Abstract

The metabolic activation of [14C]phenol resulting in covalent binding to proteins has been studied in rat liver microsomes. The covalent binding was dependent on microsomal enzymes and NADPH and showed saturation kinetics for phenol with a Km-value of 0.04 mM. The metabolites hydroquinone and catechol were formed at rates which were 10 or 0.7 times that of the binding rate of metabolically activated phenol. The effects of cytochrome P-450 inhibitors and cytochrome P-450 inducers on the metabolism and binding of phenol to microsomal proteins, suggest that cytochrome P-450 isoenzyme(s) other than P-450 PB-B or P-450 beta NF-B catalyses the metabolic activation of phenol. Furthermore, reconstituted mixed-function oxidase systems containing cytochrome P-450 PB-B and P-450 beta NF-B were (on basis of cytochrome P-450 content) 6 and 11 times less active in catalysing the formation of hydroquinone than microsomes. The isolated metabolites hydroquinone and catechol bound more extensively to microsomal proteins than phenol and the binding of these was not stimulated by NADPH. The binding occurring during the metabolism of phenol could be predicted by the rates of formation of hydroquinone and catechol and the rates by which the isolated metabolites were bound to proteins.

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