Abstract

Monohalogen benzenes, when fed, are excreted in the urine of adult dogs,1 cats,2 rats,3 and rabbits,4 partly as ethereal sulfates, partly as mercapturic acids. Hele,5 in an attempt to compare the synthesis of mercapturic acid in dogs and pigs, has come to the conclusion that the pig does not synthesize mercapturic acid readily. Hele5 used young growing pigs as experimental animals in comparing the metabolism of bromobenzene in pigs to that in the adult dog. Inasmuch as Abderhalden6 believes that the synthesis of mercapturic acid is limited in the animal body by the need of that animal for sulfur for reactions more essential than the detoxication of bromobenzene, it seemed probable that the limitation of synthesis of mercapturic acid in the pig as found by Hele5 was due to the fact that he employed young growing pigs instead of the adult animal. White and Jackson7 have adduced evidence which seems to indicate that bromobenzene, when fed to growing rats, affects the utilization by the animals of cystine nec...

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