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A new Selenium-containing compound, Selenoneine, found as the predominant Se-species in the blood of Bluefin Tuna

(19.06.2010)


Background:
Selenium is an essential element both for humans and animals that functions as selenocysteine for the reduction of antioxidant enzymes such as gluthathione peroxodases, thioredoxin reductase, and thyroid hormone deiodinases. The entire selenoprotein gene population, designated the selenoproteome, has been identified in humans and rodents, and numerous selenoprotein genes have functions in development and health. The antioxidant activity of selenium plays a protective role in numerous diseases, including cancer, immunodeficiency and cardiovascular diseases. Selenium also protects against toxic metals such as mercury, cadmium and lead.


Fig. 1: Bluefin tuna
Fish consumption is a major source of Se in the human diet for fish eating populations such as the Japanese. Red muscle and other tissues of tuna contain organic selenium in excess of 1 ppm, making this the highest selenium content in food. Both the structure of the organoselenium compounds as well as their antioxidant activity are only poorly characterized.






The new study:

Researchers from the National Research Institute of Fisheries Science in Japan now have investigated the major organic selenium compound in the blood and tissues of the bluefin tuna. Using multistep chromatographic separation including reversed-phase HPLC and size exclusion chromatography the researchers could obtain a yelloy oily compound of 200 µg from 100 g of tuna blood. High resolution mass spectrometry using electrospray ionization revealed a molecular ion peak at m/z 553.0562 that indicated the molecular formula C18H29N6O4Se2. Also the isotopic pattern of the compound matched the theoretical isotopic pattern of two selenium atoms. MS/MS fragmentation patterns indicated the presence of an selenium-containing imidazole ring, a carboxyl group, and a trimethylamine group.


Fig.2:  The chemical structure of the selenium-containing compound selenoneine (1A, 1B) and its autoxidized dimer (2)





 
Using further analytical methods such as 13C-NMR the compound was identified as 2-selenyl-N,N,N-trimethyl-L-histidine, a selenium analog of ergothioneine that was called “selenoneine”. Using LC-ICP-MS for Se-speciation analysis, the researchers further analyzed the distribution of Se-species in various tuna tissues. Selenoneine was found to be the major Se-compound in many animal tissues such as blood, hepatopancreas, spleen, heart, and skeletal muscle of the tuna, mackerel and tilapia blood, porcine kidney, chicken gizzard, liver, heart, and squid hepatopancreas.   

The authors conclude, that further study is needed to examine whether selenoneine might be a non-toxic organic selenium in animal tissues and cells, in comparison with the high toxicity of known selenium compounds such as selenocysteine (LD50 35.8 mg/kg), selenomethionine (LD50 4.3 mg/kg), and selenite (LD50 3.5 mg/kg).
      

The original study

  Yumiko Yamashita, Michiaki Yamashita, Identification of a Novel Selenium-containing Compound, Selenoneine, as the Predominant Chemical Form of Organic Selenium in the Blood of Bluefin Tuna, J. Biol. Chem., 285/24 (2010) 18134-18138.  DOI: 10.1074/jbc.C110.106377


Related studies

Oscar Palacios, Jorge Ruiz Encinar, Gérard Bertin, Ryszard Lobinski, Analysis of the selenium species distribution in cow blood by size exclusion liquid chromatography-inductively coupled plasma collision cell mass spectrometry (SEC-ICPccMS), Anal. Bioanal. Chem., 383/3 (2005) 516-522. DOI: 10.1007/s00216-005-0015-8

Gregory V. Kryukov, Sergi Castellano, Sergey V. Novoselov, Alexey V. Lobanov, Omid Zehtab, Roderic Guigo´, Vadim N. Gladyshev, Characterization of Mammalian Selenoproteomes, Science, 300 (2003) 1439-1443. DOI: 10.1126/science.1083516

Kazuo T. Suzuki, Y. Ogra, Metabolic pathway for selenium in the body: speciation by HPLC-ICP-MS with enriched Se, Food Addit. Contam., 19/10 (2002) 974-983. DOI: 10.1080/02652030210153578

Karam El-Bayoumy, The protective role of selenium on genetic damage and on cancer, Mutat. Res., 475/1-2 (2001) 123-139. DOI: 10.1016/S0027-5107(01)00075-6

Yamato Shiobara, Yasumitsu Ogra, Kazuo T. Suzuki, Speciation of metabolites of selenate in rats by HPLC-ICP-MS, Analyst, 124/8 (1999) 1237-1241. DOI: 10.1039/a902922b

Ma. Lourdes A. Cuvin-Aralar, Robert W. Furness, Mercury and selenium interaction: A review, Ecotoxicol. Environ. Safety, 21/3 (1991) 348-364. DOI: 10.1016/0147-6513(91)90074-Y


Related EVISA Resources

Brief Summary: ESI-MS: The tool for the identification of chemical species
Brief Summary: LC-ICP-MS: The most often used hyphenated system for speciation analysis
Link Database: Toxicity of Organo-Selenium compounds
Link Database: Organo-Selenium compounds and human health



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last time modified: July 1, 2020    



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