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  • Acute and subacute effects of tobacco alkaloids, tobacco-specific nitrosamines and phenethyl isothiocyanate on N'-nitrosonornicotine metabolism in rats.

Acute and subacute effects of tobacco alkaloids, tobacco-specific nitrosamines and phenethyl isothiocyanate on N'-nitrosonornicotine metabolism in rats.

Toxicology (2005-08-25)
Stefan Tyroller, Wolfgang Zwickenpflug, Charlotte Thalheim, Elmar Richter
ABSTRACT

N'-Nitrosonornicotine (NNN) was the first tobacco-specific nitrosamine (TSNA) identified as carcinogen in tobacco smoke, but no data exist on in vivo interactions between NNN and other tobacco alkaloids, TSNA or phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) which have been demonstrated in various studies on 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK). Acute effects on NNN metabolism were tested in male Fischer F344 rats injected s.c. with 30nmol/kg body weight (bw) [5-(3)H]NNN either alone or simultaneously with 15mumol/kg bw nicotine, nornicotine, anatabine, or anabasine, 150mumol/kg bw cotinine, 3mumol/kg bw myosmine, or 300nmol/kg bw of either N'-nitrosoanatabine or N'-nitrosoanabasine. Another group of rats was fed a diet supplemented with PEITC at 1mumol/g diet starting 24h before NNN treatment. Within 24h more than 80% and about 10% of the radioactivity was excreted with urine and feces, respectively. Urinary metabolites were separated by reversed-phase radio-HPLC and identified by co-chromatography with UV standards. In two sets of experiments with control rats treated with NNN only, 4-hydroxy-4-(3-pyridyl)butanoic acid (hydroxy acid, 44.4/44.8%), 4-oxo-4-(3-pyridyl)butanoic acid (keto acid, 32.4/31.5%), NNN-N-oxide (5.0/3.8%), 4-(3-pyridyl)butane-1,4-diol (diol, 1.1/1.0%) and norcotinine (2.3/1.0%) were consistently detected besides unmetabolised NNN (4.7/3.3%). Co-treatment with nicotine, cotinine, nornicotine and PEITC shifted the contribution of the two major metabolites significantly in favor of hydroxy acid (108-113% of control) as compared to keto acid (86-90% of control). The same treatments also increased norcotinine (135-170% of control). These changes are consistent with a decreased metabolic activation of NNN. In subacute studies rats received NNN in drinking water for 4 weeks at a daily dose of 30 nmol/kg bw with or without nornicotine at 15 micromol/kg bw or myosmine at 3 micromol/kg bw. On the last day of the experiment all rats received [5-(3)H]NNN at 30 nmol/kg bw with a contaminated apple bite followed by collection of urine and feces for 18h. Most of the radioactivity, 87-96% of the dose, was recovered in urine and only minor amounts have been excreted in feces or persisted in blood. In urine of the NNN-control group keto acid (32.2%) and unmetabolised NNN (3.9%) were present in identical amounts as in the acute experiment whereas hydroxy acid (41.4% of total radioactivity in urine, 93% of acute NNN control) was reduced in expense of the minor NNN metabolites. Co-administration of nornicotine resulted in a small but significant rise of keto acid (107% of control) and a significant decrease in NNN-N-oxide (76% of control). After co-treatment with myosmine the increase of keto acid (104% of control) was even less but still significant whereas NNN-N-oxide and diol were significantly reduced to 72% and 79% of control, respectively. Our experiments with rats indicate significant mutual effects of some of the major tobacco alkaloids and most relevant TSNA. Further studies on the impact on smokers and the inhibitory effects of isothiocyanates are needed for a final risk assessment.