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Xenobiotica
the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems
Volume 23, 1993 - Issue 8
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Original Article

Glutathione-dependent bioactivation of xenobiotics

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Pages 873-887 | Received 02 Mar 1993, Accepted 30 Apr 1993, Published online: 23 Apr 2010
 

Abstract

Glutathione conjugation has been identified as an important detoxication reaction. However, in recent years several glutathione-dependent bioactivation reactions have been identified. Current knowledge on the mechanisms and the possible biological importance of these reactions are discussed.

1. Dichloromethane is metabolized by glutathione conjugation to formaldehyde via S-(chloromethyl)glutathione. Both compounds are reactive intermediates and may be responsible for the dichloromethane-induced tumorigenesis in sensitive species.

2. Vicinal dihaloalkanes are transformed by glutathione S-transferase-catalyzed reactions to mutagenic and nephrotoxic S-(2-haloethyl)glutathione S-conjugates. Electrophilic episulphonium ions are the ultimate reactive intermediates formed.

3. Several polychlorinated alkenes are bioactivated in a complex, glutathione-dependent pathway. The first step is hepatic glutathione S-conjugate formation followed by cleavage to the corresponding cysteine S-conjugates, and, after translocation to the kidney, metabolism by renal cysteine conjugate β-lyase. β-Lyase-dependent metabolism of halovinyl cysteine S-conjugates yields electrophilic thioketenes, whose covalent binding to cellular macromolecules is responsible for the observed toxicity of the parent compounds.

4. Finally, hepatic glutathione conjugate formation with hydroquinones and aminophenols yields conjugates that are directed to γ-glutamyltransferase-rich tissues, such as the kidney, where they undergo alkylation or redox cycling reactions, or both, that cause organ-selective damage.

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