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Toxicologic Pathology
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0192623308317420v1
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Articles

The Comparative Pathology of the Glycosidase Inhibitors Swainsonine, Castanospermine, and Calystegines A3, B2, and C1 in Mice

Bryan L. Stegelmeier1, Russell J. Molyneux2, Naoki Asano3, Alison A. Watson4 and Robert J. Nash4

1 USDA-ARS, Poisonous Plant Research Laboratory, Logan, Utah, USA
2 USDA-ARS, Western Regional Research Center, Albany, California, USA
3 Hokuriku University, Kanazawa 920-11, Japan
4 Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, Plas Gogerddan, Aberystwyth, United Kingdom

Correspondence: Bryan Stegelmeier, Poisonous Plant Research Laboratory, 1150 East 1400 North, Logan, UT 84321; e-mail:bryan.stegelmeier{at}ars.usda.gov.

To study various polyhydroxy-alkaloid glycosidase inhibitors, 16 groups of 3 mice were dosed using osmotic minipumps with swainsonine (0, 0.1, 1, and 10 mg/kg/day), castanospermine, and calystegines A3, B2, and C1 (1, 10, and 100 mg/kg/day). After 28 days, the mice were euthanized, necropsied, and examined using light and electron microscopy. The high-dose swainsonine–treated mice developed neurologic disease with neuro-visceral vacuolation typical of locoweed poisoning. Castanospermine- and calystegines-treated mice were clinically normal; however, high-dose castanospermine–treated mice had thyroid, renal, hepatic, and skeletal myocyte vacuolation. Histochemically, swainsonine- and castanospermine-induced vacuoles contained mannose-rich oligosaccharides. High-dose calystegine A3–treated mice had increased numbers of granulated cells in the hepatic sinusoids. Electron microscopy, lectin histochemistry, and immunohistochemistry suggest these are pit cells (specialized NK cells). Histochemically, the granules contain glycoproteins or oligosaccharides with abundant terminal N-acetylglucosamine residues. Other calystegine-treated mice were histologically normal. These findings indicate that swainsonine produced lesions similar to locoweed, castanospermine caused vacuolar changes with minor changes in glycogen metabolism, and only calystegine A3 produced minimal hepatic changes. These also suggest that in mice calystegines and castanospermine are less toxic than swainsonine, and as rodents are relatively resistant to disease, they are poor models to study such induced storage diseases.

Key Words: swainsonine • castanospermine • calystegine • astragalus • ipomoea • locoweed

Abbreviations: PNA, Arachis hypogea • Con-A, Concanavalia ensiformis • SBA, Glycine X 3max • PWM, Phytolacca americana • WGA, Triticum vulgaris • UEA-1, Ulex europaeus • PAS, periodic acid Schiff • H&E, hematoxylin and eosin

This version was published on July 1, 2008

Toxicologic Pathology, Vol. 36, No. 5, 651-659 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0192623308317420


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