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Several Commonly Used Pesticides Are Toxic To Mitochondria In Laboratory Experiments
Public release date: 8-Nov-2003
Contact: Holly Korschun
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Emory University Health Sciences Center

Several commonly used pesticides are toxic to mitochondria in laboratory experiments

Pesticides attack same cellular targets as rotenone - already implicated in Parkinson's disease

Scientists at Emory University School of Medicine have found in laboratory experiments that several commonly used
pesticides are just as toxic or even more toxic to the mitochondria of cells than the pesticide rotenone, which already
has been implicated in the development of Parkinson's disease. The Emory neurologists, led by Tim Greenamyre, MD, PhD
and Todd B. Sherer, PhD, will present the results of their comparative research with pesticides at the Society for
Neuroscience meeting in New Orleans on Saturday, Nov. 8.

Parkinson's disease, which is one of the most common neurodegenerative diseases, has been associated abnormalities of
mitochondria, which are the "power plants" that provide all cells with energy. Rotenone and many other pesticides are
known to damage the mitochondria by inhibiting a mitochondrial enzyme called complex I. In earlier experiments, Dr.
Greenamyre and his colleagues found that chronic treatment with low levels of rotenone caused gradual degeneration of
the dopamine neurons in rats, and reproduced many of the features of Parkinsonism.

In the new study, the Emory scientists exposed human neuroblastoma cells to the pesticides rotenone, pyridaben,
fenazaquin, and fenpyroximate, all of which inhibit complex I. Pyridaben was by far the most potent toxic compound,
followed by rotenone and fenpyroximate, with fenazaquin being the least toxic. Pyridaben was also more potent than
rotenone in producing "free radicals" and oxidative damage to the cells, both of which are thought to be important in
causing Parkinson's disease.

"These results show that commonly used pesticides are toxic to cells, and may cause the kinds of cellular damage that
lead to diseases such as Parkinson's," Dr. Sherer says. "Although our study does not prove that any particular
pesticide causes Parkinson's, it does lead to more questions about the safety of chronic exposure to these
environmental agents and certainly warrants additional research." Last year Emory created a new Emory Collaborative
Center for Parkinson's Disease Environmental Research through a grant of more than $6.5 million from the National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

"For quite a while scientists have believed that environmental factors, including pesticides, may be important in
causing Parkinson's disease," Dr. Greenamyre says. "We are continuing our research to determine exactly how these
exposures cause nerve cell damage and death."

Other Emory scientists involved in the research study were Gary W. Miller, PhD, associate professor in Emory's Rollins
School of Public Health, and neurologists Alexander Panov, PhD and Jason Richardson, PhD.

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SOURCE: EurekAlert, DC
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-11/euhs-scu110603.php

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