Abstract

Toxicokinetics influences the toxicity of chemicals. This also holds for 1,2-unsaturated pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs), which need bioactivation to become toxic. Given that only for a limited number of 1,2-unsaturated PAs in vivo toxicity data are available, alternative testing strategies including read-across and quantitative in vitro to in vivo extrapolation (QIVIVE) are important. This paper presents how physiologically-based kinetic (PBK) models for the PAs lasiocarpine and riddelliine were developed for rat and human, and used for conversion of in vitro data for toxicity in primary hepatocytes to quantitatively predict in vivo acute liver toxicity for both rat and human. Marked differences in toxicokinetics were observed between the two model PAs influencing the predicted in vivo toxicity. In a next step, in vitro toxicokinetic data that predicted relative bioactivation of the PAs, were shown to provide a possible basis for read-across from the BMDL10 for tumor formation by riddelliine of 237 μg/kg bw per day to other PAs for which tumor data are lacking. It is concluded that when comparing toxicity of different PAs, or when extrapolating in vitro toxicity data for PAs to the in vivo situation, differences in toxicokinetics should be taken into account, while future challenges are also discussed.

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