Abstract
The anti-histaminic drug methapyrilene hydrochloride, which induces liver tumors in rats, was labeled with tritium by exchange and administered at a dose of 21 mg containing 700 μCi to each of 15 male Fischer rats. At 1 h, 6 h, 14 h, 24 h, and 44 h after treatment three rats were killed and their livers, pancreas, kidneys, and lungs were removed. The pooled organs were homogenized and DNA, RNA, and soluble protein were isolated from each. The extent of interaction of radioactive methapyrilene with liver nucleic acids was exceedingly small and did not differ significantly from the binding to nucleic acids in kidney, lung, or pancreas, which are not target organs of this carcinogen in rats. Binding of radioactivity to soluble proteins of the liver was considerable and substantially greater than in the other organs. If the mechanism of carcinogenic action of methapyrilene involves covalent interaction with DNA this must be at a very low and highly specific level.