Abstract

Trichloroethylene (TCE) was metabolized by cytochrome P-450 containing mixed-function oxidase systems to chloral (2,2,2,-trichloroacetaldehyde), glyoxylic acid, formic acid, CO, and TCE oxide. TCE oxide was synthesized, and its breakdown products were analyzed. Under acidic aqueous conditions the primary products were glyoxylic acid and dichloracetic acid. The primary compounds formed under neutral or basic aqueous conditions were formic acid and CO. TCE oxide did not form chloral in any of these or other aqueous systems, even when iron salts, ferriprotoporphyrin IX, or purified cytochrome P-450 was present. Ferric iron salts catalyzed the rearrangement of TCE oxide to chloral only in CH2Cl2 or CH3CN. A 500-fold excess of iron was required for complete conversion. A kinetic model involving the zero-order oxidation of TCE to TCE oxide by cytochrome P-450 and the first-order degradation of the epoxide was used to test the hypothesis that TCE oxide is an obligate intermediate in the conversion of TCE to other metabolites. Kinetic constants fo the breakdown of TCE oxide and for the oxidative metabolism of TCE to stable metabolites were used to predict epoxide concentrations required to support the obligate intermediacy of TCE oxide. The maximum levels of TCE oxide detected in systems using microsomal fractions and purified cytochrome P-450 were 5-28-fold lower than those predicted from the model. The kinetic data and the discrepancies between the observed metabolites and TCE oxide breakdown products support the view that the epoxide is not an obligate intermediate in the formation of chloral, and an alternative model is presented in which chlorine migration occurs in an oxygenated TCE-cytochrome P-450 transition state.

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