Abstract

Uptake, Disposition, and Persistence of Acrylonitrile in Rainbow Trout, Lech, J. J., Waddell, W. J., Friedman, M. A., and Johnson, L. R. (1995). Fundam. Appl. Toxicol. 27, 291-294. The uptake and disposition of [2,3- 14C]acrylonitrile-derived 14 C were studied in rainbow trout by water exposure. Trout were exposed to [ 14C]ACN at 5.3 μg/liter and sampled at various times during a 24-hr uptake phase. After transfer to fresh water, fish were sampled to 72 hr for the estimation of elimination rates and the half-life of 14 C. Throughout these experiments several fish were also sacrificed for whole-body autoradiography. The uptake of 14C in carcass and viscera began to level off at 24 hr and the apparent bioconcentration factor was low and of the order of 3-4. In the elimination studies, the 14C appeared to persist in both muscle and visceral tissue for a longer time than anticipated based upon its octanol-water partition coefficient (log p = -0.92). The t 1 2 of 14 C in muscle in two such experiments was calculated to be 117 and 102 hr. The autoradiographs of whole-body sections of exposed trout also revealed a slow loss of 14C from muscle. Muscle extracts prepared from exposed fish were essentially nondialyzable. When dialyzed muscle extract was analyzed for protein and 14C after SDS-PAGE electrophoresis, most of the 14C was associated with a single protein band with a mobility comparable to standards in the 10,000 Dalton range. These studies indicate that the long half-life of 14C seen in trout muscle may be due to covalent binding of 14C to a protein with a molecular weight of approximately 10,000 Daltons.

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