Consideration of the Target Organ Toxicity of Trichloroethylene in Terms of Metabolite Toxicity and Pharmacokinetics
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Drug Metabolism Reviews
- Vol. 23 (5-6), 493-599
- https://doi.org/10.3109/03602539109029772
Abstract
Trichloroethylene (TRI) is readily absorbed into the body through the lungs and gastrointestinal mucosa. Exposure to TRI can occur from contamination of air, water, and food; and this contamination may be sufficient to produce adverse effects in the exposed populations. Elimination of TRI involves two major processes: pulmonary excretion of unchanged TRI and relatively rapid hepatic biotransformation to urinary metabolites. The principal site of metabolism of TRI is the liver, but the lung and possibly other tissues also metabolize TRI, and dichlorovinyl-cysteine (DCVC) is formed in the kidney. Humans appear to metabolize TRI extensively. Both rats and mice also have a considerable capacity to metabolize TRI, and the maximal capacities of the rat versus the mouse appear to be more closely related to relative body surface areas than to body weights. Metabolism is almost linearly related to dose at lower doses, becoming dose dependent at higher doses, and is probably best described overall by Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Major end metabolites are trichloroethanol (TCE), trichloroethanol-glucuronide, and trichloroacetic acid (TCA). Metabolism also produces several possibly reactive intermediate metabolites, including chloral, TRI-epoxide, dichlorovinyl-cysteine (DCVC), dichloroacetyl chloride, dichloroacetic acid (DCA), and chloroform, which is further metabolized to phosgene that may covalently bind extensively to cellular lipids and proteins, and, to a much lesser degree, to DNA. The toxicities associated with TRI exposure are considered to reside in its reactive metabolites. The mutagenic and carcinogenic potential of TRI is also generally thought to be due to reactive intermediate biotransformation products rather than the parent molecule itself, although the biological mechanisms by which specific TRI metabolites exert their toxic activity observed in experimental animals and, in some cases, humans are not known. The binding intensity of TRI metabolites is greater in the liver than in the kidney. Comparative studies of biotransformation of TRI in rats and mice failed to detect any major species or strain differences in metabolism. Quantitative differences in metabolism across species probably result from differences in metabolic rate and enterohepatic recirculation of metabolites. Aging rats have less capacity for microsomal metabolism, as reflected by covalent binding of TRI, than either adult or young rats. This is likely to be the same in other species, including humans. The experimental evidence is consistent with the metabolic pathways for TRI being qualitatively similar in mice, rats, and humans. The formation of the major metabolites--TCE, TCE-glucuronide, and TCA--may be explained by the production of chloral as an intermediate after the initial oxidation of TRI to TRI-epoxide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)Keywords
This publication has 90 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human exposure to volatile organic compounds in household tap water: the indoor inhalation pathwayEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1987
- Carcinogenicity study of trichloroethylene, with and without epoxide stabilizer, in miceZeitschrift für Krebsforschung und Klinische Onkologie, 1984
- Interactions of trichloroethylene with DNA in vitro and with RNA and DNA of various mouse tissues in vivoArchives of Toxicology, 1983
- Dose-related effects of a single dose of ethanol on the metabolism in rat liver of some aromatic and chlorinated hydrocarbonsToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1981
- Genetic and nongenetic events in neoplasiaFood and Cosmetics Toxicology, 1981
- Consideration of the evidence for mechanisms of 1,1,2-trichloroethylene metabolism, including new identification of its dichloroacetic acid and trichloroacetic acid metabolites in miceCancer Letters, 1980
- Spectral interactions of a series of chlorinated hydrocarbons with cytochromeP-450 of liver microsomes from variously-treated ratsFEBS Letters, 1975
- Effects on experimental animals of acute, repeated and continuous inhalation exposures to dichloroacetylene mixturesToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1971
- A pathological study on the toxicity of S-dichlorovinyl-l-cysteineFood and Cosmetics Toxicology, 1965
- S-(DICHLOROVINYL)-L-CYSTEINE: AN AGENT CAUSING FATAL APLASTIC ANEMIA IN CALVES1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1957