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  • Title: Effects of the structure of a toxicokinetic model of butadiene inhalation exposure on computed production of carcinogenic intermediates.
    Author: Kohn MC, Melnick RL.
    Journal: Toxicology; 1996 Oct 28; 113(1-3):31-9. PubMed ID: 8901880.
    Abstract:
    A flow-limited physiologically based toxicokinetic model was constructed for uptake, metabolism, and clearance of butadiene (BD) and its principal metabolite 1,2-epoxy-3-butene (EB), using physiological and biochemical parameters from the literature where available. The model includes compartments for blood, liver, lung, fat, GI tract, other rapidly perfused tissues, and slowly perfused tissues. The blood was distributed among compartments for arterial plus venous blood and subcompartments for vascular spaces associated with each of the tissue compartments. The lung contained a subcompartment for the alveolar space. Metabolic activation of BD by cytochrome P450-catalyzed epoxidation was modeled as occurring in liver, lung, and the rapidly perfused tissue compartments. The detoxication of EB catalyzed by epoxide hydrolase and glutathione S-transferase (GST) was modeled as occurring in liver, lung, and the rapidly perfused tissues compartments and by blood GST activity. The model also includes depletion of glutathione (GSH) by GST-catalyzed conjugation of EB and 3-butene-1,2-diol and resynthesis of GSH from cysteine. Values of biochemical parameters that were unavailable in the literature were estimated by iteratively reweighted least squares optimization to reproduce data for uptake of BD and EB by rats and mice in closed chambers. The resulting model also reproduced the depletion of GSH in liver and lung in flow-through systems. It reproduced the concentrations of expired EB produced from BD in closed chambers but overpredicted separately measured blood EB concentrations in flow-through systems, indicating an inconsistency between these two experiments that cannot be resolved by this model or an inadequacy in the model. Equilibration of chamber gases with the alveolar space and alveolar gas with lung capillary blood results in much less dilution of the inhaled gas in the blood compared with the predictions of models in which chamber gas equilibrates directly with the total circulation. The production of EB predicted by the present model was found to be sensitive to a number of physiological and biochemical parameters. A valid and useful toxicokinetic model must have reliable physiological and enzymological data for BD biotransformation before it can be credibly used for human risk assessment.
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