Felecia S. Walton
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Featured researches published by Felecia S. Walton.
Environmental Health Perspectives | 2011
David S. Paul; Felecia S. Walton; R. Jesse Saunders; Miroslav Stýblo
Background: Type 2 diabetes is characterized by glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. Obesity is the leading cause of type 2 diabetes. Growing evidence suggests that chronic exposure to inorganic arsenic (iAs) also produces symptoms consistent with diabetes. Thus, iAs exposure may further increase the risk of diabetes in obese individuals. Objectives: Our goal was to characterize diabetogenic effects of iAs exposure and high-fat diet (HFD) in weaned C57BL/6 mice. Methods: Mice were fed HFD or low-fat diet (LFD) while exposed to iAs in drinking water (25 or 50 ppm As) for 20 weeks; control HFD and LFD mice drank deionized water. Body mass and adiposity were monitored throughout the study. We measured glucose and insulin levels in fasting blood and in blood collected during oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT) to evaluate the diabetogenic effects of the treatment. Results: Control mice fed HFD accumulated more fat, had higher fasting blood glucose, and were more insulin resistant than were control LFD mice. However, these diabetes indicators decreased with iAs intake in a dose-dependent manner. OGTT showed impaired glucose tolerance for both control and iAs-treated HFD mice compared with respective LFD mice. Notably, glucose intolerance was more pronounced in HFD mice treated with iAs despite a significant decrease in adiposity, fasting blood glucose, and insulin resistance. Conclusions: Our data suggest that iAs exposure acts synergistically with HFD-induced obesity in producing glucose intolerance. However, mechanisms of the diabetogenic effects of iAs exposure may differ from the mechanisms associated with the obesity-induced type 2 diabetes.
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2012
Lan Ding; R. Jesse Saunders; Zuzana Drobná; Felecia S. Walton; Pencheng Xun; David J. Thomas; Miroslav Stýblo
Arsenic (+3 oxidation state) methyltransferase (AS3MT) is the key enzyme in the pathway for methylation of arsenicals. A common polymorphism in the AS3MT gene that replaces a threonyl residue in position 287 with a methionyl residue (AS3MT/M287T) occurs at a frequency of about 10% among populations worldwide. Here, we compared catalytic properties of recombinant human wild-type (wt) AS3MT and AS3MT/M287T in reaction mixtures containing S-adenosylmethionine, arsenite (iAs(III)) or methylarsonous acid (MAs(III)) as substrates and endogenous or synthetic reductants, including glutathione (GSH), a thioredoxin reductase (TR)/thioredoxin (Trx)/NADPH reducing system, or tris (2-carboxyethyl) phosphine hydrochloride (TCEP). With either TR/Trx/NADPH or TCEP, wtAS3MT or AS3MT/M287T catalyzed conversion of iAs(III) to MAs(III), methylarsonic acid (MAs(V)), dimethylarsinous acid (DMAs(III)), and dimethylarsinic acid (DMAs(V)); MAs(III) was converted to DMAs(III) and DMAs(V). Although neither enzyme required GSH to support methylation of iAs(III) or MAs(III), addition of 1mM GSH decreased K(m) and increased V(max) estimates for either substrate in reaction mixtures containing TR/Trx/NADPH. Without GSH, V(max) and K(m) values were significantly lower for AS3MT/M287T than for wtAS3MT. In the presence of 1mM GSH, significantly more DMAs(III) was produced from iAs(III) in reactions catalyzed by the M287T variant than in wtAS3MT-catalyzed reactions. Thus, 1mM GSH modulates AS3MT activity, increasing both methylation rates and yield of DMAs(III). AS3MT genotype exemplified by differences in regulation of wtAS3MT and AS3MT/M287T-catalyzed reactions by GSH may contribute to differences in the phenotype for arsenic methylation and, ultimately, to differences in the disease susceptibility in individuals chronically exposed to inorganic arsenic.
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2010
Zuzana Drobná; Felecia S. Walton; Anne W. Harmon; David J. Thomas; Miroslav Stýblo
Biomethylation is the major pathway for the metabolism of inorganic arsenic (iAs) in many mammalian species, including the human. However, significant interspecies differences have been reported in the rate of in vivo metabolism of iAs and in yields of iAs metabolites found in urine. Liver is considered the primary site for the methylation of iAs and arsenic (+3 oxidation state) methyltransferase (As3mt) is the key enzyme in this pathway. Thus, the As3mt-catalyzed methylation of iAs in the liver determines in part the rate and the pattern of iAs metabolism in various species. We examined kinetics and concentration-response patterns for iAs methylation by cultured primary hepatocytes derived from human, rat, mice, dog, rabbit, and rhesus monkey. Hepatocytes were exposed to [(73)As]arsenite (iAs(III); 0.3, 0.9, 3.0, 9.0 or 30 nmol As/mg protein) for 24 h and radiolabeled metabolites were analyzed in cells and culture media. Hepatocytes from all six species methylated iAs(III) to methylarsenic (MAs) and dimethylarsenic (DMAs). Notably, dog, rat and monkey hepatocytes were considerably more efficient methylators of iAs(III) than mouse, rabbit or human hepatocytes. The low efficiency of mouse, rabbit and human hepatocytes to methylate iAs(III) was associated with inhibition of DMAs production by moderate concentrations of iAs(III) and with retention of iAs and MAs in cells. No significant correlations were found between the rate of iAs methylation and the thioredoxin reductase activity or glutathione concentration, two factors that modulate the activity of recombinant As3mt. No associations between the rates of iAs methylation and As3mt protein structures were found for the six species examined. Immunoblot analyses indicate that the superior arsenic methylation capacities of dog, rat and monkey hepatocytes examined in this study may be associated with a higher As3mt expression. However, factors other than As3mt expression may also contribute to the interspecies differences in the hepatocyte capacity to methylate iAs.
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2004
Felecia S. Walton; Anne W. Harmon; David S. Paul; Zuzana Drobná; Yashomati M. Patel; Miroslav Styblo
Cancer Research | 2003
Guo-Qiang Chen; Li Zhou; Miroslav Styblo; Felecia S. Walton; Yongkui Jing; Rona S. Weinberg; Zhu Chen; Samuel Waxman
Archives of Toxicology | 2010
Zuzana Drobná; Felecia S. Walton; David S. Paul; Weibing Xing; David J. Thomas; Miroslav Stýblo
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2004
Zuzana Drobná; Stephen B. Waters; Felecia S. Walton; Edward L. LeCluyse; David J. Thomas; Miroslav Stýblo
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2007
David S. Paul; Araceli Hernández-Zavala; Felecia S. Walton; Blakely M. Adair; Jiří Dědina; Tomáš Matoušek; Miroslav Stýblo
Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry | 2008
Araceli Hernández-Zavala; Tomáš Matoušek; Zuzana Drobná; David S. Paul; Felecia S. Walton; Blakely M. Adair; Dědina Jiří; David J. Thomas; Miroslav Stýblo
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2003
Felecia S. Walton; Stephen B. Waters; Summer Jolley; Edward L. LeCluyse; David J. Thomas; Miroslav Styblo