Abstract

o-Aminophenol and N-(2-methoxyphenyl)hydroxylamine are human metabolites of the industrial and environmental pollutant and bladder carcinogen 2-methoxyaniline (o-anisidine). The latter one is also a human metabolite of another pollutant and bladder carcinogen, 2-methoxynitrobenzene (o-nitroanisole). Here, we investigated the ability of rat hepatic micro- somes to metabolize these metabolites. N-(2-methoxyphenyl)hydroxylamine is metabolized by rat hepatic microsomes to o-aminophenol and predominantly o-anisidine, the parent carcinogen from which N-(2-methoxyphenyl)hydroxylamine is formed. In addition, two N-(2-methoxyphenyl)hydroxylamine metabolites, whose exact structures have not been identified as yet, were generated. On the contrary, no metabolites were found to be formed from o-aminophenol by rat hepatic microsomes. Whereas N-(2-methoxyphenyl)hydroxylamine is responsible for formation of three deoxyguanosine adducts in DNA, o-aminophenol seems to be a detoxication metabolite of N-(2-methoxyphenyl)hydroxylamine and/or a parental carcinogen, o-anisidine; no o-aminophenol-derived DNA adducts were found after its reaction with microsomal cytochromes P450 and peroxidases.

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