Toxicology of alkaloids I. • Alkaloids – Nitrogenous compounds – Metabolic transformation of aminoacids or /and other precursors (pseudoalkaloids) – One or more atoms of nitrogen • built into cycle (heterocyclic alkaloids) • aliphatic (protoalkaloids) – Heterocyclic alkaloids: • Quinolizidine, piperidine, pyridine, pyrrolizidine, • Isoquinoline, indol, quinoline, imidazol, terpenic, steroid – Important pharmacological and toxikological activity – Quinolizidine alkaloids • Activity similar to quinidine • Activity on ion channals (Na, K), nicotinic and muscarinic receptors, affection of proteosynthesis – Anagyrine • Anagyris foetida, Cytisus spp., Genista spp., Lupinus spp., Sophora spp. Fabaceae • Vasoconstriction – Central – Increased release of adrenalin • Teratogenic – Skeletal contractive deformation – Cleft palate – Mainly described for calfs – Inhibition of foetus movement in uterus – U lidí » Erythrocytary aplazia » Vascular anomalies » Skeletal dysplazia N N O H H •Cytisine, N- methylcytisine –Laburnum anagyroides, Cytisus spp., Genista spp., Sophora spp. Fabaceae – Common intoxications – Similar to nicotine intoxications • Mydriazis, salivation, sweting • Burning in mouth • Central irritation causing vomiting – Large amount • Delirium, excitation • Tonic-clonic convulsions • Respiratory distress N N O H H N N O H H CH3 • Lupanine, lupinine, isolupinine – Lupinus spp., Genista spp., Cytisus spp. Fabaceae – Mostly pasturing animals – Lupinosis • Anxiety, convulsions • Icterus N N O H N OH • Sparteine – Sarothomnus scoparius, Genista tinctoria Fabaceae – Effect most similar to quinidine • Delay and slowering of excitement transfer – Ventricular arrhythmia to arrest • Minimal effect on CNS • Peripherial: – Paralyse terminations of motoric nerves – Curare-phormous affection of sympathic ganglia • Image of intoxication: – Nausea, diarrhea, vomiting – Vertigo – Tachycardia? – Circulatory collapse – Decrease of glycaemia » Increased release of insulin N N • Metabolism of sparteine – Genetic polymorphism CYP2D6 – 5-10% of population slow metabolisers – 2,3-dehydrosparteine – Hydroxylation, conjugation – Excretion via kidneys • Piperidine and pyridine alkaloids – Toxicologic importance – Coniine, nicotine, tropane alkaloids • Actinidine – Actinidia polygama Actinidiaceae silver vine – Similar to kiwi, edible fruits – Poisonous leaves • Sedative effect • Excitation of Felidae beast – Toxic substance of defensive secret of some insects • N-(p-OH-phenylethyl)- actinidine – Inhibitor of cholinesterase – Valeriana officinalis Valerianaceae CH3 N CH3 • Anabasine – Nicotiana spp. Solanaceae – Anabasis aphylla Chenopodiaceae – Similar to nicotine – Highly toxic – Often intoxications – Teratogen • Poultry, cattle, pigs • tzv. arthrogryposes • Anabaseine – Aphaenogaster rudis N N N N • Arecoline – Areca catechu betel Arecaceae – Muscarinic effect – Higher dosage affects also nicotinic receptors – Salivation, perspiration, miosis • Dioscorine – yam – Dioscorea spp. Dioscoreaceae – Anticholinergic – Convulsions N O O O N O – Lobeline • Lobelia spp. Lobeliaceae • Campanula medium Campanulaceae • Nausea • Stimulation of CNS and GIT – 4´-O-methylpiridoxine • B6-antivitamin • Hypersensitivity, convulsions, death • Mainly cattle – Pasture of Albizia spp. • Gingko biloba N CH3 OHO • Coniine, N-methylconiine • γ-coniceine (Aloe globuligemma) – Conium maculatum Apiaceae – Local irritation – Paralysis of snesoric and motoric nerves – Typical ascending paralysis of skeletal muscles – Terminal stage • Respiratory arrest in full consciousness nad heart action – Symtoms • Nausea, salivation, vomitus • Stomach pain with diarrea • Landry´s ascending polyneuritis – Chronic intoxication • teratogenic N • Cocaine • Erythroxylon cocca, Erythroxylaceae – History • Indians of Chibcha tribe • Incas • Spanish • Coca-cola till 1904 • 1860 Albert Niemann – pure cocaine • Sigmund Freund, Carl Coller –Metabolism –Formation of ethylderivative during intoxication by ethanol – Mechanism of rffect • Indirect sympathomimetic (inhibitor of noradrenaline reuptake) • Block of ion channels of neurons (disorder of excitement transmission) • Adrenergic stimulation – Peripheral effects • Vasoconstriction, hypertermia, mydriazis • Low dosage - ↓ of heart rate • High dosage - ↑ of heart rate, cardial arrest – Central stimulation • Euphoria, depletion of neutransmiters (NA), short depressive effect • Rise of psychic dependence – Does not induces physical dependence • Intelectual stimulation, hyperactivity, hyperlucidity • Self-deceit, paranoid psychosis N O O O O H • Cocaine – Complications during usage • Cardiovascular failure – Way of use • As salt (chloride) or base • Chloride – Snuffing, i.v. • Base – Smoking (crack), inhalation • Mixture with heroine – snowball • Mixture with alcohol – Cardiotoxic – Highly euphoric • Tropane alkaloids – Azabicyklo[3,2,1]octane – Apoatropine, atropine, hyoscyamine, scopolamine – Solanaceae – Parasympatholytic • Competitive antagonists of acetylcholinergic receptors – Muscarine type – Intoxication • Facial redness, dry mucose, thirst • Tachycardia, mydriasis • Hypertermia, central excitation, halucination • Coma, respiratory distress N O O O • Pyrrolizidine alkaloids – Asteracea, Fabaceae, Boraginaceae – Ester bonded alkaloids • Necine part (base, bicyclic pyrrolizidine, sometimes 1,2 dehydroform) • Necic acid or fragment – Dehydroform more toxic – 360 compounds • Makrocyclic diesters • Open diesters • Monoesters – Metabolism in plant: • Synthesis in roots via N-oxides • Transport through phloem • Storage in vacuoles, in water as N-oxides • Loss of water – tertiary bases Senecio spp. Heliotropium spp. Symphytum officinalis –Metabolism in vertebrae •N-oxides polar and non- toxic –Do not cross membranes –Unstable –Reduction in gut to tertiary amines –Crossing membranes thanks to lipophilicity »Non-protonated •Partially cleaved to base and acid –Non-specific blood esterase –Non-toxic (no metabolites) –Conjugation and urine excretion –Steric protection – not cleaved •In liver –Oxidation to pyrrol, hydrolýsis –Derivatives with exocyclic methylene E. Röder. Pharmazie 50 (1995), 83-98. • Toxicity – N-oxides similarly toxic to tertiary alkaloids – Polar – therefore rapid excretion – Acute toxicity • Hepatotoxicity – Megalocytosis of hepatocytes (upto 30 times bigger) – Enlargement of hepatocytes nuclei – Disorder of hepatocyte metabolism – Disorder of mitosis – Cellular destruction – Fat degeneration • Intake of 10-20 mg of alkaloids • Larger scale of cells destruction – liver failure, death. – Chronic toxicity • Proliferation of bile ducti epitel • Inflammatory changes • Centrilobular necrosis • Cirrhosis, ascites • Venooclusive disease – seneciosis – Clinical symptoms • Pain in underbelly • Vomiting, diarrhea • Ascites • Swelling of liver • Vasomotoric collapse • Blood regurgitation, blood diarrhea • After liver damage – Pulmonary damage, stimulation of pulmonary arterial epithelium – Cor pulmonale • Intake of sub-toxic doses for long time (about 1 mg) – Megalocytosis – VOD – Fat degeneration of liver – Adenomas or carcinomas • Middle and South Africa – Usage of several medicinal plants – Crotalaria, Cynoglossum, Heliotropium and Senecio • Mutagenicity – senkirkine > monocrotaline > seneciphylline > senecionine > 7-acetyl-intermedine > heliotrine > retrorsine > 7acetyllycopsamine > symphytine > jacoline > symlandine > intermedine > indicine > lycopsamine > indicin N-oxide > supinine – Hydroxylation of structure decrease mutagenicity • Teratogenity – 50 to 200 mg alkaloid/kg of body weight • Damage and changes – Death of fetus • More than 200 mg/kg • Isoquinoline alkaloids – Different structures – Different biogenetic pathways – Wide occurrence – Isoquinoline nucleus – Derived from tyrosine – Tetrahydroisoquinoline – Benzyltetrahydroisoquinoline – Bis(Benzyltetrahydroisoquinoline) – Amaryllidaceae – Monoterpenoid • Adlumine – Phtalidoisoquinoline alkaloid – Adlumia fungosa, Fumaria a Coryldalis spp. Fumariaceae – Convulsions, cardial depression – Gut stimulation – Uterotonic • Bicuculine – Phtalidisoquinoline alkaloid – Corydalis, Fumaria, Adluminia Fumariaceae – Antagonist of GABAA – For experimental purposes Adlumia fungosa Fumaria officinalis Corydalis lutea • Allocryptopine – Benzylisoquinoline alkaloid of protoberberine type – Bocconia spp., Chelidonium spp., Glaucium spp. Papaveraceae – Corydalis spp. Fumariaceae – Zanthoxylum spp., Fagara spp. Rutaceae – Thalictrum spp. Ranunculaceae – Increases bond of GABA to receptors (benzodiazepine activity) – Inhibition of phosphodiesterases – Bond to adrenergic α-receptors – Toxicity • Non-specified cardial toxicity N O O OMe OMe CH3 O Escholzia californica Bocconia spp. Chelidonium majus • Androcymbine – Androcymbium melanthoides Liliaceae – Homomorphinan alkaloid • Colchicine – Colchicum spp., Gloriosa superba, Merendera spp. Liliaceae – Exocyclic amine derived from tyrosine – Toxicity • Toxin of cell division – Inhibition » Transport of proteins and saccharides in neural cells » Transport of vesicules to memebranes » Transport of chromosomes from equatorial position to poles – GIT, heart, neural tissue, haemopoiesis • After consumation rapid absorption, strong linkage to plasmatic proteins, later biliar elimination – Gut reabsorpce (lonf termed toxicity, cumulation of low dosage) O MeO OMe MeO MeO N CH3 OMe MeO MeO N CH3 O O OMe Androcymbium spp. Merendera spp. Gloriosa superba • Symptoms – Similar to arsenic intoxication • Burning of oral and throat mucosa • Nausea, vomitus • Stomach pain, colics, convulsive urination • Watery and bloody bowel movement, hemorrhage to GIT • Loss of liquids, plasma, electrolytes • Circulatory disorders, hypotension, tachycardia, shock • Toxicity – Damage of liver tissue – Damage of nerves • Mental confusion, tonic-clonic convulsions • Loss of tendinous reflexes – Alopecia – Lethal dosage variable • 7 mg to 50 mg, 20-30 mg in average – Acts slowly • First symptoms in several hours • Death comes first in 12 hours • Bulbocapnine – Aporphine type of alkaloid – Corydalis spp., Fumaria spp. – Glaucium spp. Papaveraceae – Toxicity • So called bulbocapnine numbness – Catatonia – Slowering of cognitive function – Bizarre movements of extremities – High dosage » Tremor, convulsions » Circulatory disorders, respiratory paralysis • Inhibition of peristaltic • Stimulation to paralysis of uterus • Hyperglycemia NCH3 O O OH MeO • Erythrina alkaloids – β-erythroidine, erysonine, erythratidine – Erythrina spp. Fabaceae • Mostly Erythrina americana – Highest concentration in seeds – Boiling lowers toxicity – Toxicity • Used as halucinogenic (Mexico) • Vomiting and diarrhea • Peroral administration of pure substances – Neuromuscular blockator » Curare-forming effect » Sedative effect on CNS » Depression of respiratory centre N O O MeO •Morphine, codeine, heroine –Morphinan alkaloids –Effective levorotary form –Morphinan type of alkaloids • Typical for Papaver spp. Papaveraceae • Morphine –P. somniferum, P. setigerum Papaveraceae –Stereospecific, reversibile linkage to opioid receptors • At diiferent levels of CNS –Agonist at presynaptic receptors of myelinized fibers of small diameter • Nociception, inhibition of substance P release • Uprise of physical dependance –Inhibition of enkephaline production and simultaneous occupation of receptors –Insufficiency of natural ligands and morphinans » Withdrawal syndrome –Effect on respiration • Depression of respiratory centre –Decrease of sensitivity to hypoxia and pCO2 –Dependent on dose –Tempo of onset dependent on way of administration –Miosis of central origin –Depression of centre for cough –Complex effect on centre for vomiting • Nausea and vomiting –Influence on hypophysis • ↓secretion of FSH, LH, ACTH –Influence on hypothalamus • ↑secretion of ADH –Influence on fibers of smooth muscles • Constipation and urinary retention • Morphine metabolism • Symptoms of withdrawal – Chronic users • Nasal bleeding, perspiration, lachrymation, anxiety • Mydriasis, myalgia and pain of joints • Insomnia, tachycardia, arrhythmias, polypnoe, dispnoe • Nausea, diarrhea • Acute intoxication – Usually overdose from different reasons – High dosage • Immediate depression of CNS – Lower dosage • Initial short stimulation • Successive malaise, fatigue, somnolence • Heart rate decreases and tends to fade • Respiration slow and shallow • Loss of consciousness • Relaxation of muscles, extinction of reflexes • Cold, pale, wet skin – If the dose high enough • Coma, relaxation of muscles • Circulatory failure, cyanosis • Death caused by CNS depression – Respiratory arrest • Chronic intoxication – Morphinism • Short time of uprise – Strong analgetic – Experiments with drug • Tolerance to dosage • Combination of health problems – Social excomunication » Psychical and physical dilapidation – Criminality – Prognosis adverse » Accompanying diseases » Suicidal tendences http://www.mujweb.cz/www/jpdepot/danger/Drugs.htm • Thebaine – Morphinane type of alkaloid – Papaver somniferum, Papaver bracteatum Papaveraceae – Metabolism • oripavine, nororipavine and codeine – Symptoms similar to strychnine • Higher doses convulsion – Inhibitor of cholinesterase – Stimulation of CNS – ↑ deliberation of histamine – More toxic than morphine, lower risk of triggering dependence O O N O H O O N OH H • Papaverine – Benzylisoquinolin alkaloid – Papaver somniferum • In opium cca 1 % – No effect on CNS – Relaxation of smooth muscles • Vessels, lungs, GIT – Quinidine effect on heart • Risc hypotension and arrhythmias – Symptoms of intoxication • Cardiovascular system • Headache • Constipation, vomiting • Sweating N MeO MeO OMe OMe • Sanguinarine – Benzophenanthridine alkaloid – Sanguinaria canadensis, Papaver somniferum, Chelidonium majus Papaveraceae – Fumaria officinalis Fumariaceae – Peroraly only low toxicity – Parenteral administration • Much higher toxicity • Depressor of heart function • Effect on CNS – Symptoms • Vomiting, gastritis, stomach pain • More difficult respiration • Miosis, syncope • Cardiac arrest – Epidemiologic studies • Higher incidence of glaucoma O O O O N + • Tubocurarine – Chondrodendron spp., mostly Ch. tomentosum Menispermaceae – Part of curare • Active after parenteral administration only – Competition with acetylcholine • On the nicotine receptor of neuromuscular disc • Prevent formation of excitement • No influence of other type of excitement formation • Do not prevent muscle contraction triggered by direct stimulation – Effect of curare • Lowering of muscle tonus • Advancing atonia • Muscular paralysis – Firstly face and eye lid – Neck and numbs – Abdominal and respiratory muscles – Diaphragm • Peripheral myorelaxant • Effect not persisting – Teratogenic N + O CH3 CH3 OH OCH3 OOH O N + CH3 CH3 CH3 • Alkaloids of Amaryllidaceae – Galanthus, Leucojum, Narcissus, Lycoris, Amaryllis, Hippeastrum – More than 100 of toxic alkaloids – Several sub-groups • Most important lycorine, galanthamine, narciclasine Lycoris radiata Amaryllis spp. Hippeastrum equestre Haemanthus spp. • Galanthamine – Reverse inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase • Mostly in CNS • Less on peripheria – Disorders of atrioventricular transmission – Bradycardia – Nausea, vomiting, hypotension, analgesia • Lycorine – Respiratory depression, death caused by respiratory arrest – Strong emetic – Symptoms • Vomiting, diarrhea, congestion of GIT musosa • Congestion of pleura and endocardium – It is cytotoxic • Narciclasine – Antimitotic activity • Inhibition of protein synthesis by blocking the bigger ribosome subunit N OH MeO N O O OH OH N O O OH OH OOH OH • Monoterpenic isoquinoline alkaloids – Emetine • Cephaelis spp. Rubiaceae • Hedera spp. Araliaceae – Intoxication • Usually overdose of drug • Muscular weakness, tachycardia, abnormalities on ECG • Changes in ALT, AST levels • GIT malaise – vomiting, diarrhea, pyloric inflammation • Lethal dose cca 1 gram N N OMe OMe MeO MeO