| Literature DB >> 22545047 |
David C Dorman1, Melvin E Andersen, Jerry M Roper, Michael D Taylor.
Abstract
Concerns have been raised regarding environmental manganese exposure since high exposures have been associated with neurological disorders. The USA Environmental Protection Agency most recent human health risk assessment of inhaled manganese conducted in 1993 identified specific areas of uncertainty regarding manganese pharmacokinetics. This led to the development of a test rule under the USA Clean Air Act that required the generation of pharmacokinetic information on the inorganic manganese combustion products of the organometallic fuel additive methylcyclopentadienyl manganese tricarbonyl (MMT). The Alternative Tier 2 testing program for MMT, described in this paper, has yielded substantial pharmacokinetic data and has enabled the generation of physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models for manganese. These models are capable of predicting tissue manganese concentrations across a variety of dose routes, levels, and durations while accounting for factors such as age, gender, and reproductive status, enabling the consideration of tissue dosimetry in future risk assessments.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22545047 PMCID: PMC3321555 DOI: 10.1155/2012/946742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Toxicol ISSN: 1687-8191
Overview of the pharmacokinetic studies conducted in response to the Alternative Tier 2 test program for MMT. The following forms of manganese (Mn) were used in these studies: Mn tetroxide, Mn sulfate, and Mn phosphate. Some studies also involved intravenous administration of radiolabeled Mn chloride (54MnCl2) to assess whole-body (WB) clearance.
| Pharmacokinetic endpoint of interest | Regulatory Status | Animal Species | Manganese species and exposure conditions | Primary publication(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Particle solubility and dissolution kinetics | Voluntary | Rat | Phosphate, sulfate, and tetraoxide—intratracheal instillation | [ |
| Exposure-response and WB clearance | Voluntary | Rat | Phosphate inhalation | [ |
| Particle solubility and WB clearance | Voluntary | Rat | Sulfate and tetroxide inhalation | [ |
| Diet-inhalation interaction and WB clearance | Voluntary | Rat | Sulfate or tetroxide inhalation | [ |
| Olfactory transport of Mn | Voluntary | Rat | Chloride and phosphate inhalation ~0.5 mg Mn/m3 for 90 min | [ |
| Individual susceptibility WB clearance | Required | Rat | Inhalation | [ |
| Individual susceptibility | Required | Rat | Sulfate inhalation | [ |
| Species differences | Required | Rhesus monkey | Sulfate inhalation | [ |
Figure 1Schematic overview of steps used to develop and review study protocols and produce final reports. Independent peer review was carried out by the appropriate TAP. Completed final reports for all of the manganese studies can be found in the Federal Docket Management System (FDMS) at http://www.regulations.gov identified by docket number EPA-HQ-OAR-2004-0074. EPA: Environmental Protection Agency; ORD: EPA Office of Research and Development.
Notable scientific contributions derived from the MMT Alternative Tier 2 test program.
| Pharmacokinetic endpoint | Key Finding(s) |
|---|---|
| Chemical form of manganese | Lung uptake and brain (tissue) delivery is highly influenced by solubility (sulfate ≫ phosphate > tetroxide) |
| Dose and duration dependences | Manganese uptake and elimination rates depend on exposure dose and exposure duration |
| Homeostatic control | Manganese concentration in brain remains controlled at low levels of exposure and accumulates at air concentrations >10–50 |
| Dose metrics | Dose rate rather than cumulative dose appears to be the appropriate dose metric at low levels of exposure |
| Route of exposure | The observed pharmacokinetic differences between dietary and inhaled manganese can be attributed to rates of uptake and elimination required to achieve the same target tissue doses |
| Olfactory transport | Inhaled manganese is taken up by the nasal olfactory epithelium and transported directly via the olfactory nerve to the olfactory bulb |
| Species differences | Despite specific pharmacokinetic differences between rats and nonhuman primates, similar overall pharmacokinetic responses to and homeostatic controls of manganese were observed across species |