Abstract

We report the discovery of three toxicologically relevant methylated phenylarsenical metabolites in the liver of chickens fed 3‐nitro‐4‐hydroxyphenylarsonic acid (ROX), a feed additive in poultry production that is still in use in several countries. Methyl‐3‐nitro‐4‐hydroxyphenylarsonic acid (methyl‐ROX), methyl‐3‐amino‐4‐hydroxyphenylarsonic acid (methyl‐3‐AHPAA), and methyl‐3‐acetamido‐4‐hydroxyphenylarsonic acid (or methyl‐N‐acetyl‐ROX, methyl‐N‐AHPAA) were identified in such chicken livers, and the concentration of methyl‐ROX was as high as 90 μg kg−1, even after a five‐day clearance period. The formation of these newly discovered methylated metabolites from reactions involving trivalent phenylarsonous acid substrates, S‐adenosylmethionine, and the arsenic (+3 oxidation state) methyltransferase enzyme As3MT suggests that these compounds are formed by addition of a methyl group to a trivalent phenylarsenical substrate in an enzymatic process. The IC50 values of the trivalent phenylarsenical compounds were 300–30 000 times lower than those of the pentavalent phenylarsenicals.

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