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Folate, homocysteine, and arsenic metabolism in arsenic-exposed individuals in Bangladesh.


Chronic exposure to arsenic is occurring throughout South and East Asia due to groundwater contamination of well water. Variability in susceptibility to arsenic toxicity may be related to nutritional status nutritional status,
n the assessment of the state of nourishment of a patient or subject.
. Arsenic is methylated meth·yl·ate  
n.
An organic compound in which the hydrogen of the hydroxyl group of methyl alcohol is replaced by a metal.

tr.v. meth·yl·at·ed, meth·yl·at·ing, meth·yl·ates
1.
 to monomethylarsonic acid (MMA (Microcomputer Managers Association, Inc.) A membership organization with chapters throughout the U.S. that was devoted to educating personnel responsible for personal computers. It disbanded in 1996.

Mma - A fast Mathematica-like system, in Allegro CL by R. Fateman, 1991.
) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA (1) (Digital Media Adapter) See digital media hub.

(2) (Document Management Alliance) A specification that provides a common interface for accessing and searching document databases.
) via one-carbon metabolism, a biochemical pathway that is dependent on folate folate /fo·late/ (fo´lat)
1. the anionic form of folic acid.

2. more generally, any of a group of substances containing a form of pteroic acid conjugated with l-glutamic acid and having a variety of substitutions.
. The majority of one-carbon metabolism methylation methylation,
n a phase-II detoxification pathway in the liver; methyl groups combine with toxins to rid the body of various substances.

methylation
(meth´
 reactions are devoted to biosynthesis Biosynthesis

The synthesis of more complex molecules from simpler ones in cells by a series of reactions mediated by enzymes. The overall economy and survival of the cell is governed by the interplay between the energy gained from the breakdown of compounds
 of creatine creatine /cre·a·tine/ (kre´ah-tin) an amino acid occurring in vertebrate tissues, particularly in muscle; phosphorylated creatine is an important storage form of high-energy phosphate. , the precursor of creatinine. Our objectives of this cross-sectional study cross-sectional study
n.
See synchronic study.


cross-sectional study,
n the scientific method for the analysis of data gathered from two or more samples at one point in time.
 were to characterize the relationships among folate, cobalamin cobalamin: see coenzyme; vitamin. , homocysteine Homocysteine Definition

Homocysteine is a naturally occurring amino acid found in blood plasma. High levels of homocysteine in the blood are believed to increase the chance of heart disease, stroke, Alzheimer's disease, and osteoporosis.
, and arsenic metabolism in Bangladeshi adults. Water arsenic, urinary arsenic, urinary creatinine, plasma folate, cobalamin, and homocysteine were assessed in 1,650 adults; urinary arsenic metabolites Metabolites
Substances produced by metabolism or by a metabolic process.

Mentioned in: Interactions
 were analyzed for a subset of 300 individuals. The percentage of DMA in urine was positively associated with plasma folate (r = 0.14, p = 0.02) and negatively associated with total homocysteine (tHcys; r = -0.14, p = 0.01). Conversely, percent MMA was negatively associated with folate (r = -0.12, p = 0.04) and positively associated with tHcys (r = 0.21, p = 0.0002); percent inorganic arsenic (InAs) was negatively associated with folate (r = -0.12, p = 0.03). Urinary creatinine was positively correlated with percent DMA (r = 0.40 for males, p < 0.0001; 0.25 for females, p = 0.001), and with percent InAs (r = -0.45 for males, p < 0.0001; -0.20 for females, p = 0.01). Collectively, these data suggest that folate, tHcys, and other factors involved in one-carbon metabolism influence arsenic methylation. This may be particularly relevant in Bangladesh, where the prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia is extremely high. Key words: arsenic, arsenicosis, Bangladesh, creatinine, dimethylarsinic acid, folate, homocysteine, hyperhomocysteinemia, micronutrient mi·cro·nu·tri·ent
n.
A substance, such as a vitamin or mineral, that is essential in minute amounts for the proper growth and metabolism of a living organism.
 deficiency, monomethylarsonic acid, one-carbon metabolism, S-adenosylmethionine, vitamin [B.sub.12], well water. Environ Health Perspect 113:1683-1688 (2005). doi:10.1289/ehp.8084 available via http://dx.doi.org/[Online 21 July 2005]

**********

Arsenic that is naturally present in soil can be mobilized and transported, leading to increased concentrations of As in aquifers that are sources of drinking water drinking water

supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g.
 (Harvey et al. 2002). The largest contemporary known mass exposure to As is occurring due to the consumption of tube-well water throughout the Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta in Bangladesh and India. In Bangladesh alone, this exposure is affecting approximately 25-30 million residents. Our survey of roughly 6,000 contiguous wells in Araihazar, Bangladesh, the region of interest in the current study, reported well-water As concentrations ranging from < 5 to 860 [micro]g/L (van Geen et al. 2002). This range greatly exceeds the maximum contaminant level Maximum Contaminant Levels are standards that are set by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for drinking water quality. A Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) is the legal threshold limit on the amount of a hazardous substance that is allowed in drinking water under  of 10 [micro]g/L promulgated prom·ul·gate  
tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates
1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce.

2.
 by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  (EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
 2001) and the World Health Organization (WHO 2004), as well as the Bangladesh standard of 50 [micro]g/L.

Individuals chronically exposed to As are at increased risk for various cancers, including cancers of the skin, bladder, lung, and liver. Chronic As exposure is also a risk factor for stroke (Chiou et al. 1997), ischemic heart disease Ischemic heart disease
Insufficient blood supply to the heart muscle (myocardium).

Mentioned in: Myocarditis

ischemic heart disease 
 (Hsueh et al. 1997), and neurologic consequences in adults and children (Wasserman et al. 2004). In addition, inorganic arsenic (InAs) has long been considered to be a teratogen teratogen /ter·a·to·gen/ (ter´ah-to-jen) any agent or factor that induces or increases the incidence of abnormal prenatal development.teratogen´ic

te·rat·o·gen
n.
 in multiple mammalian species (Shalat et al. 1996; Wlodarczyk et al. 2001).

The biomethylation of InAs generates mono- and dimethyl di·meth·yl  
n.
An organic compound, especially ethane, containing two methyl groups.
 arsenic species [monomethylarsonic acid (MMA) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA), respectively; Figure 1] which are more readily excreted than InAs (Vahter and Marafante 1987). Individuals whose urine contains relatively lower proportions of DMA have been reported to be at increased risk for skin and bladder cancers (Chen et al. 2003a, 2003b; Hsueh et al. 1997; Yu et al. 2000). Thus, methylation of InAs has traditionally been considered to be a detoxification Detoxification Definition

Detoxification is one of the more widely used treatments and concepts in alternative medicine. It is based on the principle that illnesses can be caused by the accumulation of toxic substances (toxins) in the body.
 pathway. However, a growing literature of experimental studies indicates that the trivalent trivalent /tri·va·lent/ (tri-va´lent) having a valence of three.

tri·va·lent
adj.
Having valence 3.



tri·va
 methylated arsenic intermediates (MM[A.sup.III] and DM[A.sup.III]) may be more toxic than In[As.sup.III] or any of the pentavalent pentavalent

having a valence of five.


pentavalent antimony compounds
see antimony.

pentavalent organic arsenicals
includes the pharmaceuticals arsanilic acid, roxarsone, nitarsone. See also organic arsenical.
 intermediates (Ahmad et al. 1999; Lee et al. 1988; Nesnow et al. 2002; Styblo et al. 2002).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

In humans, there is considerable interindividual variability in the proportions of InAs, MMA, and DMA excreted in urine. InAs and MMA are enzymatically methylated via one-carbon metabolism, a biochemical pathway dependent on folate for recruitment of methyl groups. One-carbon metabolism also requires vitamins [B.sub.12] (cobalamin) and [B.sub.6], as cofactors (Figure 2). Not surprisingly, animal studies have suggested that folate nutritional status may influence As metabolism. For example, dietary folate deficiency folate deficiency Folic acid deficiency Hematology A condition caused by a decrease in dietary folic acid, resulting in megaloblastic anermia, GI tract complaints–eg, glossitis, stomatitis, malabsorption, infertility, neural tube defects, and possibly also  (Spiegelstein et al. 2005) and/or dietary methyl donor deficiency significantly decreased total urinary As excretion, mainly due to lower DMA excretion; these diets also gave rise to increased retention of As in tissues, particularly in the liver and lungs (Tice et al. 1997; Vahter and Marafante 1987). These studies provided experimental evidence that the well-characterized nutritional regulation of one-carbon metabolism can influence As methylation and excretion.

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

The evidence for nutritional regulation of As methylation and excretion in humans is limited. In a study of 11 families in Chile, Chung et al. (2002) reported intrafamily associations in arsenic methylation. Although the correlation for InAs/(MMA+DMA) between father and mother was low (r = 0.18), adjustment for folate or homocysteine increased the correlation substantially (r = 0.33 and 0.55, respectively). The authors did not conclude that there was a significant effect of nutritional factors on methylation, but the data were highly suggestive (Chung et al. 2002). A case-control study case-control study,
n an investigation employing an epidemiologic approach in which previously existing incidents of a medical condition are used in lieu of gathering new information from a randomized population.
 in West Bengal, India, using dietary assessment, found a modest increase in risk for arsenicosis skin lesions Skin Lesions Definition

A skin lesion is a superficial growth or patch of the skin that does not resemble the area surrounding it.
Description

Skin lesions can be grouped into two categories: primary and secondary.
 for individuals within the lowest quintiles Quintiles Transnational Corp. is a contract research organization which serves the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and healthcare industries. History
Quintiles was founded in 1982 by Dennis Gillings and as of 2007 it has 18,000 employees.
 for dietary intake of animal protein, calcium, fiber, and folate (Mitra et al. 2004).

In the current study we tested the hypothesis that nutritional regulation of one-carbon metabolism, specifically folate nutritional status, contributes to the interindividual variability observed in InAs methylation. We conducted a cross-sectional study to assess the relationships among plasma total homocysteine (tHcys), total cysteine cysteine (sĭs`tēn), organic compound, one of the 20 amino acids commonly found in animal proteins. Only the l-stereoisomer participates in the biosynthesis of mammalian protein.  (Cys), folate, and cobalamin concentrations and As metabolism in adults residing in Araihazar, Bangladesh.

Methods

The data presented are from the Nutritional Influences on Arsenic Toxicity (NIAT NIAT NASA Integrated Action Team
NIAT Net Income After Taxes
NIAT National Institute for Advanced Technology (University of Nevada)
NIAT Naval Institute of Aeronautical Technology
NIAT National Institute of Advanced Technology
) study, an ongoing study on nutritional influences on arsenic metabolism. The NIAT study works in collaboration with a larger multidisciplinary program by health, earth, and social scientists from Columbia University and Bangladesh (the Columbia University Superfund Basic Research Program The Superfund Basic Research Program (SBRP) was created within the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in 1986 under the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA). ), the National Institute of Preventive and Social Medicine, and Dhaka University. The centerpiece of the public health research is a prospective cohort study, Health Effects of Arsenic Longitudinal Study longitudinal study

a chronological study in epidemiology which attempts to establish a relationship between an antecedent cause and a subsequent effect. See also cohort study.
 (HEALS), of 12,000 adults exposed to a wide range of water As concentrations, from which the current sample is derived.

Study region. Bangladesh is a nation of roughly 124 million people inhabiting an area of 145,000 [km.sup.2]. It is divided into 64 districts, each of which is divided into 10-50 administrative units or Thanas. The study site is in Araihazar, one of 464 Thanas in Bangladesh, and is a 25-[km.sup.2] region approximately 30 km east of Dhaka. The study site was chosen because a) it is known to have a wide range of As concentrations in the drinking water, permitting dose-response analyses and b) it is within a reasonable commuting distance from Dhaka. Socioeconomic data indicate that this region is not particularly poor by Bangladeshi standards.

Eligibility criteria/participant recruitment/ ethics. The HEALS cohort study includes a random sample of 11,746 married men and women between 20 and 65 years of age who were recruited between September 2000 and May 2002 and are followed at 2-year intervals (Ahsan et al., in press). This study only included married couples to minimize the likelihood of loss to follow-up due to a change of residence after marriage. Centered around visits of one of the investigators (M.V.G.), a subset of 1,650 of these cohort study participants were consecutively enrolled in the present study. We further selected 300 of these 1,650 participants to measure urinary arsenic metabolites. This subset of participants was selected to be representative of the study population for total urinary As; the subset excluded those identified as being cobalamin deficient (plasma cobalamin concentrations < 185 pmol/L). Oral informed consent was obtained by our Bangladeshi field staff physicians, who read an institutional review board approved assent form to the study participants. Ethics approval was obtained from the Institutional Review Board of Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center and the Bangladesh Medical Research Council, and informed consent was obtained by our Bangladeshi field staff physicians.

Plasma collection and handling. We obtained plasma samples for tHcys, folate, and total cobalamin by venipuncture venipuncture /veni·punc·ture/ (ven?i-pungk´chur) surgical puncture of a vein.

ve·ni·punc·ture or ve·ne·punc·ture
n.
 after the participant had been sitting for 10-15 min for an interview. Blood was collected into EDTA-containing tubes and immediately placed in IsoRack cool packs (Brinkmann Instruments, Westbury, NY) designed to maintain samples at 0[degrees]C for > 6 hr. Within 4 hr, samples were transported in hand-carried coolers containing additional ice packs to our local laboratory situated in our three-story field clinic in Araihazar. Samples were centrifuged at 4[degrees]C and plasma separated from the cells. Plasma was then stored in aliquots at -80[degrees]C and shipped frozen on dry ice to Columbia University for analysis.

Measures of arsenic exposure. We analyzed well-water arsenic concentrations as part of a comprehensive well survey before the onset of the cohort study. The actual well-water arsenic concentration was labeled onto each well, with signs indicating safety or danger, and many study participants subsequently switched wells to reduce exposure (van Geen et al. 2002); therefore, well-water arsenic did not always strictly represent current arsenic exposure. However, we do not believe that this led to significant exposure misclassification, as the duration of drinking water from the surveyed well greatly exceeded the duration of drinking water from an alternate well. In the analyses pertaining to folate and tHcys concentrations, any potential exposure misclassification would only bias to the null. Furthermore, we collected urine samples for urinary arsenic measurements on the same visit that the plasma samples were collected.

Well-water and urinary As provide two different estimates of As exposure. Although well-water As provides a direct measure of exposure that is uninfluenced Adj. 1. uninfluenced - not influenced or affected; "stewed in its petty provincialism untouched by the brisk debates that stirred the old world"- V.L.Parrington; "unswayed by personal considerations"
unswayed, untouched
 by in vivo in vivo /in vi·vo/ (ve´vo) [L.] within the living body.

in vi·vo
adj.
Within a living organism.



in vivo adv.
 metabolism, it does not take into account the amount of water consumed or the accumulated body burden. Urinary As, traditionally considered a marker of recent exposure, may more closely reflect the body burden of As in a given individual because a) it receives contributions from tissue stores and b) it is more strongly associated with skin lesions than is well-water AS (Ahsan et al. 2000). Urinary As concentrations are heavily influenced by variations in hydration hydration /hy·dra·tion/ (hi-dra´shun) the absorption of or combination with water.

hy·dra·tion
n.
1. The addition of water to a chemical molecule without hydrolysis.

2.
 status, as indicated by the association between total urinary As and urinary creatinine concentrations (r = 0.58, p < 0.0001, N = 1,650); thus, urinary creatinine must be included as a separate variable in the urinary As analyses. Because animal studies suggest that impaired one-carbon metabolism incurred by methyl-deficient diets decreases total urinary arsenic by up to 20-30% (Spiegelstein et al. 2003, 2005; Tice et al. 1997; Vahter and Marafante 1987), both urine As and well water As were included in the analyses.

Total urinary As. We measured total urinary As concentrations by graphite furnace atomic absorption Graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS) (also known as Electrothermal Atomic Absorption Spectrometry (ETAAS)) is a type of spectrometry that uses a graphite-coated furnace to vaporize the sample.  spectrometry using the Analyst 600 graphite furnace system (Perkin Elmer, Shelton, CT) in the Columbia University Trace Metals Core Lab, essentially as previously described (Nixon et al. 1991). Our laboratory participates in a quality control program coordinated by Philippe Weber at the Quebec Toxicology Center in Quebec, Canada. During the course of this study, intraclass correlation coefficients between our laboratory's values and samples calibrated cal·i·brate  
tr.v. cal·i·brat·ed, cal·i·brat·ing, cal·i·brates
1. To check, adjust, or determine by comparison with a standard (the graduations of a quantitative measuring instrument):
 at the Quebec laboratory were 0.99. Urinary creatinine concentrations were analyzed by a colorimetric col·or·im·e·ter  
n.
1. Any of various instruments used to determine or specify colors, as by comparison with spectroscopic or visual standards.

2.
 Sigma Diagnostics Kit (Sigma, St. Louis, MO).

Urinary arsenic metabolites. Urinary arsenic metabolites were speciated for 300 participants using a method adapted from Heitkemper (Vela vela

plural of velum.
 et al. 2001). This method employs HPLC HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography.

HPLC

high performance liquid chromatography.

HPLC High-performance liquid chromatography Lab instrumentation A highly sensitive analytic method in which analytes are placed
 separation of arsenobetaine (AsB), arsenocholine (AsC), arsenate ar·se·nate
n.
A salt of arsenic acid.



arsenate

an uncommon garden pesticide, as lead arsenate, or as antifungal spray on fruit trees or cattle tick dip as sodium arsenate.
, arsenite, MMA, and DMA, followed by detection by inductively-coupled mass spectrometry mass spectrometry
 or mass spectroscopy

Analytic technique by which chemical substances are identified by sorting gaseous ions by mass using electric and magnetic fields.
 (ICPMS ICPMS Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry
ICPMS Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy
). We calculated the percentages of InAs, MMA, and DMA after subtracting AsC and AsB from the total. In most cases, AsC and AsB were nondetectable.

Plasma folate and cobalamin. We analyzed folate and cobalamin in 1648 plasma samples by radioimmunoassay (Quantaphase II, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Richmond CA), as previously described (Gamble et al. 2005).

Plasma homocysteine and cysteine concentrations. We measured plasma tHcys and Cys concentrations in 1644 plasma samples by HPLC with fluorescence detection according to the method described by Pfeiffer et al. (1999), as described previously (Gamble et al. 2005). The within-day and between-day coefficients of variation for tHcys were 5% and 8%, respectively.

Statistical analyses. We calculated descriptive statistics descriptive statistics

see statistics.
 for characteristics of the study sample separately by sex. Because we expected the distributions to be non-normal, sex differences in quantitative variables were tested using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test that requires no distribution assumption. We used chi-square tests to test for sex differences in categorical variables.

We used linear regression Linear regression

A statistical technique for fitting a straight line to a set of data points.
 analyses to examine associations. Because As exposure might potentially influence plasma folate and tHcys concentrations, we explored the associations between these variables in the 1,650 samples. In sequential regression analyses on the subset of 300 participants with urinary arsenic metabolite metabolite, organic compound that is a starting material in, an intermediate in, or an end product of metabolism. Starting materials are substances, usually small and of simple structure, absorbed by the organism as food.  data, we examined determinants of percentages of InAs (%InAs), MMA(%MMA), and DMA (%DMA).

Because tHcys, folate, and cobalamin in plasma, and water arsenic, urine arsenic, and urine creatinine have skewed distributions, we used log-transformation to achieve approximately symmetric distributions. In preliminary analyses, water arsenic, age, sex, cigarette smoking, and betelnut use were found to be associated with urinary arsenic metabolites and were therefore included in our regression models as potential confounding variables.

Results

Characteristics of the population. The general characteristics of the NIAT study sample have been previously described in detail (Gamble et al. 2005). Out of 1,650 participants, 973 were women and 677 were men. The mean ages for women and men were 34.6 [+ or -] 8.8 and 42.2 [+ or -] 9.8 years, and body mass indices were 20.2 [+ or -] 3.2 and 19.4 [+ or -] 3.0, respectively. Betelnut use was practiced by 30% of women and 40% of men, whereas 6% of women and 76% of men smoked cigarettes.

tHcys, folate, and cobalamin findings. We recently reported a high prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia, particularly among males (63% [greater than or equal to] 11.4 [micro]M) in this study population (Gamble et al. 2005). Folate and cobalamin nutritional status accounted for 15% and 5%, respectively, of the variability in tHcys.

Arsenic exposure. As is shown in Table 1, urinary As concentrations, expressed in micrograms per liter, did not differ between males and females. However, when adjusted for urinary creatinine, as is routinely done to correct for the effects of hydration, males had significantly lower As concentrations than females. This divergence is attributable to significant sex differences in urinary creatinine, which is related to lean body mass (Schutte et al. 1981). Well-water As concentrations ranged from 0.1 [micro]g/L to 650 [micro]g/L, with 82% of wells having concentrations > 10 [micro]g/L and 63% > 50 [micro]g/L.

Influence of arsenic exposure on folate, tHcys and Cys. Among the entire sample (n = 1,650), water arsenic concentrations were significantly associated with plasma folate (r = -0.13, p < 0.0001), tHcys (r = 0.05, p = 0.03), and Cys (r = 0.13, p < 0.0001). Although total urinary arsenic (micrograms per gram creatinine) was also negarively associated with plasma folate (r= -0.15, p < 0.0001), it was not associated with tHcys or Cys (r = -0.03, p = 0.29; r = -0.03, p = 0.23). Folate deficiency may influence urinary creatinine concentrations because the synthesis of creatine, the precursor of creatinine, accounts for approximately 75% of folate- and S-adenosylmethionine (SAM)-dependent transmethylation reactions (Figure 2, reaction 6; Mudd et al. 1975). Thus, we sought to rule out the possibility that the inverse association between plasma folate and urinary As per gram creatinine might be due to an association between plasma folate and urinary creatinine. Indeed, plasma folate concentrations were positively correlated with urinary creatinine for males (r = 0.083, p = 0.0308) (Gamble et al. 2005). Urinary arsenic concentrations (micrograms per liter) were negatively associated with plasma folate (r = -0.13, p < 0.0001), even when not adjusted for urinary creatinine.

tHcys, folate, cobalamin, and urinary arsenic metabolites. Urinary As metabolites measured in a subset of 300 study participants showed a wide interindividual variability in arsenic methylation capacity. For example, the percentage of total urinary As present as DMA (%DMA) ranged from 20 to 90%, with the majority falling between 50 and 80% (Figure 3). In addition, methylation capacity differed by sex: on average, females had a higher %DMA than males (72.2 [+ or -] 10.4 vs. 69.7 [+ or -] 7.7 %DMA, respectively, p = 0.0012) and a lower %MMA (11.5 [+ or -] 4.8 vs. 15.5 [+ or -] 5.2 %MMA, respectively, p < 0.0001). The %InAs did not differ by sex (16.3 [+ or -] 10.1 vs. 14.7 [+ or -] 5.5, p = 0.60). The sex differences persisted in regression analyses for %DMA and %MMA after adjustment for other covariates including age and water arsenic (data not shown). Although age was not significantly associated with %DMA, it was positively associated with %MMA and negatively associated with %InAs (r = 0.29, p < 0.0001, and r = -0.24, p < 0.0001, respectively). Although only 12 of these 300 participants had arsenic-related skin lesions, the presence of skin lesions was associated with higher %MMA (18.5 [+ or -] 5.2 vs. 13.1 [+ or -] 5.3, p = 0.0016) and with lower %DMA (66.6 [+ or -] 9.1 vs. 71.3 [+ or -] 9.3, p = 0.0518). These findings have recently been confirmed in a much larger sample of the HEALS cohort study (data not shown).

[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]

As hypothesized, %DMA was positively associated with plasma folate and negatively associated with plasma tHcys (Table 2). Conversely, %MMA was negatively associated with plasma folate and positively associated with tHcys. Although %InAs was also negatively associated with folate, the association with tHcys was not significant. In addition, plasma Cys concentrations were negatively correlated with %InAs and positively correlated with %MMA. Plasma cobalamin concentrations were not correlated with arsenic metabolites.

Due to the clear biochemical link between creatine biosynthesis and SAM-dependent transmethylation reactions (Figure 2, reaction 6), the expression of urinary As per gram creatinine might potentially confound the associations with arsenic metabolites. To explore this possibility, we examined the association between urinary, creatinine and urinary arsenic metabolites. We observed that urinary creatinine was strongly and positively associated with %DMA for both males and females and negatively associated with %InAs and with %MMA for females (Table 3). These associations remained highly significant after controlling for other covariates including body weight, age, and water arsenic. Furthermore, the associations between As metabolites and folate or tHcys became nonsignificant non·sig·nif·i·cant  
adj.
1. Not significant.

2. Having, producing, or being a value obtained from a statistical test that lies within the limits for being of random occurrence.
 when urinary creatinine was included in regression analyses.

We previously reported that cigarette smoking and betelnut use are both negative predictors of plasma folate and positive predictors of tHcys (Gamble et al. 2005). Betelnut use also proved to be a significant predictor of %MMA, even after adjusting for covariates including sex, cigarette smoking, water arsenic, urinary creatinine, and plasma folate (p = 0.03).

Discussion

Our previous observation of a high prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia in Araihazar, Bangladesh (Gamble et al. 2005) afforded us a suitable setting in which to assess the potential impact of hyperhomocysteinemia and folate deficiency on arsenic metabolism in a human population. Although cobalamin concentrations were not significantly associated with arsenic metabolism, this finding was not unexpected because a) cobalamin deficiency cobalamin deficiency See Vitamin B12 deficiency.  is relatively rare in this region, where vegetarianism vegetarianism, theory and practice of eating only fruits and vegetables, thus excluding animal flesh, fish, or fowl and often butter, eggs, and milk. In a strict vegetarian, or vegan, diet (i.e.  is uncommon, and b) cobalamin-deficient participants were excluded from the study on arsenic metabolites. Thus, the results of this study do not rule out the possibility that cobalamin deficiency may influence arsenic methylation.

In general, although the effect sizes were relatively small, the associations between As methylation and folate and tHcys were as predicted; however, a few points are of particular interest. First, the observation that folate is negatively (and equally) associated with both %InAs and %MMA implies that adequate folate nutritional status is required for both the first and the second methylation steps. This may be of clinical relevance because a growing body of evidence links increased risk for adverse health outcomes to higher %MMA and reduced risk with higher %DMA in urine (Chen et al. 2003a, 2003b; Hsueb et al. 1997; Yu et al. 2000).

A second finding of interest is our observation that tHcys is not associated with %InAs but is positively associated with %MMA (Table 2). In one-carbon metabolism, all SAM-dependent methylation reactions yield the methylated product and S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)
Loss of blood into the subarachnoid space, the fluid-filled area that surrounds the brain tissue.

Mentioned in: Cerebral Aneurysm
; Figure 2, reaction 6). SAH is then hydrolyzed to homocysteine in a reaction that is readily reversible. Plasma SAH levels increase linearly with even mild elevations in homocysteine levels (Yi et al. 2000). This is of particular relevance because SAH is a potent product inhibitor of most transmethylation reactions (Yi et al. 2000), including those of arsenic (De Kimpe et al. 1999). SAH binds tightly to methyltransferases and is only removed if the pathway is pulled forward by downstream removal of tHcys, as might be achieved with folate supplementation (Figure 2, reaction 4). SAH is actually more crucial than SAM in regulating methylation reactions (Yi et al. 2000). Thus, it is possible that the positive association between tHcys and %MMA and negative association with %DMA may reflect inhibition of the second methylation step by SAH. It is not entirely clear why tHcys is not also positively associated with %InAs. Perhaps because SAH binds to the arsenic methyltransferase during the first methylation step, it subsequently inhibits the second methylation step. The potential for folate supplementation to reverse hyperhomocysteinemia and thereby facilitate arsenic methylation is currently being tested in a placebo-controlled double-blind folate supplementation trial to folate deficient participants.

The amino acid amino acid (əmē`nō), any one of a class of simple organic compounds containing carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and in certain cases sulfur. These compounds are the building blocks of proteins.  Cys is produced from Hcys as an intermediate in glutathione glutathione: see coenzyme.  biosynthesis (Figure 2, reaction 8). Consequently, Cys concentrations in plasma are positively correlated with both tHcys and glutathione (GSH GSH reduced glutathione.

GSH

reduced glutathione.
). Cys has recently been reported to play a role in redox redox (rē`dŏks): see oxidation and reduction.  cycling (Jones et al. 2004). Like glutathione, Cys is capable of reducing pentavalent [As.sup.V] to [As.sup.III] in vitro in vitro /in vi·tro/ (in ve´tro) [L.] within a glass; observable in a test tube; in an artificial environment.

in vi·tro
adj.
In an artificial environment outside a living organism.
 (Celkova et al. 1996), and this reduction is a prerequisite to methylation. The observation that plasma Cys concentrations are negatively associated with %InAs and positively associated with %MMA suggests that this capacity may be physiologically relevant.

However, we cannot rule out the possibility that the observed associations are simply due to a positive association between Cys and plasma GSH. The complete lack of an association with %DMA suggests that Cys (or possibly GSH) does not similarly reduce MM[A.sup.V] to MM[A.sup.III] to facilitate the second methylation step.

A number of noteworthy observations regarding urinary creatinine arose from this study. The formation of creatine from methylation of guanidinoacetate has been estimated to account for approximately 75% of transmethylation reactions (Mudd and Poole 1975). Creatine is a precursor of creatinine, and both are synthesized and circulate at concentrations proportional to muscle mass, which is generally greater in males than females. Consequently, urinary creatinine is "also greater for males than females (Barr et al. 2005; Gamble and Liu 2005). Because creatinine is excreted at a relatively constant rate throughout the course of the day, it is commonly used as a correction factor to adjust for variations in urine concentration. It is important to note, however, that this adjustment introduces an artificial sex difference such that, using total urinary arsenic/g creatinine as the exposure variable, males may artificially appear to have a lower exposure than females. This finding has particular relevance to the field of As toxicology because it has been reported that males may be more susceptible than females to arsenic toxicity (Chen et al. 2003a; Kristiansen et al. 1997) for two reasons. First, creatinine adjustment causes males to appear to have a lower exposure than females (Table 1). Second, although speculative, it is also possible that the increased susceptibility among males is related to the fact that males place higher demands on one-carbon metabolism due to their greater muscle mass and associated demands for creatine formation and restthant higher tHcys (Brattstrom et al. 1994).

The associations between the methylation of As and urinary crcatinine are quite remarkable and intriguing. In this study, urinary creatinine was the strongest predictor by far of arsenic methylation. Particularly for males, the effect sizes were more than double those of any of the nutritional variables. There are a number of plausible mechanisms which could explain these associations: a) for reasons described above, urinary creatinine may serve as a proxy for one-carbon "metabolic rate"; b) urinary creatinine is a known proxy for muscle mass, which could have some unknown impact on As methylation; c) urinary creatinine is influenced by dietary protein intake, which influences one-carbon metabolism in-so-far as it provides a source of methionine methionine (mĕthī`ənēn), organic compound, one of the 20 amino acids commonly found in animal proteins. Only the L-stereoisomer appears in mammalian protein. ; and d) urinary creatinine is influenced by rend rend  
v. rent or rend·ed, rend·ing, rends

v.tr.
1. To tear or split apart or into pieces violently. See Synonyms at tear1.

2.
 function, which, for reasons that remain unclear, is a primary determinant of tHcys concentrations (Arnadottir et al. 1996; Wollesen et al. 1999). Any of these mechanisms acting either independently or in concert may play a role in determining what fraction of InAs is methylated.

Like cigarette smoking and betelnut use (Gamble et al. 2005), total urinary As and well-water As were found to be negatively associated with plasma folate. Because folate is highly prone to oxidative degradation, and because there is a substantial basic literature indicating that exposure to As induces oxidative stress oxidative stress,
n an imbalance of the prooxidant antioxidant ratio in which too few antioxidants are produced or ingested or too many oxidizing agents are produced.
, it is possible that this observation is attributable to As-induced oxidative degradation of folate. The positive associations between well-water As and tHcys and Cys likely follow from their metabolic interrelations with folate.

Alternatively, it has been postulated that increased demands on one-carbon metabolism for the methylation of As in those chronically exposed to As-contaminated drinking water may deplete de·plete
v.
1. To use up something, such as a nutrient.

2. To empty something out, as the body of electrolytes.
 the methyl donor pool (Mass and Wang 1997). We have not measured the hepatic methyl donor pool, nor is it entirely clear from our understanding of folate and one-carbon metabolism what effect depletion of the methyl donor pool would have on plasma folate concentrations. If one were to assume that methyl depletion would increase folate turnover, then plasma folate concentrations would be reduced. This is another potential explanation for the observation that well water As and urinary As were negatively associated with plasma folate, but determination of the mechanism underlying this observation will require additional study.

In conclusion, the results of this cross-sectional study suggest that adequate folate nutritional status facilitates both the first and second methylation steps, resulting in excretion of lower proportions of lnAs and MMA and higher DMA. Conversely, individuals with hyperhomocysteinemia have a reduced ability to methylate methylate /meth·yl·ate/ (meth´i-lat)
1. a compound of methyl alcohol and a base.

2. to add a methyl group to a substance.


meth·yl·ate
v.
1.
 MMA to generate DMA. As evidence has accrued linking increased risk for various adverse health outcomes to higher %MMA and lower %DMA in urine, it appears that hyperhomocysteinemia may represent a modifiable risk factor for arsenic toxicity. This may be particularly important in Bangladesh, where the incidence of hyperhomocysteinemia is extremely high (Gamble et al. 2005). Elucidation of the mechanism(s) underlying the relationship between urinary creatinine and arsenic methylation deserves further investigation.

We thank S. Alam for overseeing laboratory operations in Araihazar, and our staff, field workers, and study participants in Bangladesh, without whom this work would not have been possible.

This work was supported by grants RO1 ES01160l, 5P30ES09089, and 1 P42 ES10349 from the National Institutes of Health.

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.

Received 3 March 2005; accepted 21 July 2005.

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Mary V. Gamble, (1) Xinhua Liu, (2) Habibul Ahsan, (3) J. Richard Pilsner, (1) Vesna Ilievski, (1) Vesna Slavkovich, (1) Faruque Parvez, (1) Diane Levy, (2) Pam Factor-Litvak, (3) and Joseph H. Graziano (1,4)

(1) Department of Environmental Health Sciences, (2) Department of Biostatistics, and (3) Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA; (4) Department of Pharmacology, College of Physicians and Surgeons College of Physicians and Surgeons: see Columbia Univ. , Columbia University, New York, NY, USA

Address correspondence to M.V. Gamble, Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 60 Haven Ave., BI, New York, NY 10032, USA. Telephone: (212) 305-7949. Fax: (212) 305-3857. E-mail: mvg7@columbia.edu
Table 1. Sex differences in urinary creatinine and
urinary arsenic when expressed per gram creati-
nine (mean [+ or -] SD).

                             Females             Males
                            (n = 961)          (n = 675)       p-Value

Urinary                  134 [+ or -] 120   133 [+ or -] 137    0.26
  arsenic ([micro]g/L)
Urinary                   57 [+ or -] 41     70 [+ or -] 53    <0.0001
  creatinine (mg/dL)
Arsenic/g                284 [+ or -] 226   194 [+ or -] 179   <0.0001
  creatinine

Table 2. Spearman correlation coefficients for As
metabolites versus plasma folate, tHcys, and
cobalamin for 300 participants.

                       %InAs      %MMA        %DMA

tHcys ([micro]M)       0.06      0.21 (#)   -0.14 **
Cysteine ([micro]M)   -0.11 *    0.16 **     0.01
Folate (nM)           -0.12 *   -0.12 *      0.14 *
Cobalamin (pM)        -0.06     -0.002       0.04

* p < 0.05. ** p < 0.01 (#) p < 0.001.

Table 3. Spearman correlation coefficients for As
metabolites versus urinary creatinine.

%InAs                 %InAs        %MMA       %DMA

Males (n = 136)     -0.45 (##)     -0.13     0.40 (##)
Females (n = 164)   -0.20 ** (a)   -0.16 *   0.25 **
Total (n = 300)     -0.32 (##)     -0.09     0.30 (##)

(a) Correlation between urinary creatinine and %InAs differ
by sex (p = 0.014). * p < 0.05. ** p < 0.01. ** p < 0.0001.
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