J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 4637-4639
4637
A Metabolic Link between Arsenite and Selenite: The
Seleno-bis(S-glutathionyl) Arsinium Ion
Ju1 rgen Gailer,*,†,4 Graham N. George,*,‡ Ingrid J. Pickering,‡ Roger C. Prince,§
Steven C. Ringwald,¶ Jeanne E. Pemberton,¶ Richard S. Glass,¶ Husam S. Younis,⊥
Donald W. DeYoung,| and H. Vasken Aposhian†
Contribution from the Departments of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Chemistry, Pharmacology and
Toxicology, and UniVersity Animal Care, UniVersity of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, the Stanford
Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, P.O. Box 4349, MS 69, Stanford, California 94309, and the
ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company, Annandale, New Jersey 08801
ReceiVed August 23, 1999
Abstract: Among the most startling observations in mammalian toxicology is that a lethal dose of selenium
can be overcome by an otherwise lethal dose of arsenic. We report the molecular basis of this antagonism.
Using X-ray absorption spectroscopy we have identified a new arsenic-selenium compound in the bile of
rabbits injected with aqueous selenite and arsenite solutions. This compound contains equimolar arsenic and
selenium and exhibits X-ray absorption spectra which are essentially identical with those of a synthetic species
in solution which we have identified spectroscopically as the seleno-bis(S-glutathionyl) arsinium ion. The in
vivo detection of this compound links the mammalian metabolism of arsenite, selenite, and sulfur. It provides
a molecular basis for the antagonistic interaction between these metalloid compounds, and a potential explanation
of the association of cancer with prolonged intake of inorganic arsenic in humans.
Both arsenic and selenium compounds are known for their
toxicity, although selenium, and possibly also arsenic, is an
essential trace element. Natural and anthropogenic processes
release As and Se compounds to the environment,1,2 sometimes
leading to significant contamination of freshwater resources and
to an accumulation in the food chain.3 Additionally, the
unintended consequence of a “safe-water” program in Bangladesh has provided a public water supply contaminated with
low levels of arsenic on a massive scale.4 Typically, the most
toxic As and Se compounds in natural waters are the oxy-anions
arsenite and selenite.1,5 A surprising antagonism between arsenite
and selenite was first reported in the late 1930s when drinking
water containing arsenite completely protected rats against the
otherwise lethal liver damage caused by ingestion of seleniferous
wheat or selenite.6 Subsequent experiments revealed that arsenite
can also overcome the toxicity of selenite in dogs, swine, and
cattle.7 Arsenite inhibited pulmonary excretion of (CH3)2Se in
rats also receiving selenite,8 but biliary excretion of Se was
dramatically increased.9 Similarly, selenite stimulated gas†
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Arizona.
Present address: Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of
Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721.
‡ Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory.
§ ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company.
¶ Department of Chemistry, University of Arizona.
⊥ Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Arizona.
| University Animal Care, University of Arizona.
(1) Cullen, W. R.; Reimer, K. J. Chem. ReV. 1989, 89, 713-764.
(2) Berrow, M. L.; Ure, A. M. Occurrence and Distribution of Selenium;
Ihnat, M., Ed.; CRC Press: Boca Raton, 1989; pp 213-242.
(3) Pacyna, J. M. Toxicology of Metals; Chang, L. W., Ed.; CRC Lewis
Publishers: Boca Raton, 1996; pp 9-28.
(4) Nickson, R.; McArthur, J.; Burgess, W.; Ahmed, K. M.; Ravenscroft,
P.; Rahman, M. Nature 1998, 395, 338.
(5) Conde, J. E.; Sanz Alaejos, M. Chem. ReV. 1997, 97, 1979-2003.
(6) (a) Moxon, A. L. Science 1938, 88, 81. (b) Dubois, K. P.; Moxon,
A. L.; Olson, O. E. J. Nutr. 1940, 19, 477-482.
(7) Levander, O. A. EnViron. Health Perspect. 1977, 19, 159-164.
4
trointestinal excretion of arsenic.10 In vitro, greater than stoichiometric arsenite prevents (CH3)2Se formation from selenite
in the presence of glutathione (GSH) and GSH-reductase,
suggesting the formation of an As-Se compound,11 which may
be excreted in vivo from the liver to bile.9 To investigate this
possibility, we collected bile from rabbits injected with arsenite,
selenite, or both.12 We report a new As-Se compound in rabbit
bile, its structural identification with an As/Se-model compound,
and its significance for mammalian toxicology.
X-ray fluorescence spectrometry13 was used to quantify As
and Se (Figure 1). Bile from rabbits injected with As or Se
contained 1.7 ( 0.3 ppm As, or <0.1 ppm Se, respectively.
(8) Levander, O. A.; Argrett, L. C. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 1969, 14,
308-314.
(9) Levander, O. A.; Baumann, C. A. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 1966,
9, 106-115.
(10) Levander, O. A.; Baumann, C. A. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 1966,
9, 98-105.
(11) Hsieh, H. S.; Ganther, H. E. Biochemistry 1975, 14, 1632-1636.
(12) We used New Zealand white rabbits because humans and rabbits
have a very similar As(III) metabolism [Vahter, M.; Marafante, E. Chem.Biol. Interact. 1983, 47, 29-44]. Animals were deprived of food overnight,
and following halothane anesthesia, midline abdominal incision, and
gallbladder ligation, the common bile duct cannulated. Intravenous lactated
Ringer’s solution was given via the marginal ear vein and a tracheal tube
ensured free airways. After constant bile-flow was established, either
selenite, arsenite (0.63 and 0.60 mg‚kg-1 body weight, respectively), or
both (selenite followed 3 min later by arsenite) were injected (20 mM in
phosphate buffered saline, pH 7.4.) through the marginal ear vein (3 rabbits
per experiment). Bile was collected for 25 min after injection, mixed with
40% v/v glycerol (taking precautions against air exposure), and frozen in
liquid nitrogen.
(13) X-ray absorption measurements were carried out at the Stanford
Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory (SSRL) as previously described [George,
G. N.; Garrett, R. M.; Graf, T.; Prince, R. C.; Rajagopalan, K. V. J. Am.
Chem. Soc. 1998, 120, 4522-4523]. Energy calibration assumed lowest
inflection of elemental As and hexagonal Se to be 11867 and 12658 eV,
respectively. Fluorescence quantification used pseudo-Voigt fitting to
estimate peak areas relative to 10 ppm As and Se standards in control bile.
10.1021/ja993064m CCC: $19.00 © 2000 American Chemical Society
Published on Web 04/29/2000
4638 J. Am. Chem. Soc., Vol. 122, No. 19, 2000
Gailer et al.
Figure 1. As and Se quantification in rabbit bile by X-ray fluorescence
emission. Representative spectra are shown from animals treated with
As, Se, and both As and Se. The rising background (from left to right)
is the tail of the intense X-ray scatter peak from the 13400 eV excitation.
However, when the two were injected almost simultaneously,
a substantial increase of both metalloids was detected: 20.9 (
5.4 ppm As and 21.6 ( 5.9 ppm Se. As/Se molar ratios in
individual rabbit bile samples were 0.97 ( 0.02, suggesting that
a 1:1 As-Se compound was excreted to bile. Since selenite
and arsenite both have a high propensity to react with thiols,11,14
and because GSH is the most prevalent intracellular thiol
(5 mM in rat hepatocyte cytoplasm),15 the abiotic reaction of
an aqueous solution containing equimolar arsenite and selenite
with increasing GSH was investigated.16 Seven to eight mole
equivalents of GSH were required to form a water-soluble
As-Se species.
Figure 2 shows the As and Se K-edge extended X-ray
absorption fine structure (EXAFS)13 of the in vitro arsenicselenium-glutathione compound. The Se data could not be
fitted with both As and S ligands; instead only a single As at
2.31 ( 0.02 Å was indicated (Figure 2). Similarly, inclusion of
a Se-O interaction did not improve the fit, although two outershell Se-S at 3.03 ( 0.08 Å improved the fit marginally in the
low-k region. The As K-edge data showed two As-S bonds at
2.25 ( 0.02 Å and a single As-Se bond at 2.32 ( 0.01 Å
(Figure 2). A search of the Cambridge Structural Database
indicated typical As-Se bond lengths of 2.26-2.33 and 2.392.47 Å for double and single bonds, respectively. Our data thus
imply the structure shown in the inset to Figure 2, the selenobis(S-glutathionyl) arsinium ion, which we will refer to as
[(GS)2AsSe]-.17 The As-Se distance of 2.32 Å suggests
significant contribution from both resonance forms:
(GS)2AssSe- T (GS)2As-dSe
1a
1b
77Se-NMR
shows a chemical shift of -5.7 ppm, versus 144317 ppm for terminal (exocyclic) As-Se entities in cyclic
selenoarsenates,18 consistent with contribution of 1a. The Raman
(14) Gailer, J.; Lindner, W. J. Chromatogr. B 1998, 716, 83-93.
(15) Bellomo, G.; Vairetti, M.; Stivala, L.; Mirabelli, F.; Richelmi, P.;
Orrenius, S. Proc. Natl. Acad.. Sci. U.S.A. 1992, 89, 4412-4416.
(16) Reactions were carried out at 37 °C. A red-brown precipitate was
formed with 1 to 6 mol equiv of GSH. With 7 to 10 mol equiv of GSH, a
clear solution was formed after initial precipitate formation. In the absence
of arsenite, R-Se was formed for all stoichiometries. Samples for spectroscopy were prepared by adding equimolar sodium arsenite and selenite to 9
mol equiv of GSH. X-ray absorption samples were 10 mM metalloid with
40% v/v glycerol.
(17) For simplicity we neglect charges from amino and carboxylates of
glutathione. In support of our postulated structure, [(GS)2AsSe]- has recently
been chromatographically separated and the charge verified [Gailer J. G.;
Madden, S.; Burke, M. F.; Denton, M. B.; Aposhian, H. V. Unpublished].
(18) (a) Smith, D. M.; Park, C.-W.; Ibers, J. A. Inorg. Chem. 1996, 35,
6682-6687. (b) Smith, D. M.; Pell, M. A.; Ibers, J. A. Inorg. Chem. 1998,
37, 2340-2343.
Figure 2. As and Se K-edge EXAFS (A) and corresponding EXAFS
Fourier transforms (B) of [(GS)2AsSe]-, showing data (solid lines) and
best fits (broken lines). The As and Se Fourier transforms were phasecorrected for S and As backscattering, respectively. The inset shows
the postulated structure for [(GS)2AsSe]-.
spectrum of [(GS)2AsSe]- contains a peak at 290 cm-1, assigned
as the ν(As-Se) mode. This frequency is lower than previously
reported for AsdSe bonds (325-370 cm-1),19 again consistent
with an As-Se bond order of slightly less than two. Collectively,
the EXAFS, 77Se-NMR, and Raman data strongly support the
[(GS)2AsSe]- structure depicted in Figure 2.
Representative bile As and Se near-edge spectra are shown
in Figure 3, together with model compound spectra. The Se
spectrum of bile is almost identical with that of [(GS)2AsSe](Figure 3), which is unique among the many Se species we have
investigated. Thus the bile Se near-edge spectrum clearly
indicates the presence of a species [(RS)2AsSe]-, where R is
an organic donor; the near-edge cannot explicitly identify GSH
as the sulfur donor, although the metabolic roles and the high
GSH levels in vivo make this likely. The As near-edge spectrum
of the bile is similar to both [(GS)2AsSe]- and (GS)3As,
although with a somewhat broader peak (Figure 3).
The As and Se K-edge EXAFS spectra from the bile of a
single animal dosed with twice the amount of As and Se clearly
indicate 2.32 Å AsdSe coordination in the naturally produced
compound. Quantitative analysis of both near-edge and EXAFS
by total curve-fitting to a linear combination of the spectra of
(19) Abalonin, B. E.; Kostin, V. P.; Avvakumova, L. V.; Shagidullin,
R. R. Zh. Obsch. Khim. 1990, 60, 1119-1124.
J. Am. Chem. Soc., Vol. 122, No. 19, 2000 4639
A Metabolic Link between Arsenite and Selenite
whether [(GS)2AsSe]- enters the enterohepatic circulation). The
chemistry reported herein has important consequences for the
mammalian toxicology of both arsenite and selenite. When not
co-administered, both are enzymatically methylated in the
liver.20,21 On co-administration, a mutual inhibition of the
individual methylation pathways occurs,8,11,20 and this can now
be explained by the formation of [(GS)2AsSe]-.
The biliary excretion of [(GS)2AsSe]- may be especially
important in view of the fact that Se is an essential trace element.
Prolonged exposure to inorganic arsenic in drinking water
significantly reduces tissue selenium concentrations.22 Since a
chronic daily inorganic arsenic intake of ∼200 µg is significantly
associated with the development of various cancers,23 it is
conceivable that this consumption causes the formation and
excretion of [(GS)2AsSe]-, thereby leading to Se-deficiency,
which has been linked with cancer.24 Indeed, the chronic
ingestion of arsenite abolishes the anticarcinogenic effect of
selenium in rats,25 providing a potential explanation of the
association of cancer with prolonged As intake in humans.26
Consequently, in cases of chronic exposure to inorganic arsenic,
for example, the well-publicized “safe water” problems in
Bangladesh,4 an increased daily intake of selenium leading to
the formation and excretion of [(GS)2AsSe]- might protect
against the pathological effects of inorganic arsenic in drinking
water.
Acknowledgment. This research was supported in part by
the Austrian Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen
Forschung (Project No. J01303-CHE) and by the Superfund
Basic Research Program NIEHS. SSRL is funded by DOE
OBES, with further support by DOE OBER and NIH. Drs. N.
E. Jacobsen and K. Christensen (Department of Chemistry,
University of Arizona) are gratefully acknowledged for help
with 77Se-NMR.
Figure 3. As (upper) and Se (lower) K X-ray absorption near-edge
spectra of [(GS)2AsSe]-, bile, and relevant model compounds, all 5-10
mM in aqueous solution: (upper and lower) (a) the As + Se bile sample
of Figure 1 and (b) [(GS)2AsSe]-; (upper) (c) As(GS)3, (d) arsenite,
and (e) arsenate; (lower) (c) elemental R-Se, (d) Se(GS)2, (e) selenite,
and (f) selenate.
Supporting Information Available: Tables of EXAFS
curve-fitting results and Raman spectral frequencies, plus figures
of 77Se-NMR, Raman, and X-ray absorption spectra (PDF). This
material is available free of charge via the Internet at
http://pubs.acs.org.
JA993064M
[(GS)2AsSe]-, and arsenite or R-Se, for As or Se data,
respectively, indicate that the bile contained at least 60%
[(GS)2AsSe]-. Some loss of [(GS)2AsSe]- might have occurred
during collection of the bile, since samples were briefly exposed
to air, and might have undergone partial oxidation. We noted
that both bile samples and synthetic [(GS)2AsSe]- 16 developed
a precipitate of R-Se upon prolonged air exposure.
The reversal of Se toxicity by arsenite can thus be explained
by the formation and subsequent excretion of [(GS)2AsSe]- by
hepatocytes to bile (although we have no evidence, as yet, on
(20) Zakharyan, R.; Wu, Y.; Bogdan, G.; Aposhian, H. V. Chem. Res.
Toxicol. 1995, 8, 1029-1038.
(21) Ganther, H. E. J. Am. Coll. Toxicol. 1986, 5, 1-5.
(22) Wang, C.-T. Eur. J. Clin. Chem. Clin. Biochem. 1996, 34, 493497.
(23) Marcus, W. L.; Rispin, A. S. AdVances in Modern EnVironmental
Toxicology: Cothern, C. R., Mehlmans, M. A., Marcus, W. L., Eds.;
Princeton Publishing: Princeton, NJ, 1988; pp 133-158.
(24) Clark, L. C.; Cantor, K. P.; Allaway, W. H. Arch. EnViron. Health
1991, 46, 37-42.
(25) Ip, C.; Ganther, H. E. Carcinogenesis 1988, 9, 1481-1484.
(26) Chen, C.-J.; Kuo, T.-L.; Wu, M.-M. Lancet 1988, i, 414-415.