Literature DB >> 8933033

Biomonitoring of 1,3-butadiene and related compounds.

S Osterman-Golkar1, J A Bond.   

Abstract

The 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments list several volatile organic chemicals as hazardous air pollutants, including ethylene oxide, butadiene, styrene, and acrylonitrile. The toxicology of many of these compounds shares several common elements such as carcinogenicity in laboratory animals, genotoxicity of the epoxide intermediates, involvement of cytochrome P450 for metabolic activation (except ethylene oxide), and involvement of at least two enzymes for detoxication of the epoxides (e.g., hydrolysis or conjugation with glutathione). These similarities facilitate research strategies for identifying and developing biomarkers of exposure. This article reviews the current knowledge about biomarkers of butadiene. Butadiene is carcinogenic in mice and rats, which raises concern for potential carcinogenicity in humans. Butadiene is metabolized to DNA-reactive metabolites, including 1,2-epoxy-3-butene and diepoxybutane. These epoxides are thought to play a critical role in butadiene carcinogenicity. Butadiene and some of its metabolites (e.g., epoxybutene) are volatile. Exhalation of unchanged butadiene and excretion of butadiene metabolites in urine represent major routes of elimination. Therefore, biomonitoring of butadiene exposure could be based on chemical analysis of butadiene in exhaled breath, blood levels of butadiene epoxides, excretion of butadiene metabolites in urine, or adducts of butadiene epoxides with DNA or blood proteins. Mutation induction in specific genes (e.g., HPRT) following butadiene exposure can be potentially used as a biomarker. Excretion of 1,2-dihydroxy-4-(N-acetylcysteinyl-S)butane or the product of epoxybutene with N-7 in guanine in urine, epoxybutene-hemoglobin adducts, and HPRT mutation have been used as biomarkers in recent studies of occupational exposure to butadiene. Data in laboratory animals suggest that diepoxybutane may be a more important genotoxic metabolite than epoxybutene. Biomonitoring methods need to be developed for diepoxybutane and other putative reactive butadiene metabolites. With butadiene and related compounds, the ultimate challenge is to identify useful biomarkers of exposure in which quantitative linkages between exposure and internal dose of the important DNA-reactive metabolites are established.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8933033      PMCID: PMC1469696          DOI: 10.1289/ehp.96104s5907

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Health Perspect        ISSN: 0091-6765            Impact factor:   9.031


  64 in total

1.  Use of T-cell receptor gene probes to quantify the in vivo hprt mutations in human T-lymphocytes.

Authors:  J A Nicklas; J P O'Neill; R J Albertini
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  1986-01       Impact factor: 2.433

2.  Urinary N-acetyl-S-2-hydroxyethyl-L-cysteine in rats as biological indicator of ethylene oxide exposure.

Authors:  M Gérin; R Tardif
Journal:  Fundam Appl Toxicol       Date:  1986-10

3.  Comparison of blood concentrations of 1,3-butadiene and butadiene epoxides in mice and rats exposed to 1,3-butadiene by inhalation.

Authors:  M W Himmelstein; M J Turner; B Asgharian; J A Bond
Journal:  Carcinogenesis       Date:  1994-08       Impact factor: 4.944

4.  Species differences in urinary butadiene metabolites: comparisons of metabolite ratios between mice, rats, and humans.

Authors:  W E Bechtold; M R Strunk; I Y Chang; J B Ward; R F Henderson
Journal:  Toxicol Appl Pharmacol       Date:  1994-07       Impact factor: 4.219

5.  Comparative cytogenetic analysis of bone marrow damage induced in male B6C3F1 mice by multiple exposures to gaseous 1,3-butadiene.

Authors:  R R Tice; R Boucher; C A Luke; M D Shelby
Journal:  Environ Mutagen       Date:  1987

6.  Species differences in the formation of butadiene monoxide from 1,3-butadiene.

Authors:  U Schmidt; E Loeser
Journal:  Arch Toxicol       Date:  1985-09       Impact factor: 5.153

7.  Monitoring of environmental cancer initiators through hemoglobin adducts by a modified Edman degradation method.

Authors:  M Törnqvist; J Mowrer; S Jensen; L Ehrenberg
Journal:  Anal Biochem       Date:  1986-04       Impact factor: 3.365

8.  Sister chromatid exchange and chromosome aberration analyses in mice after in vivo exposure to acrylonitrile, styrene, or butadiene monoxide.

Authors:  Y Sharief; A M Brown; L C Backer; J A Campbell; B Westbrook-Collins; A G Stead; J W Allen
Journal:  Environ Mutagen       Date:  1986

9.  Induction and rapid repair of sister-chromatid exchanges in multiple murine tissues in vivo by diepoxybutane.

Authors:  M K Conner; J E Luo; O Gutierrez de Gotera
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  1983-03       Impact factor: 2.433

10.  Induction of micronuclei in peripheral blood and bone marrow erythrocytes of rats and mice exposed to 1,3-butadiene by inhalation.

Authors:  K Autio; L Renzi; J Catalan; O E Albrecht; M Sorsa
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  1994-09-01       Impact factor: 2.433

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  1 in total

1.  Ethylene oxide in blood of ethylene-exposed B6C3F1 mice, Fischer 344 rats, and humans.

Authors:  Johannes Georg Filser; Winfried Kessler; Anna Artati; Eva Erbach; Thomas Faller; Paul Erich Kreuzer; Qiang Li; Josef Lichtmannegger; Wanwiwa Numtip; Dominik Klein; Christian Pütz; Brigitte Semder; György András Csanády
Journal:  Toxicol Sci       Date:  2013-09-25       Impact factor: 4.849

  1 in total

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