Abstract

Urine of rats dosed with styrene (240 mg/kg), R-, S- and racemic styrene oxide (150 mg/kg) was analysed for mandelic acid enantiomers and for regioisomers and diastereomers of mercapturic acids by NMR spectrometry. Enantiomers of mandelic acid were converted to diastereomeric Mosher's derivatives prior to analysis. R- and S-styrene oxide yielded predominantly R- and S-mandelic acid, respectively, racemic styrene oxide gave predominantly the R-enantiomer whereas styrene yielded almost racemic mandelate. The regioselectivity of mercapturic acid formation was very similar for styrene, R- and S-styrene oxide. These three species yielded a 2:1 mixture of N-acetyl- S-(1-phenyl-2-hydroxyethyl)cysteine (MA1) and N-acetyl- S-(2-phenyl-2-hydroxyethyl)cysteine (MA2). R-Styrene oxide gave higher conversion to mercapturic acids (28%) than the S-isomer (19% of the dose). However, R-styrene oxide yielded stereospecifically S, R-MA1 and R, R-MA2 whereas S-styrene oxide gave R, R-MA1 and S, R-MA2. Styrene yielded a mixture of diastereomeric mercapturic acids. The ratios of R, R-/ S, R-isomers were 80:20 and 15:85 for MA1 and MA2, respectively. These data suggest that styrene is metabolised stereoselectively to S-styrene oxide as a major enantiomer in rat in vivo. This enantiomer has been reported to be less mutagenic than R-styrene oxide in vitro.

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