Godin_2006_Drug.Metab.Dispos_34_1764

Reference

Title : Species differences in the in vitro metabolism of deltamethrin and esfenvalerate: differential oxidative and hydrolytic metabolism by humans and rats - Godin_2006_Drug.Metab.Dispos_34_1764
Author(s) : Godin SJ , Scollon EJ , Hughes MF , Potter PM , DeVito MJ , Ross MK
Ref : Drug Metabolism & Disposition: The Biological Fate of Chemicals , 34 :1764 , 2006
Abstract :

Pyrethroids are neurotoxic pesticides whose pharmacokinetic behavior plays a role in their potency. This study examined the elimination of esfenvalerate and deltamethrin from rat and human liver microsomes. A parent depletion approach in the presence and absence of NADPH was used to assess species differences in biotransformation pathways, rates of elimination, and intrinsic hepatic clearance. Esfenvalerate was eliminated primarily via NADPH-dependent oxidative metabolism in both rat and human liver microsomes. The intrinsic hepatic clearance (CL(INT)) of esfenvalerate was estimated to be 3-fold greater in rodents than in humans on a per kilogram body weight basis. Deltamethrin was also eliminated primarily via NADPH-dependent oxidative metabolism in rat liver microsomes; however, in human liver microsomes, deltamethrin was eliminated almost entirely via NADPH-independent hydrolytic metabolism. The CL(INT) for deltamethrin was estimated to be 2-fold more rapid in humans than in rats on a per kilogram body weight basis. Metabolism by purified rat and human carboxylesterases (CEs) were used to further examine the species differences in hydrolysis of deltamethrin and esfenvalerate. Results of CE metabolism revealed that human carboxylesterase 1 (hCE-1) was markedly more active toward deltamethrin than the class 1 rat CEs hydrolase A and B and the class 2 human CE (hCE-2); however, hydrolase A metabolized esfenvalerate 2-fold faster than hCE-1, whereas hydrolase B and hCE-1 hydrolyzed esfenvalerate at equal rates. These studies demonstrate a significant species difference in the in vitro pathways of biotransformation of deltamethrin in rat and human liver microsomes, which is due in part to differences in the intrinsic activities of rat and human carboxylestersases.

PubMedSearch : Godin_2006_Drug.Metab.Dispos_34_1764
PubMedID: 16855054

Related information

Substrate Fenvalerate    Esfenvalerate    Deltamethrin

Citations formats

Godin SJ, Scollon EJ, Hughes MF, Potter PM, DeVito MJ, Ross MK (2006)
Species differences in the in vitro metabolism of deltamethrin and esfenvalerate: differential oxidative and hydrolytic metabolism by humans and rats
Drug Metabolism & Disposition: The Biological Fate of Chemicals 34 :1764

Godin SJ, Scollon EJ, Hughes MF, Potter PM, DeVito MJ, Ross MK (2006)
Drug Metabolism & Disposition: The Biological Fate of Chemicals 34 :1764