Decreased pneumotoxicity of deuterated 3-methylindole: bioactivation requires methyl C-H bond breakage. 1987

J C Huijzer, and J D Adams, and G S Yost

The bioactivation of the pulmonary toxin 3-methylindole has been postulated to proceed via the formation of an imine methide. To test this hypothesis, the toxicity in mice of 3-methylindole has been compared to the toxicity of its perdeuteromethyl analog. Deuteration of the methyl group should slow the rate of production of the corresponding imine methide and diminish the toxicity of deutero-3-methylindole, if C-H bond breakage occurs prior to or during the rate-determining step. In agreement with this hypothesis, deutero-3-methylindole was synthesized and was shown to be significantly less toxic (LD50 735 mg/kg) than 3-methylindole (LD50 578 mg/kg). Both compounds produced the same lesion at the LD50 dose, bronchiolar damage and mild alveolar edema, indicating that deuteration of 3-methylindole did not change the pathologic process. However, at a much lower dose (25 mg/kg), 3-methylindole produced a mild bronchiolar lesion whereas deutero-3-methylindole did not damage lung tissue. Additionally, administration of deutero-3-methylindole caused less pulmonary edema compared to 3-methylindole, as assessed by increased wet lung weights. Finally, the depletion of pulmonary glutathione by deutero-3-methylindole was considerably slower than depletion by 3-methylindole. The electrophilic imine methide has been postulated to be the intermediate which binds with and depletes glutathione. Therefore, the evidence presented here supports the involvement of an imine methide as the primary reactive intermediate in 3-methylindole-mediated pneumotoxicity.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007211 Indoles Benzopyrroles with the nitrogen at the number one carbon adjacent to the benzyl portion, in contrast to ISOINDOLES which have the nitrogen away from the six-membered ring.
D007928 Lethal Dose 50 The dose amount of poisonous or toxic substance or dose of ionizing radiation required to kill 50% of the tested population. LD50,Dose 50, Lethal
D008168 Lung Either of the pair of organs occupying the cavity of the thorax that effect the aeration of the blood. Lungs
D009929 Organ Size The measurement of an organ in volume, mass, or heaviness. Organ Volume,Organ Weight,Size, Organ,Weight, Organ
D003903 Deuterium The stable isotope of hydrogen. It has one neutron and one proton in the nucleus. Deuterons,Hydrogen-2,Hydrogen 2
D005978 Glutathione A tripeptide with many roles in cells. It conjugates to drugs to make them more soluble for excretion, is a cofactor for some enzymes, is involved in protein disulfide bond rearrangement and reduces peroxides. Reduced Glutathione,gamma-L-Glu-L-Cys-Gly,gamma-L-Glutamyl-L-Cysteinylglycine,Glutathione, Reduced,gamma L Glu L Cys Gly,gamma L Glutamyl L Cysteinylglycine
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D001711 Biotransformation The chemical alteration of an exogenous substance by or in a biological system. The alteration may inactivate the compound or it may result in the production of an active metabolite of an inactive parent compound. The alterations may be divided into METABOLIC DETOXICATION, PHASE I and METABOLIC DETOXICATION, PHASE II.
D012862 Skatole 3-Methylindole,3 Methylindole
D051379 Mice The common name for the genus Mus. Mice, House,Mus,Mus musculus,Mice, Laboratory,Mouse,Mouse, House,Mouse, Laboratory,Mouse, Swiss,Mus domesticus,Mus musculus domesticus,Swiss Mice,House Mice,House Mouse,Laboratory Mice,Laboratory Mouse,Mice, Swiss,Swiss Mouse,domesticus, Mus musculus

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