Toxicology Reports (Jan 2022)

Metabolic profiling and in vitro-in vivo extrapolation of furathiocarb in mammalian hepatic microsomes

  • Khaled Abass,
  • Petri Reponen,
  • Walaa F. Alsanie,
  • Arja Rautio,
  • Olavi Pelkonen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 750 – 758

Abstract

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Furathiocarb is a carbamate insecticide found in marine ecosystems as well as river water and sediments. The aim of this study was to characterize species differences in the in vitro metabolism of furathiocarb in seven mammalian species (human, monkey, minipig, rat, mouse, dog, rabbit) analyzed by LC-TOF-MS/MS, in order to provide qualitative and quantitative chemical-specific data to enhance toxicological risk assessment. Furathiocarb was mainly biotransformed to carbofuran metabolic pathway via (N-S) bond-cleavage. Two hydroxylated and sulfoxidated metabolites of furathiocarb were also detected (oxidation pathway). No unique human metabolites were detected. The carbofuran metabolic pathway was more predominant than the furathiocarb oxidation pathway in all species studied; differences based on hepatic clearance rates (CLH), were up to 9.4-fold in monkey and 7-fold in rats, while it was 4.3-fold in human. Animal to human differences in the carbofuran pathway are within the default toxicokinetic uncertainty factor, except for mouse (3.9-fold). Our findings on metabolic profiling and in vitro-in vivo extrapolations are helpful for the interpretation of toxicological findings and chemical risk assessment of furathiocarb.

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