Abstract
Dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) is the endogenous byproduct of fructose metabolism. Excess DHAP in cells can induce advanced glycation end products and oxidative stress. Dihydroxyacetone (DHA) is the triose precursor to DHAP. DHA is used as the active ingredient in sunless tanning products, including aerosolized spray tans, and is formed by the combustion of solvents found in electronic cigarettes. Human exposure to DHA has been increasing as the popularity of sunless tanning products and electronic cigarettes has grown. Topically applied DHA is absorbed through the viable layers of the skin and into the bloodstream. Exogenous exposure to DHA is cytotoxic in immortalized keratinocytes and melanoma cells with cell cycle arrest induced within 24 h and cell death occurring by apoptosis at consumer-relevant concentrations of DHA within 72 h. Less is known about systemic exposures to DHA that occur following absorption through skin, and now through inhalation of the aerosolized DHA used in spray tanning. In the present study, HEK293T cells were exposed to consumer-relevant concentrations of DHA to examine the cytotoxicity of systemic exposures. HEK293T cells were sensitive to consumer-relevant doses of DHA with an IC50 value of 2.4 ± 0.3 mM. However, cell cycle arrest did not begin until 48 h after DHA exposure. DHA-exposed cells showed altered metabolic activity with decreased mitochondrial function and decreased lactate and ATP production observed within 24 h of exposure. Autofluorescent imaging and NAD+ sensors also revealed an imbalance in the redox cofactors NAD+/NADH within 24 h of exposure. Cell death occurred by autophagy indicated by increases in LC3B and SIRT1. Despite DHA's ability to be converted to DHAP and integrated into metabolic pathways, the metabolic dysfunction and starvation responses observed in the HEK293T cells indicate that DHA does not readily contribute to the energetic pool in these cells.
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