Abstract
A dose of 0.99mg d(3)-acrylamide (d(3)-AA) (13.2μg/kg body weight) was ingested by a healthy male volunteer. Urine samples were collected over a period of 46h after the intake and analyzed for the hydrolysis product of glycidamide (GA), 2,3-dihydroxy-propionamide (OH-PA), a metabolite of the toxicologically relevant oxidative AA metabolism pathway; 5.4% of the administered d(3)-AA dose was eliminated as OH-PA within 46h after ingestion. Therefore, OH-PA represents a major metabolite of the oxidative metabolism pathway. Elimination kinetics of OH-PA is similar to the oxidative metabolites N-acetyl-S-(2-carbamoyl-2-hydroxyethyl)-cysteine (GAMA) and N-acetyl-S-(1-carbamoyl-2-hydroxyethyl)-cysteine (iso-GAMA). The major excretion of d(3)-OH-PA took place between 8 and 22h with the highest urinary d(3)-OH-PA concentration (c (max)) of 69.3μg/L urine, 18h (t (max)) postdose. OH-PA (5.4%), together with the other known urinary metabolites of the oxidative pathway GAMA (4.6%) and iso-GAMA (0.8%), represents 10.8% of the total AA dose. The share of the oxidative pathway metabolites is much smaller than the share of the reductive pathway metabolite N-acetyl-S-(2-carbamoylethyl)-cysteine (AAMA) that represents 51.7% of the ingested d(3)-AA dose. However, this new quantitative human data on OH-PA together with the previous data on the other oxidative pathway metabolites are of special importance when evaluating the carcinogenic potential of AA and when comparing human data with data from animal studies.
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