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Title: The metabolism and excretion of styrene oxide-glutathione conjugates in the rat and by isolated perfused liver, lung and kidney preparations. Author: Steele JW, Yagen B, Hernandez O, Cox RH, Smith BR, Bend JR. Journal: J Pharmacol Exp Ther; 1981 Oct; 219(1):35-41. PubMed ID: 7288613. Abstract: The metabolism and excretion of styrene oxide-glutathione conjugates were studied in the intact rat and by isolated perfusion techniques in rat lung, liver and kidney. The intact animals converted the styrene oxide-glutathione conjugates almost entirely to styrene oxide-n-acetylcysteine derivatives mercapturic acids), with much smaller amounts of cysteine, cysteinylglycine and (unchanged) glutathione conjugates. Only small amounts of biliary excretion (approximately 5%) and less than 1% of fecal excretion of radioactivity were found. The isolated perfused kidney retains the capacity to transform virtually all of the glutathione conjugates at the dose level studied (25-30 mumol/kidney) and the principal component in urine from the isolated kidney was the cysteine conjugate. Isolated perfused lung experiments demonstrated that this organ has a minor role in styrene oxide-thioether conjugate. Isolated perfused lung experiments demonstrated that this organ has a minor role in styrene oxide-thioether conjugate metabolism. The isolated perfused liver experiments showed that phenobarbital pretreatment has little effect on biliary excretion but barbital pretreatment has little effect on biliary excretion but that it causes profound qualitative and quantitative effects on metabolism of styrene oxide-glutathione conjugates in the perfusion medium. The high level of styrene oxide-cysteine conjugates in the perfusion medium of an isolated perfused liver, especially after phenobarbital treatment, is consistent with the theory that gamma-glutamyltransferase activity is extracellular. The high-pressure liquid chromatography system of analysis described offers the ability to simultaneously separate and quantitate the major thioether conjugates of styrene oxide and other electrophilic epoxides.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]