Abstract

This study has demonstrated that the microsomal fraction of the rat small intestinal mucosa has the capacity to catalyse the oxidation of benzo[ a]pyrene(BP)-7,8-diol to BP-diol-epoxides (BPDEs) both by a mechanism involving the mixed-function oxidase system (NADPH-dependent) and as a result of the initiation of peroxidation of the membrane phospholipids by ferrous ions, ascorbate and ADP. The NADPH-dependent reaction was fastest in the proximal part of the intestine and resulted in the formation of approximately equal amounts of BPDE I and BPDE II. The lipid peroxidation-catalysed reaction favoured the production of BPDE I and was maximal in the middle region of the intestine, closely paralleling the rate of lipid peroxidation in the intestinal sections. Feeding rats on a cod liver oil diet, rich in C 20:5 and C 22:6, significantly increased the incorporation of these fatty acids into the microsomal fractions. This resulted in a greatly increased rate of lipid peroxidation in vitro and a significantly higher rate of lipid peroxidation-catalysed BP-7,8-diol oxidation compared to rats fed fat-free, mono-unsaturated lard or corn oil (58% C 18:2) diets. Thus the rate of conversion of BP-7,8-diol to its ultimate carcinogenic forms during lipid peroxidation in the intestinal fractions of rats fed a polyunsaturated fat was quantitatively more important than the NADPH-catalysed reaction as measured in vitro.

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