METABOLISM OF TRICHLOROETHYLENE IN ISOLATED HEPATOCYTES, MICROSOMES, AND RECONSTITUTED ENZYME-SYSTEMS CONTAINING CYTOCHROME-P-450
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 43 (3) , 1145-1152
Abstract
The metabolism of the suspected carcinogen trichloroethylene (TCE) was studied in in vitro systems involving purified rat liver cytochrome P-450; rat, human and mouse liver microsomes; rat lung microsomes; and isolated rat and mouse hepatocytes. The studies support the view that metabolism of TCE proceeds through formation of a complex with oxygenated cytochrome P-450 which, by rearrangement, can lead to: suicidal heme destruction; formation of chloral, which can be either reduced to trichloroethanol and conjugated to form a glucuronide or oxidized to trichloroacetic acid; formation of TCE oxide, which decomposes to CO and glyoxylate; and metabolites which bind irreversibly to protein, DNA and RNA. Studies with microsomes and reconstituted enzyme systems suggest that the contributions of the 4 major pathways described above vary depending upon the isozymes of cytochrome P-450 involved and that these pathways cannot be strictly correlated. Conjugation of products with glutathione does not appear to play a major role in TCE metabolism. Treatment of rats and mice with phenobarbital resulted in a number of alterations in metabolism which were more pronounced in the isolated hepatocyte system than in fortified microsomal incubations. In several cases where hepatocytes were used, the bulk of the metabolites which became irreversibly bound to DNA and protein could be trapped outside of the cells by including such macromolecules in the system, implying that metabolites which bind irreversibly must possess a reasonable degree of chemical stability. TCE oxide is apparently not the TCE metabolite responsible for irreversible binding to protein and DNA. The levels of protein adducts and particularly DNA adducts formed were substantially higher in isolated C57BL/6 .times. C3H F1 mouse hepatocytes than in isolated Osborne-Mendel rat hepatocytes, and these results may help to explain species differences previously reported in carcinogen bioassays.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The pharmacokinetics and macromolecular interactions of trichloroethylene in mice and ratsToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1982
- Fate of [14C]vinyl chloride after single oral administration in ratsToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1976