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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Disposition and metabolism of the carcinogen reduced Michler's ketone in rats.

Studies on the in vivo and in vitro disposition of 4,4'-[14C]-methylenebis(N,N-dimethyl)benzamine (reduced Michler's ketone, RMK) were performed. Osborne-Mendel rats retained, after 24 hr, 78% of a p.o. dose of [14C]RMK. At 24 hr after an i.p. dose, fat, liver, and intestine represented major sites for deposition of radioactivity. The major urinary metabolite of RMK, representing 36% of the total radioactivity recovered in the urine, was N,N'-diacetyl-4,4'-(hydroxymethylene)dianiline. In vitro microsomal metabolism of RMK involved demethylation. Products included N,N-dimethyl-4,4'-methylenedianiline, N,N'-dimethyl-4,4'-methylenedianiline, N-methyl-4,4'-methylenedianiline, and 4,4'-methylenedianiline, representing 44.7, 5.3, 11.8, and 6.9%, respectively, of the total radioactivity recovered from the reaction mixture. Although none of the microsomal metabolites was a direct-acting mutagen in the standard Salmonella typhimurium assay, all could be activated to mutagens when incubated with 9000 X g liver supernatants and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate. The activation of 4,4'-methylenedianiline to a mutagen suggests that the methyl groups of RMK are not required for the conversion of RMK to a reactive electrophile.[1]

References

  1. Disposition and metabolism of the carcinogen reduced Michler's ketone in rats. McCarthy, D.J., Struck, R.F., Shih, T.W., Suling, W.J., Hill, D.L., Enke, S.E. Cancer Res. (1982) [Pubmed]
 
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