Abstract

A diffusion limited physiologically based pharmacokinetic model for rats and mice was developed to characterize the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination of naphthalene after inhalation exposure. This model includes compartments for arterial and venous blood, lung, liver, kidney, fat, and other organs. Primary sites for naphthalene metabolism to naphthalene oxide are the lung and the liver. The data used to create this model were generated from National Toxicology Program inhalation and iv studies on naphthalene and consisted of blood time-course data of the parent compound in both rats and mice. To examine the basis for possible interspecies differences in response to naphthalene, the model was extended to describe the distribution and metabolism of naphthalene oxide and the depletion and resynthesis of glutathione. After testing several alternative models, the one presented in this paper shows the best fit to the data with the fewest assumptions possible. The model indicates that tissue dosimetry of the parent compound alone does not explain why this chemical was carcinogenic to the female mouse lung but not to the rat lung. The species difference may be due to a combination of higher levels of naphthalene oxide in the mouse lung and a greater susceptibility of the mouse lung to epoxide-induced carcinogenesis. However, conclusions regarding which metabolite(s) may be responsible for the lung toxicity could not be reached.

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