Literature DB >> 21671592

Capacities of membrane lipids to accumulate neutral organic chemicals.

Satoshi Endo1, Beate I Escher, Kai-Uwe Goss.   

Abstract

Lipids have been considered as the predominant components for bioaccumulation of organic chemicals. However, differences in accumulation properties between different types of lipid (e.g., storage and membrane lipids) have rarely been considered. Moreover, in view of toxic effects on organisms, chemical accumulation specifically in biological membranes is of particular importance. In this review article, partition coefficients of 240 neutral organic compounds between liposomes (phospholipid membrane vesicles) and water (K(lipw)), reported in the literature or measured additionally for this work, were evaluated. Values of log K(lipw) and log K(ow) (octanol-water partition coefficients) differ by 0.4 on average. Polyparameter linear free energy relationships (PP-LFERs) can describe the log K(lipw) data even better (standard deviations = 0.28-0.31) than the log K(ow) model. Recent experimental data for highly hydrophobic compounds fit well to the PP-LFERs and do not indicate the existence of a previously postulated "hydrophobicity cutoff". Predictive approaches based only on the molecular structure (KOWWIN, SPARC, COSMOthermX, COSMOmic) were also evaluated for K(lipw) prediction. The PP-LFERs revealed that partition coefficients into membrane lipids can be two log units higher than those into storage lipids for H-bond donor compounds, suggesting that distinguishing between the two lipids is necessary to account for the bioaccumulation of these compounds, and that tissues rich in membrane lipids (e.g., kidneys, liver) instead of fat tissue can be the primary phase for accumulation.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21671592     DOI: 10.1021/es200855w

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  27 in total

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2.  Toxicokinetic Triage for Environmental Chemicals.

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3.  Evaluation and calibration of high-throughput predictions of chemical distribution to tissues.

Authors:  Robert G Pearce; R Woodrow Setzer; Jimena L Davis; John F Wambaugh
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4.  Uptake of hydrophobic organic compounds, including organochlorine pesticides, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, and perfluoroalkyl acids in fish and blue crabs of the lower Passaic River, New Jersey, USA.

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Journal:  Environ Toxicol Chem       Date:  2019-02-19       Impact factor: 3.742

5.  Atropselective Partitioning of Polychlorinated Biphenyls in a HepG2 Cell Culture System: Experimental and Modeling Results.

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Review 6.  The Role of Protein-Protein and Protein-Membrane Interactions on P450 Function.

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Journal:  Drug Metab Dispos       Date:  2016-02-05       Impact factor: 3.922

7.  Lipophilicity of Cationic Ligands Promotes Irreversible Adsorption of Nanoparticles to Lipid Bilayers.

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9.  Amino acids change solute affinity for lipid bilayers.

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Review 10.  Passive sampling methods for contaminated sediments: scientific rationale supporting use of freely dissolved concentrations.

Authors:  Philipp Mayer; Thomas F Parkerton; Rachel G Adams; John G Cargill; Jay Gan; Todd Gouin; Philip M Gschwend; Steven B Hawthorne; Paul Helm; Gesine Witt; Jing You; Beate I Escher
Journal:  Integr Environ Assess Manag       Date:  2014-02-18       Impact factor: 2.992

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