Skip to main content
SLU publication database (SLUpub)

Research article1995Peer reviewed

Extrahepatic bioactivation of aflatoxin B1 in fetal, infant and adult rats

Larsson, Pia; Tjälve, Hans

Abstract

Whole-body autoradiography of H-3-labelled anatoxin B-1 (H-3-AFB(1)) in female non-pregnant adult and infant Sprague-Dawley rats showed retention of tissue-bound radioactivity, in addition to the liver, in the mucosa and some glands in the nose, and in the mucosa of the nasopharynx, trachea, bronchioles, colon and caecum. The extrahepatic binding was most pronounced in the infant rats. In a rat pretreated with the glutathione (GSH)-depleting agent phorone, bound labelling was also seen in the superficial part of the mucosa of the glandular stomach. Autoradiography of H-3-AFB(1) in pregnant rats showed a marked localization of bound AFB(1)-metabolites in the fetal nasal olfactory and tracheal mucosa. In vitro experiments demonstrated that the nasal olfactory mucosa had a much higher capacity than the liver to form AFB(1)-metabolites which bound to DNA and protein. The bioactivation was observed both pre- and post-natally and increased with age. Bioactivation was found also in the caecum, the colon and the lateral nasal gland (Steno's gland), but not in the small intestine, oesophagus or Harderian gland. Our results indicated that glutathione-S transferase activity catalysing the AFB(1)-8,9-epoxide GSH-conjugation was present in the nasal olfactory mucosa and liver at all pre- and post-natal ages examined. Several of the extrahepatic tissues able to bioactivate AFB(1) have been reported to be targets for the carcinogenicity of the substance. Our results indicate that the extrahepatic carcinogenicity of AFB(1) is correlated to a local bioactivation in the sensitive tissues.

Keywords

ANATOXIN B-1; PRE- AND POSTNATAL EXTRAHEPATIC METABOLISM; NASAL OLFACTORY MUCOSA

Published in

Chemico-Biological Interactions
1995, volume: 94, number: 1, pages: 1-19
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCI PUBL IRELAND LTD

SLU Authors

  • Larsson, Pia

    • Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
  • Tjälve, Hans

    • Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

UKÄ Subject classification

Pathobiology

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/0009-2797(94)03283-E

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/40227