Pharmacokinetic Modeling of Manganese. III. Physiological Approaches Accounting for Background and Tracer Kinetics
- 10 August 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A
- Vol. 70 (18) , 1515-1526
- https://doi.org/10.1080/15287390701384635
Abstract
Manganese (Mn), an essential metal nutrient, produces neurotoxicity in workers exposed chronically to high concentrations of Mn-containing dusts. Our long-term goal was to develop a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model to support health risk assessments for Mn. A PK model that accounts for Mn-tracer kinetics and steady-state tissue Mn in rats on normal diets (about 45 ppm Mn) is described. The focus on normal dietary intakes avoids inclusion of dose-dependent processes that maintain Mn homeostasis at higher dose rates. Data used for model development were obtained from published literature. The model represents six tissues: brain, respiratory tract, liver, kidneys, bone, and muscle. Each of these has a shallow tissue pool in rapid equilibration with blood and a deep tissue store, connected to the shallow pool by transfer rate constants. Intraperitoneal (ip) tracer Mn is absorbed into systemic blood and equilibrated with the shallow and deep pools of tissue Mn. The model was calibrated to match steady-state tissue concentrations and radiotracer kinetics following an ip dose of 54Mn. Successful simulations showed uptake of 0.8% of dietary Mn, and estimated tissue partition coefficients and transfer rate constants in the tissues. Inhalation tracer 54Mn studies could only be adequately modeled by assuming that deposited Mn was absorbed into deep tissue stores in the lung before becoming available to move via blood to other tissues. In summary, this present effort provides the basic structure of a multiroute PBPK model for Mn that should now be easily extended to include homeostatic control and inhalation exposures in order to support risk assessment calculations for Mn.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Toxicokinetics and Physiologically Based Toxicokinetics in Toxicology and Risk AssessmentJournal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part B, 2003
- Brain Manganese Concentrations in Rats Following Manganese Tetroxide Inhalation are Unaffected by Dietary Manganese IntakeNeuroToxicology, 2002
- Influence of Particle Solubility on the Delivery of Inhaled Manganese to the Rat Brain: Manganese Sulfate and Manganese Tetroxide Pharmacokinetics Following Repeated (14-Day) ExposureToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 2001
- Direct Olfactory Transport of Inhaled Manganese (54MnCl2) to the Rat Brain: Toxicokinetic Investigations in a Unilateral Nasal Occlusion ModelToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 2000
- Physiological Parameter Values for Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic ModelsToxicology and Industrial Health, 1997
- Tissue Manganese Concentrations and Antioxidant Enzyme Activities in Rats Given Total Parenteral Nutrition With and Without Supplemental ManganeseJournal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 1995
- Manganese status, gut endogenous losses of manganese, and antioxidant enzyme activity in rats fed varying levels of manganese and fatBiological Trace Element Research, 1994
- Receptor‐Mediated Endocytosis of a Manganese Complex of Transferrin into Neuroblastoma (SHSY5Y) Cells in CultureJournal of Neurochemistry, 1993
- Manganese metabolism in cows and goatsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects, 1976
- Comparative Metabolism of Radionuclides in Mammals-III Retention of Manganese-54 in the Mouse, Rat, Monkey and DogHealth Physics, 1966