal with and without prior incubation with N-acetylcysteine, cystine, glutathione ethyl ester, or methionine at a final concentration of 100 & #956;mol/L each. N-Acetylcysteine is an acetylated analog of cysteine that easily crosses the cell membrane and is rapidly deacetylated inside the cell and utilized for GSH synthesis (Zafarullah et al., 2003). Glutathione ethyl ester is an esterified form of glutathione that is able to cross the cell membrane against the concentration gradient ( et al., 2004). Cystine is the disulfide (oxidized) form of cysteine that is readily taken up by astrocytes, but not neurons (Sagara et al., 1993). Since astrocytes are unable to synthesize GSH from methionine, the addition of methionine to the media served as a negative control. Triplicate aliquots of neuroblastoma and astroglial cells were plated in 96-well plates at concentrations of 8 × 105 cells/ml and 5 × 105 cells/ml, respectively. The supplements were added to the culture media 45 min before the addition of Thimerosal and were prepared as 10x concentrates and added in 10 & #956;L to the cell culture media. Cell viability after Thimerosal exposure was assessed with the MTT assay as described above. For HPLC analysis of intracellular glutathione levels, neuroblastoma and glioblastoma cells were plated in triplicate in 6-well plates at a density of 6.5 × 105 cells/well and 1 × 106 cells/well, respectively, and cultured for 4 days in order to generate sufficient cells for HPLC analysis. Triplicate wells were pooled for analysis. HPLC Sample Preparation Briefly, 106 cells were homogenized on ice in 200 & #956;L of phosphate- buffered saline. To reduce sulfhydryl (thiol) bonds, 50 & #956;l freshly prepared 1.43 M sodium borohydride solution containing 1.5 & #956;M EDTA, 66 mM NaOH and 10 & #956;l iso-amyl alcohol was added to the homogenate. After mixing, the solution was incubated in a 40 °C water bath for 30 min with gentle shaking. To precipitate proteins, 250 & #956;L ice cold 10% meta-phosphoric acid was added, mixed well, and the sample was incubated for 30 min on ice. After centrifugation at 18,000 × g for 15 min at 4 °C, the supernatant was filtered through a 0.2 & #956;m nylon membrane filter (PGC Scientific, Frederic, MD). A 20 & #956;l aliquot of cell extract was directly injected onto the column using Beckman Autosampler (model 507E). HPLC with Coulometric Electrochemical Detection The elution of glutathione was accomplished using HPLC with a Shimadzu solvent delivery system (ESA model 580) and a reverse phase C18 column (5 & #956;m; 4.6 mm × 150 mm, MCM Inc., Tokyo, Japan) obtained from ESA Inc. (Chemsford, MA). A 20 & #956;L aliquot of cell extract was directly injected onto the column using Beckman autosampler (model 507E). The mobile phase consisted of 50 mM sodium phosphate monobasic, monohydrate, 1.0 mM ion-pairing reagent octane sulfonic acid, 2% (v/v) acetonitrile adjusted to pH 2.7 with 85% phosphoric acid, with isocratic elution at ambient temperature at a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min and a pressure of 120-140 kgf/cm2 (1800-2100 psi). To assure standardization between sample runs, calibration standards and reference plasma samples were interspersed at intervals during each run. The metabolites were quantified using a model 5200A Coulochem II electrochemical detector (ESA Inc.) equipped with a dual analytical cell (model 5010) and a guard cell (model 5020). The concentration of intracellular glutathione was calculated from peak areas and standard calibration curves using HPLC software and expressed per mg protein. An aliquot of initial homogenate was used for protein determination using the BCA protein assay (Pierce Inc., Rockford, IL). Statistics Values are expressed as the mean ± standard deviation. One way ANOVA was used to determine significant differences between groups and the Bonferroni t-test for pairwise comparisons using Sigma Stat 2.0 software. Treatment related differences were considered to be significant at p < 0.05. RESULTS Dose-Response Characteristics of Thimerosal in Glioblastoma and Neuroblastoma Cells Fig. 3A and B shows the dose response characteristics of triplicate cultures of the glioblastoma and neuroblastoma cells, respectively. In both cell lines, a progressive increase in cytotoxicity (decrease in viability) was observed when Thimerosal dose was progressively doubled from 2.5 & #956;mol/L to 5, 10 and 20 & #956;mol/L. Viability was reduced more than 50% in both cell lines with exposure to 10 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal and less than 10% of cells survived a dose of 20 & #956;mol/L. Although the shape of the dose response is similar between the two cell types, the dose response curve for the neuroblastoma cells occurred with a only a 3 h exposure whereas the glioblastoma cell required 48 h to exhibit similar cytotoxic effects at the same dose. These results demonstrate that the neuroblastoma cells are much more sensitive to Thimerosal cytoxicity than are glioblastoma cells. (27K) Fig. 3. Viability of glioblastoma cells (A) and neuroblastoma cells ( with increasing concentrations of Thimerosal in the media. Asterisks indicate significant differences from control cells without Thimerosal treatment (n = 3, p < 0.01). Neuroprotective Effect of N-Acetylcysteine, Cystine, and Glutathione Ethyl Ester Based on the viability assays, 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal was selected as the dose for the supplementation studies since a significant level of toxicity was observed in both cell lines. Glioblastoma Cells Triplicate cultures were pretreated for 1 h with 100 & #956;mol/L N- acetylcysteine (NAC), glutathione ethyl ester, cystine, or methionine before addition of 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal to the culture medium. As shown in Fig. 4A, 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal alone induced approximately 3- fold decrease in cell viability whereas pretreatment with either cystine, glutathione, or NAC provided significant protection from cell death. The failure of methionine to provide precursors for GSH synthesis is consistent with the lack of cystathionine & #947; lyase activity in these cells. (44K) Fig. 4. Viability of glioblastoma cells (A) and neuroblastoma cells ( without (control) and with exposure to 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal alone for 48 h or Thimerosal treatment after a 45 min pretreatment with 100 & #956;mol/L of N-acetyl cysteine (NAC), glutathione ethyl ester (GSH) cystine, or methionine. Asterisks indicate significant differences between cells treated with Thimerosal alone and cells pretreated with indicated nutrients (n = 3, p < 0.05). Neuroblastoma Cells Triplicate cultures of neuroblastoma cells were pretreated for 1 h with the same supplements as the glioblastoma cells. Fig. 4B demonstrates that Thimerosal alone induced more than a 6-fold decrease in viability, confirming the increased vulnerability of neuroblastoma cells to Thimerosal relative to the glioblastoma cells. Both NAC and glutathione ethyl ester provided significant protection against cell death whereas cystine and methionine were without effect. The lack of effect of cystine is consistent with previous reports that neurons can take up cysteine, but not cystine (Sagara et al., 1993). As expected, methionine afforded no protection. Glutathione Depletion with Thimerosal Exposure: Preservation of Intracellular GSH with Nutritional Supplementation The baseline level of intracellular glutathione was 39 & #956;mol/L in the glioblastoma cells compared to only 26 & #956;mol/L in the neuroblastoma cells (Fig. 5A). Exposure to15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal for 1 h caused less than a 50% decrease in intracellular glutathione levels in the glioblastoma cells whereas the same exposure induced more than an 8- fold-decrease in the neuroblastoma cells. Pretreatment with NAC or glutathione ethyl ester completely prevented the Thimerosal-induced depletion in glutathione in neuroblastoma cells (Fig. 5B). In the glioblastoma cells, pretreatment with NAC completely prevented the Thimerosal-induced glutathione depletion and glutathione ethyl ester was partially protective. (40K) Fig. 5. Concentration of intracellular glutathione in 106 glioblastoma cells (A) and neuroblastoma cells ( without (control) and with 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal alone or Thimerosal after pretreatment with 100 & #956;mol/L of N-acetyl cysteine (NAC), glutathione ethyl ester (GSH) in a representative experiment that was repeated with similar results. DISCUSSION Considerable concern has been expressed recently over the cumulative dose of mercury given to children through routine immunizations given in the 1990s. The source of mercury in vaccines is the antimicrobial preservative, Thimerosal, containing 49.9% ethyl mercury by weight. All forms of mercury are well known to be neurotoxic, especially during early brain development (Costa et al., 2004). The high affinity binding of mercuric compounds to the thiol (SH) group of cysteines in essential proteins is thought to be the basis for mercury-induced cytotoxicity. In vivo studies in rodents have shown that ethyl mercury is able to cross the cell membrane and then is converted intracellularly to inorganic mercury which accumulates preferentially in the brain and kidney (Magos et al., 1985). Intracellular accumulation of inorganic mercury was shown to be higher for ethyl compared to methylmercury with equimolar exposure, although the clearance rate of ethylmercury was faster than methylmercury (Magos et al., 1985). A recent in vitro study of Thimerosal exposure to fibroblasts and human cerebral cortical neuron cell lines demonstrated that short term exposure in concentrations similar to those used in the present study induced DNA strand breaks, membrane damage, caspase-3 activation, and cell death (Baskin et al., 2003). The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the mechanism of ethylmercury toxicity was similar to that previously reported for methylmercury. Human glioblastoma and neuroblastoma cell lines were used as surrogates for astrocytes and neurons, respectively, based on a previous study demonstrating similar dose- response profiles to methyl mercury between primary cultures and transformed cell lines (Sanfeliu et al., 2001). Glutathione provides the major intracellular defense against ROS and oxidative stress-induced cell damage and apoptosis (Meister, 1995). Agents or conditions that deplete mitochondrial glutathione will indirectly increase ROS levels and induce cell death in a variety of cell types ( et al., 2001 and Marchetti et al., 1997). Mercury and other heavy metals are well known to increase oxidative stress and deplete intracellular glutathione (Naganuma et al., 1990). A major unanswered question is whether mercury-induced depletion of glutathione precedes the increase in ROS or whether mercury-induced ROS induces glutathione depletion. In thymocytes, mitochondrial glutathione depletion was shown to precede the increase in ROS associated with loss of viability and apoptosis (Macho et al., 1997). Whether mercury-induced depletion of glutathione is the initiating factor for increased oxidative stress and cell death in brain cells has not yet been evaluated. A recent in vitro study of Thimerosal immunotoxicity using immortalized Jurkat T cells demonstrated an increase in reactive oxygen species and a decrease in intracellular glutathione with increasing concentrations of Thimerosal (Makani et al., 2002). Thimerosal, but not thiosalacylic acid (the non-mercury component of Thimerosal), induced apoptotic cell death in T cells in a concentration-dependent manner as evidenced by mitochondrial release of cytochrome c, apoptosis activating factor, and activation of caspases 9 and 3. Exogenous glutathione inhibited activation of these caspases and prevented cell death. These results suggest that, at least in T cells, Thimerosal induces oxidative stress and apoptosis by activating mitochondrial cell death pathways. A subsequent study using cultured human neuron and fibroblast cell lines similarly showed that low micromolar concentrations of Thimerosal induced DNA strand breaks, caspase-3 activation, membrane damage and cell death (Baskin et al., 2003). In the present study, we evaluated glioblastoma cells and neuroblastoma cells in culture to determine the relative sensitivity of each cell type to Thimerosal-induced oxidative stress and cell death. At equimolar concentrations of Thimerosal, the neurons were found to be much more sensitive to Thimerosal-induced cell death than the astrocytes. In the neuronal cell line, viability was significantly reduced in a concentration-dependent manner at 2.5, 5, 10, and 20 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal after only a 3 h exposure, whereas the astrocytes required a full 48 h exposure for a similar loss of viability (Fig. 3). These results duplicate observations in the same cell lines exposed to similar concentrations of methyl mercury and suggest that the mechanism of ethyl- and methylmercury neurotoxicity is similar. The addition of either N-acetylcysteine or gluthatione ethyl ester (100 & #956;mol/L) to the culture medium 1 h before adding 15 & #956;mol/L Thimerosal conferred significant protection against cytotoxicity in both cell lines (Fig. 4). It is likely that the extracellular NAC and glutathione provided partial protection by complexing with the Thimerosal in the culture medium as well as by increasing intracellular glutathione levels. The oxidized form of cysteine (cystine) was protective in astrocytes, but not neurons, consistent with facilitated membrane transport of cystine in astrocytes (Kranich et al., 1998). Neurons depend on glutathione synthesized in the astrocytes and released extracellularly where it is hydrolyzed to cysteinylglycine and cysteine by ectoenzymes to provide neurons with necessary precursors for intracellular gluthathione synthesis (Dringen et al., 1999). In both cell lines, methionine provided no protection against Thimerosal toxicity confirming the inability of either cell type to synthesize cysteine (and glutathione) from methionine. The intracellular concentration of glutathione before supplementation was 30% lower in neuroblastoma cells compared to the glioblastoma cells. The lower baseline glutathione concentration in the neuronal cell line was associated with increased sensitivity to Thimerosal cytotoxicity (Fig. 5). Thus, sensitivity to Thimerosal was directly proportional to the basal intracellular glutathione concentration. In co-culture studies, astrocytes have been shown to protect neurons against the toxicity of oxidative stress (Dringen et al., 2000a). The provision of glutathione precursors to neurons is a possible explanation for the protective effect of astrocytes. Recent results have confirmed the primary role of astrocytes in glutathione metabolism and antioxidant defense in the brain (Dringen, 2000). Depletion of astrocyte glutathione would therefore indirectly induce oxidative cell death in neurons by depletion of essential glutathione precursors. In summary, we have shown that human glioblastoma cells are more resistant to Thimerosal cytotoxicity than neuroblastoma cells at doses in the low micromolar range and that the resistance is correlated with higher intracellular levels of intracellular glutathione. The significant protection by NAC and glutathione ethyl ester against Thimerosal cytotoxicity suggests the possibility that supplementation with glutathione precursors might be protective against mercury exposures in vivo. Numerous clinical studies have demonstrated the efficacy of NAC in increasing intracellular glutathione levels and reducing oxidative stress in humans ( and Luo, 1998 and Badaloo et al., 2002). Since cytotoxicity with both ethyl- and methylmercury have been shown to be mediated by glutathione depletion, dietary supplements that increase intracellular glutathione could be envisioned as an effective intervention to reduce previous or anticipated exposure to mercury. This approach would be especially valuable in the elderly and in pregnant women before receiving flu vaccinations, in pregnant women receiving Rho D immunoglobulin shots, and individuals who regularly consume mercury-containing fish. REFERENCES et al., 2001 J.W. , G. Shanker and M. Aschner, Methylmercury inhibits the in vitro uptake of the glutathione precursor, cystine, in astrocytes, but not in neurons, Brain Res 894 (2001) (1), pp. 131-140. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (724 K) and Luo, 1998 M.E. and J.L. Luo, Glutathione therapy: from prodrugs to genes, Semin Liver Dis 18 (1998) (4), pp. 415-424. et al., 2004 M.F. , M. Nilsson and N.R. Sims, Glutathione monoethylester prevents mitochondrial glutathione depletion during focal cerebral ischemia, Neurochem Int 44 (2004) (3), pp. 153-159. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (161 K) Awata et al., 1995 S. Awata, K. Nakayama, I. Suzuki, K. Sugahara and H. Kodama, Changes in cystathionine gamma-lyase in various regions of rat brain during development, Biochem Mol Biol Int 35 (1995) (6), pp. 1331-1338. Badaloo et al., 2002 A. Badaloo, M. Reid, T. Forrester, W.C. Heird and F. Jahoor, Cysteine supplementation improves the erythrocyte glutathione synthesis rate in children with severe edematous malnutrition, Am J Clin Nutr 76 (2002) (3), pp. 646-652. Ball et al., 2001 L.K. Ball, R. Ball and R.D. Pratt, An assessment of thimerosal use in childhood vaccines, Pediatrics 107 (2001) (5), pp. 1147-1154. Baskin et al., 2003 D.S. Baskin, H. Ngo and V.V. Didenko, Thimerosal induces DNA breaks, caspase-3 activation, membrane damage, and cell death in cultured human neurons and fibroblasts, Toxicol Sci 74 (2003) (2), pp. 361-368. Costa et al., 2004 L.G. Costa, M. Aschner, A. Vitalone, T. Syversen and O.P. Soldin, Developmental neuropathology of environmental agents, Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol 44 (2004), pp. 87-110. Dringen, 2000 R. Dringen, Metabolism and functions of glutathione in brain, Progr Neurobiol 62 (2000) (6), pp. 649-671. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (286 K) Dringen et al., 2000a R. Dringen, J.M. Gutterer and J. Hirrlinger, Glutathione metabolism in brain metabolic interaction between astrocytes and neurons in the defense against reactive oxygen species, Eur J Biochem 267 (2000) (16), pp. 4912-4916. Dringen et al., 2000b R. Dringen, J.M. Gutterer and J. Hirrlinger, Glutathione metabolism in brain metabolic interaction between astrocytes and neurons in the defense against reactive oxygen species, Eur J Biochem 267 (2000) (16), pp. 4912-4916. Dringen and Hirrlinger, 2003 R. Dringen and J. Hirrlinger, Glutathione pathways in the brain, Biol Chem 384 (2003) (4), pp. 505- 516. Dringen et al., 1999 R. Dringen, B. Pfeiffer and B. Hamprecht, Synthesis of the antioxidant glutathione in neurons: supply by astrocytes of CysGly as precursor for neuronal glutathione, J Neurosci 19 (1999) (2), pp. 562-569. 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Skipp, The comparative toxicology of ethyl- and methylmercury, Arch Toxicol 57 (1985) (4), pp. 260-267. Makani et al., 2002 S. Makani, S. Gollapudi, L. Yel, S. Chiplunkar and S. Gupta, Biochemical and molecular basis of thimerosal-induced apoptosis in T cells: a major role of mitochondrial pathway, Genes Immun 3 (2002) (5), pp. 270-278. Marchetti et al., 1997 P. Marchetti, D. Decaudin, A. Macho, N. Zamzami, T. Hirsch and S.A. Susin et al., Redox regulation of apoptosis: impact of thiol oxidation status on mitochondrial function, Eur J Immunol 27 (1997) (1), pp. 289-296. Meister, 1995 A. Meister, Glutathione metabolism, Methods Enzymol 251 (1995), pp. 3-7. Naganuma et al., 1990 A. Naganuma, M.E. and A. Meister, Cellular glutathione as a determinant of sensitivity to mercuric chloride toxicity. Prevention of toxicity by giving glutathione monoester, Biochem Pharmacol 40 (1990) (4), pp. 693-697. Public Health Service, 1999 Public Health Service, Department of Health and Human Services & American Academy of Pediatrics. Morb Mortal Weekly Rep 1999;48:563-4. Sagara et al., 1993 J.I. Sagara, K. Miura and S. Bannai, Maintenance of neuronal glutathione by glial cells, J Neurochem 61 (1993) (5), pp. 1672-1676. Sanfeliu et al., 2003 C. Sanfeliu, J. Sebastia, R. Cristofol and E. -Farre, Neurotoxicity of organomercurial compounds, Neurotox Res 5 (2003) (4), pp. 283-305. Sanfeliu et al., 2001 C. Sanfeliu, J. Sebastia and S.U. Ki, Methylmercury neurotoxicity in cultures of human neurons, astrocytes, neuroblastoma cells, Neurotoxicology 22 (2001) (3), pp. 317-327. Abstract | Full Text + Links | PDF (624 K) Wang and Cynader, 2000 X.F. Wang and M.S. Cynader, Astrocytes provide cysteine to neurons by releasing glutathione, J Neurochem 74 (2000) (4), pp. 1434-1442. Zafarullah et al., 2003 M. Zafarullah, W.Q. Li, J. Sylvester and M. Ahmad, Molecular mechanisms of N-acetylcysteine actions, Cell Mol Life Sci 60 (2003) (1), pp. 6-20. Corresponding author. Tel.: +1 501 364 4665; fax: +1 501 364 5107. This Document SummaryPlus Full Text + Links ·Full Size Images PDF (293 K) Actions E-mail Article NeuroToxicology Volume 26, Issue 1 , January 2005, Pages 1-8 1 of 18 Feedback | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy Copyright © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. ScienceDirect® is a registered trademark of Elsevier B.V. > > > Theresa: > > I agree with you, the EWG report seems remarkable. How we can find > out more about the protocol that Dr. followed. > > It would be completely amazing, not short of a miracle if our > children could be cured of apraxia... > > Does anyone in our group have more information regarding this EWG > report and the protocol? I'm up for discussion on this important > issue. > > G.-- Do you have any insight regarding the EWG Report and the > protocol? What are your thoughts? > > Thanks, > > > > > , Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2004 Report Share Posted December 29, 2004 Colleen, I also am very appreciative of the information,I am gearing up to further restrict the diet,we had already eliminated artificials but still occasionally see red ears,dark circles and sleep problems,so perhaps it is the chocolate or corn I think we are probably dealing with yeast and I know there is a viral link for my dd,she keeps getting a red throat off and on and has ticks which come and go again many thanks for your kind sharing theresa [ ] Re:EWG Report ---- Autism report news release 12.13.04 Colleen, Thanks so much for posting this information! Did you supplement methyl b12 orally or through injections? Dina In a message dated 12/28/2004 1:24:03 PM Eastern Standard Time, writes: Month 3 we added methyl b 12 every other day Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2004 Report Share Posted December 29, 2004 Theresa, Here is some more you may want to take along with you. Good Luck Colleen HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS QUICK SEARCH: [advanced] Author: Keyword(s): Year: Vol: Page: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- This Article Full Text Full Text (PDF) Alert me when this article is cited Alert me if a correction is posted Citation Map Services Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal Download to citation manager PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by , S J. Articles by Neubrander, J. A American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 80, No. 6, 1611-1617, December 2004 © 2004 American Society for Clinical Nutrition ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION Metabolic biomarkers of increased oxidative stress and impaired methylation capacity in children with autism1,2 S Jill , Cutler, Stepan Melnyk, Stefanie Jernigan, Laurette Janak, W Gaylor and A Neubrander 1 From the Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute, Little Rock, AR (SJJ, SM, and SJ); Niagara Falls, NY (PC); Colden, NY (LJ); Gaylor and Associates, LLC, Eureka Springs, AR (DWG); and Edison, NJ (JAN) Background: Autism is a complex neurodevelopmental disorder that usually presents in early childhood and that is thought to be influenced by genetic and environmental factors. Although abnormal metabolism of methionine and homocysteine has been associated with other neurologic diseases, these pathways have not been evaluated in persons with autism. Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate plasma concentrations of metabolites in the methionine transmethylation and transsulfuration pathways in children diagnosed with autism. Design: Plasma concentrations of methionine, S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), adenosine, homocysteine, cystathionine, cysteine, and oxidized and reduced glutathione were measured in 20 children with autism and in 33 control children. On the basis of the abnormal metabolic profile, a targeted nutritional intervention trial with folinic acid, betaine, and methylcobalamin was initiated in a subset of the autistic children. Results: Relative to the control children, the children with autism had significantly lower baseline plasma concentrations of methionine, SAM, homocysteine, cystathionine, cysteine, and total glutathione and significantly higher concentrations of SAH, adenosine, and oxidized glutathione. This metabolic profile is consistent with impaired capacity for methylation (significantly lower ratio of SAM to SAH) and increased oxidative stress (significantly lower redox ratio of reduced glutathione to oxidized glutathione) in children with autism. The intervention trial was effective in normalizing the metabolic imbalance in the autistic children. Conclusions: An increased vulnerability to oxidative stress and a decreased capacity for methylation may contribute to the development and clinical manifestation of autism. Key Words: Autistic disorder • biomarkers • oxidative stress • methylation • methionine • S-adenosylmethionine • S- adenosylhomocysteine • adenosine • cysteine • glutathione ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS Copyright © 2004 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc. > > > > > > Theresa: > > > > I agree with you, the EWG report seems remarkable. How we can find > > out more about the protocol that Dr. followed. > > > > It would be completely amazing, not short of a miracle if our > > children could be cured of apraxia... > > > > Does anyone in our group have more information regarding this EWG > > report and the protocol? I'm up for discussion on this important > > issue. > > > > G.-- Do you have any insight regarding the EWG Report and the > > protocol? What are your thoughts? > > > > Thanks, > > > > > > > > > > , > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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