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Zygote (Cambridge, England) Jun 2022Methomyl is a broad-spectrum carbamate insecticide that has a variety of toxic effects on humans and animals. However, there have been no studies on the toxicity of...
Methomyl is a broad-spectrum carbamate insecticide that has a variety of toxic effects on humans and animals. However, there have been no studies on the toxicity of methomyl in female mammalian oocytes. This study investigated the toxic effects of environmental oestrogen methomyl exposure on mouse oocyte maturation and its possible mechanisms. Our results indicated that methomyl exposure inhibited polar body extrusion in mouse oocytes. Compared with that in the control group, in the methomyl treatment group, superoxide anion free radicals in oocytes were significantly increased. In addition, the mitochondrial membrane potential of metaphase II stage oocytes in the methomyl treatment group was significantly decreased, resulting in reduced mouse oocyte quality. After 8.5 h of exposure to methomyl, metaphase I stage mouse oocytes displayed an abnormal spindle morphology. mRNA expression of the pro-apoptotic genes Bax and Caspase-3 in methomyl-treated oocytes increased, which confirmed the apoptosis. Collectively, our results indicated that mouse oocyte maturation is defective after methomyl treatment at least through disruption of spindle morphology, mitochondrial function and by induction of oxidative stress.
Topics: Animals; Female; Mammals; Metaphase; Methomyl; Mice; Mitochondria; Oocytes; Oogenesis
PubMed: 34676817
DOI: 10.1017/S0967199421000782 -
Chemical Research in Toxicology Jun 2022Oxime-type carbamate pesticides having an oxime moiety such as aldicarb, butocarboxim, methomyl, oxamyl, and thiofanox are widely used and have been detected in many...
Oxime-type carbamate pesticides having an oxime moiety such as aldicarb, butocarboxim, methomyl, oxamyl, and thiofanox are widely used and have been detected in many fatal cases of accidental exposure or suicide. In forensic toxicology, the accurate determination of blood pesticide concentration is obligatory to prove death by oxime-type carbamate pesticide poisoning. However, the fatal pesticide concentration in blood at autopsy differs from that at the time of death. In this study, we found that oxime-type carbamate pesticides were decomposed by Hb in a temperature-dependent fashion. The mechanism underlying methomyl, aldicarb, oxamyl, and thiofanox decomposition involves the formation of adducts with the amino acids in Hb. With regard to butocarboxim, its decomposition involves the oxidation of the free form and the formation of adducts with the amino acids in Hb. The mass spectra obtained by liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry revealed that carbamylated amino acid adducts such as W-adduct and V-adduct were formed in Hb solution incubated with methomyl, aldicarb, oxamyl, and thiofanox, whereas alkylated amino acid adducts such as W-adduct were formed in Hb solution incubated with butocarboxim. These results indicate that aldicarb, butocarboxim, methomyl, oxamyl, and thiofanox are post-mortem changed by Hb.
Topics: Aldicarb; Amino Acids; Autopsy; Carbamates; Cholinesterase Inhibitors; Hemoglobins; Humans; Methomyl; Oximes; Pesticides
PubMed: 35559618
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.2c00092 -
Scientific Reports May 2023Insecticides are an integral part of most of the cropping systems worldwide; however, these usually exert negative impact on the environment and non-target insects as...
Insecticides are an integral part of most of the cropping systems worldwide; however, these usually exert negative impact on the environment and non-target insects as well. Non-target insects are prone to develop resistance to insecticides due to prolonged and repeated lethal and sublethal exposures. Musca domestica is a common non-target, pollinator and nectar feeder species in cotton ecosystem, besides its status as a public health pest in human habitations. In the present work, resistance to methomyl, one of the major insecticides used for cotton pest management, was assessed in 20 M. domestica strains from the major cotton producing areas of the Punjab and Sindh provinces of Pakistan. The results revealed that toxicity values of methomyl for Punjabi and Sindhi strains ranged from 28.07 to 136.16 µg fly and 29.32 to 136.87 µg fly, respectively. Among Punjabi strains, D.G. Khan, Lodhran, Bahawalpur, Toba Tek Singh, Bahawalnagar, Rajanpur and Jhang strains exhibited very high levels of resistance (RR > 100) to methomyl; Bhakkar, Kasur, Vehari, Layyah, Muzaffargarh and R.Y. Khan showed high resistance (RR = 51-100 fold), while the Mianwali strain showed a moderate level of resistance to methomyl (RR = 36.45 fold). In case of Sindhi strains, very high levels of resistance (> 100 fold) were reported for Sukkar and Sanghar strains, high levels of resistance (RR 51-100 fold) for Khairpur, Jamshoro and Ghotki, and moderate resistance to methomyl (38.08 fold) in the Dadu strain. There was a significant synergism of methomyl toxicity in all field strains when methomyl bioassayed along with piperonyl butoxide (PBO) and S,S,S-tributylphosphorotrithioate (DEF) providing clues of metabolic-based mechanisms of resistance to methomyl. In conclusion, insecticides used in crop farming can cause resistance development in non-target M. domestica. It is necessary to adopt the pest management activities that are safe for the environment and non-target insect species.
Topics: Animals; Humans; Insecticides; Methomyl; Houseflies; Pakistan; Ecosystem; Insecticide Resistance
PubMed: 37127684
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-34331-4 -
Chemical Research in Toxicology Jan 2021Methomyl, (,)-methyl -{[(methylamino)carbonyl]oxy}ethanimidothioate, is a widely used pesticide that has been detected in many fatal cases of accidental exposure or...
Methomyl, (,)-methyl -{[(methylamino)carbonyl]oxy}ethanimidothioate, is a widely used pesticide that has been detected in many fatal cases of accidental exposure or suicide. Forensic toxicologists have been baffled that the blood methomyl concentration in persons who have died of methomyl poisoning is much lower than the expected concentration in blood. In this study, we speculated two mechanisms underlying the insufficient recovery of methomyl in blood. First, methomyl is decomposed by serum albumin as esterase. Second, methomyl is bound to a specific blood protein, resulting in insufficient recovery in the free form. However, human serum albumin does not show esterase activity for the decomposition of methomyl. On the contrary, specific methomyl hemoglobin adducts have been detected by liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-Q/TOF-MS). The mass spectra indicated that methomyl was specifically bound to tryptophan (W), tyrosine (Y), and valine (V) residues in hemoglobin. The amounts of W- and V-adducts dose-dependently increased when the methomyl concentration was lower than the lethal concentration. In addition, the W-adduct was detected in blood sampled from an autopsied subject who died of intentional methomyl ingestion, suggesting that the W-adduct could be used as a biomarker of methomyl poisoning. We were able to estimate the amount of methomyl ingested on the basis of the amount of the W-adduct.
Topics: Aged, 80 and over; Female; Forensic Toxicology; Hemoglobins; Humans; Methomyl; Molecular Structure; Suicide
PubMed: 33405899
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.0c00472 -
Journal of Environmental Science and... 2015The main objective of this work was to investigate the kinetic characteristics of acid and alkaline phosphatases isolated from different sources and to study the effects...
The main objective of this work was to investigate the kinetic characteristics of acid and alkaline phosphatases isolated from different sources and to study the effects of the herbicide atrazine and insecticide methomyl on the activity and kinetic properties of the enzymes. Acid phosphatase (ACP) was isolated from the tomato plant (Solanum lycopersicum L. var. lycopersicum); alkaline phosphatase (ALP) was isolated from two sources, including mature earthworms (Aporrectodea caliginosa) and larvae of the Egyptian cotton leafworm (Spodoptera littoralis). The specific activities of the enzymes were 33.31, 5.56 and 0.72 mmol substrate hydrolyzed per minute per milligram protein for plant ACP, earthworms ALP and cotton leafworm ALP, respectively. The inhibition kinetics indicated that atrazine and methomyl caused competitive-non-competitive inhibition of the enzymes. The relationships between estimates of K(m) and V(max) calculated from the Michaelis-Menten equation have been explored. The extent of the inhibition was different, as estimated by the values of the inhibition constant Ki that were found to be 3.34 × 10(-3), 1.12 × 10(-2) and 1.07 × 10(-2) mM for plant ACP, earthworms ALP and cotton leafworm ALP, respectively, with methomyl. In the case of atrazine, K(i) were found to be 8.99 × 10(-3), 3.55 × 10(-2) and 1.36 × 10(-2) mM for plant ACP, earthworms ALP and cotton leafworm ALP, respectively.
Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Alkaline Phosphatase; Animals; Atrazine; Enzyme Inhibitors; Herbicides; Insecticides; Kinetics; Larva; Solanum lycopersicum; Methomyl; Oligochaeta; Species Specificity; Spodoptera
PubMed: 25996812
DOI: 10.1080/03601234.2015.1018759 -
Journal of Environmental Management Nov 2023Natural soil components, such as clays, have recently piqued interest because of their potential as pesticide adsorbents. This research work sheds light on the...
Natural soil components, such as clays, have recently piqued interest because of their potential as pesticide adsorbents. This research work sheds light on the possibility of the application of natural Albanian clays as adsorbents for methomyl and dimethoate pesticides from aqueous solutions. Natural Albanian clays from the regions of Brari, Currila, Dardha, and Prrenjasi were employed in the study and were characterized by granulometric analysis and powder X-ray diffraction. Each clay's adsorption capacity and desorption behavior were investigated toward the chosen pesticides. Within 48 h of contact time, methomyl and dimethoate solutions with different concentrations were evaluated at 25 °C to see how the insecticide concentration affected the adsorption & desorption processes for each natural clay type. The experimental data were fitted to Freundlich, Temkin and Dubinin-Radushkevich isotherm like functions and the results showed the best correlation on Freundlich like adsorption isotherm for almost all cases. Brari clay performed better adsorptive properties toward dimethoate, followed by Dardha, Currila and Prrenjasi clays. The dimethoate adsorbed quantities varied from 0.250 mg/g for C = 0.200 g/L to 0.822 mg/g for C = 0.500 g/L. In comparison to Dardha and Prrenjasi clays, Brari and Currila clays exhibit longer saturation times and improved methomyl retention. In the first 2 h of contact, 96.5% of methomyl and 81% of dimethoate were desorbed from Brari clay. The adsorption process was also investigated employing pseudo first-order and pseudo second-order kinetic models, with the results indicating that all clay-pesticide systems studied demonstrated second-order kinetic behavior. Based on the studied desorption process, it is possible to impregnate clays with various insecticides in agriculture and completely control the quantities of the insecticide released.
Topics: Clay; Pesticides; Methomyl; Dimethoate; Insecticides; Adsorption; Kinetics
PubMed: 37717393
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118989 -
Medicine, Science, and the Law Sep 2023Pesticides are used to kill, repel or control any animal or plant species which are considered pests, but have also been associated with intentional and unintentional...
Pesticides are used to kill, repel or control any animal or plant species which are considered pests, but have also been associated with intentional and unintentional human fatalities. A rapid increase in pesticide suicides was observed during 'The Green Revolution' after pesticides were introduced into low- and middle-income rural households without appropriate guidelines for safe use and storage. While national pesticide bans have contributed to a significant decrease in pesticide-related suicides, such cases still comprise a large proportion of all suicides around the world. The aim of the current study was to provide a profile of pesticide suicides in a high-income country as a point of comparison against studies from low- and middle-income countries. Statistical analyses were performed using R (version 4.2.3). Over the 20-year study period, there were a low, yet consistent number of pesticide suicides which were most common among males over the age of 40. Paraquat and methomyl pesticides collectively contributed to almost half (48.8%) of all fatalities. Consistent with the literature, such cases often occurred with little premeditation in response to an acute emotional crisis. While interpretation of autopsy findings was mostly limited, there were some pesticides that demonstrated findings consisted with previously reported characteristics (e.g., gastroesophageal erosions with paraquat). Given the high proportion of cases where paraquat and methomyl pesticides were implicated, it may be appropriate to review the availability and accessibility of such compounds to reduce the occurrence of pesticide suicides in South Australia and potentially the wider Australian population.
PubMed: 37661826
DOI: 10.1177/00258024231197914 -
Journal of Occupational Health Jan 2021To assess pesticide exposure and understand the resultant health effects of agricultural workers in Northern Thailand.
OBJECTIVES
To assess pesticide exposure and understand the resultant health effects of agricultural workers in Northern Thailand.
METHODS
This was a cross-sectional study. We quantified exposure to pesticides, including chlorpyrifos, methomyl, and metalaxyl, by air sampling and liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. We estimated differences in self-reported health outcomes, complete blood counts, cholinesterase activity, and serum/urine calcium and creatinine concentrations at baseline between farmworkers and comparison workers, and after pesticide spraying in farmworkers only.
RESULTS
This study included 97 men between the ages of 22 and 76 years; 70 were conventional farmworkers; and 27 did not report any prior farmwork or pesticide spraying. None of the farmworkers wore standardized personal protective equipment (PPE) for the concentrated chemicals they were working with. Methomyl (8.4-13 481.9 ng/m ), ethyl chlorpyrifos (11.6-67 759 ng/m ), and metalaxyl (13.9-41 191.3 ng/m ) were detected via personal air sampling. When it came to reporting confidence in the ability to handle personal problems, only 43% of farmworkers reported feeling confident, which reflects higher stress levels in comparison to 78% of comparison workers (P = .028). Farmworkers also had significantly lower monocyte counts (P = .01), serum calcium (P = .01), red blood count (P = .01), white blood cell count (P = .04), and butyrylcholinesterase activity (P < .0001), relative to comparison workers. After adjusting for body mass index (BMI), age, and smoking, methomyl air concentrations were associated with a decrease in farmworker acetylcholinesterase activity (beta = -0.327, P = .016).
CONCLUSIONS
This population of farmworkers had significant alterations in stress measures and clinical biomarkers, including decreased blood cell counts and cholinesterase activity, relative to matched controls. These changes are potentially linked to occupational pesticide exposures. Improving PPE use presents a likely route for preventive intervention in this population.
Topics: Adult; Aged; Agriculture; Biological Monitoring; Biomarkers; Blood Cell Count; Calcium; Cholinesterases; Creatinine; Cross-Sectional Studies; Environmental Monitoring; Farmers; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Occupational Exposure; Personal Protective Equipment; Pesticides; Thailand; Young Adult
PubMed: 33973692
DOI: 10.1002/1348-9585.12222 -
The Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical... Jul 2015Carbamate insecticide is a leading cause of poisoning in Thailand. The objective of this study was to characterize the clinical manifestations and modes of occupational...
Carbamate insecticide is a leading cause of poisoning in Thailand. The objective of this study was to characterize the clinical manifestations and modes of occupational exposure in carbamate poisoning cases. We retrospectively studied all the cases of carbamate poisoning due to occupational exposure recorded in the Ramathibodi Poison Center Toxic Exposure Surveillance system during 2005 to 2010. Demographic data, clinical manifestations and severity were analyzed statistically. During the study period, 3,183 cases were identified, of which 170 (5.3%) were deemed to be due to occupational exposure. Ninety-six cases (56.5%) and 35 cases (20.6%) were poisoned by carbofuran and methomyl, respectively. Carbofuran is sold as a 3% grain and applied by sowing; methomyl is sold as a liquid and is applied by spraying. The majority of poisoned patients did not wear personal protective equipment (PPE) while applying the carbamates. The clinical manifestations of occupational carbofuran poisoning recorded were nausea and vomiting (82.3%), headaches (56.3%) and miosis (19.8%). The clinical manifestations of methomyl poisoning were nausea and vomiting (74.3%), headaches (57.1%) and palpitations (11.4%). Most patients in both groups had mild symptoms. Only one case in each group required endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation support. There were no deaths and the lengths of hospitalization ranged from 2 hours to 2 days. Occupational carbamate poisoning cases in our series were mostly mild and the patients recovered quickly. There were only rare cases of serious symptoms. Lack of knowledge and inadequate PPE were the major factors contributing to occupational poisoning. Educating agricultural workers about correct precautions and pesticide use could minimize this type of poisoning.
Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Agricultural Workers' Diseases; Carbamates; Carbofuran; Child; Diarrhea; Female; Gloves, Protective; Headache; Humans; Insecticides; Male; Masks; Methomyl; Middle Aged; Miosis; Nausea; Occupational Diseases; Personal Protective Equipment; Poisoning; Protective Clothing; Retrospective Studies; Sweating; Thailand; Vomiting; Young Adult
PubMed: 26867400
DOI: No ID Found -
Human & Experimental Toxicology Mar 2019Methomyl toxicity has been reported as a cause of several accidental and suicidal fatalities. The study is evaluating the effect of lethal methomyl toxicity on fortilin...
Methomyl toxicity has been reported as a cause of several accidental and suicidal fatalities. The study is evaluating the effect of lethal methomyl toxicity on fortilin and S100A1 in serum and cardiac tissues. Adult 96 female Sprague-Dawley rats were divided equally into a control (euthanized by cervical dislocation) and a study group (overdosed with methomyl). The levels of fortilin and S100A1 in serum were measured antemortem (to establish the basal levels in serum) and postmortem (to evaluate changes after methomyl exposure) using enzyme-linked immunoassay. S100A1 was immunostained in sections from cardiac tissues. Both proteins in the control were not significantly different ( > 0.05) compared with the antemortem levels. On the contrast, both biomarkers levels in the intoxicated group were remarkably higher ( < 0.001) than the control and the antemortem levels. Ventricular tissues from the intoxicated rats presented depleted S100A1 immunostain in cardiomyocytes localized mainly in the epicardium with deeply stained adjacent cardiac fibroblasts. The cardiomyocytes were damaged with a prominent loss of striations compared to normal cardiac tissues from the control. The present outcomes explain to a certain degree the potential toxic effect of methomyl poisoning on the cardiac tissue. Both proteins could be added to the currently available battery of markers for assessing methomyl toxicity.
Topics: Animals; Biomarkers; Biomarkers, Tumor; Female; Insecticides; Methomyl; Myocardium; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; S100 Proteins; Tumor Protein, Translationally-Controlled 1
PubMed: 30472887
DOI: 10.1177/0960327118814153