Measurement of polybrominated diphenyl ethers and metabolites in mouse plasma after exposure to a commercial pentabromodiphenyl ether mixture.

Minerva Mercado Feliciano's picture
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TitleMeasurement of polybrominated diphenyl ethers and metabolites in mouse plasma after exposure to a commercial pentabromodiphenyl ether mixture.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsQiu, X, Mercado-Feliciano, M, Bigsby, RM, Hites, RA
JournalEnviron Health Perspect
Volume115
Issue7
Pagination1052-8
Date Published2007 Jul
ISSN0091-6765
KeywordsAnimals, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Hydroxylation, Mice, Polybrominated Biphenyls
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) behave as weak estrogens in animal and cell culture bioassays. In vivo metabolites of PBDEs are suspected to cause these effects.

OBJECTIVES: To identify candidate metabolites, mouse plasma samples were collected after continuous oral and subcutaneous exposure to DE-71, a widely used commercial pentabromodiphenyl ether product, for 34 days.

METHODS: Samples were extracted, separated into neutral and phenolic fractions, and analyzed by gas chromatographic mass spectrometry.

RESULTS: In the plasma samples of orally treated animals, 2,2',4,4',5,5'-hexabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-153) represented 52% of total measurable PBDEs, whereas it represented only 4.3% in the DE-71 mixture. This suggested that BDE-153 was more persistent than other congeners in mice. Several metabolites were detected and quantitated: 2,4-dibromophenol, 2,4,5-tribromophenol, and six hydroxylated PBDEs. The presence of the two phenols suggested cleavage of the ether bond of 2,2',4,4'-tetrabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-47) and 2,2',4,4',5-pentabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-99), respectively. The hydroxylated (HO)-PBDEs might come from hydroxylation or debromination/hydroxylation. Among the quantitated hydroxylated metabolites, the most abundant was 4-HO-2,2',3,4'-tetra-BDE, which suggested that there was a bromine shift during the hydroxylation process. para-HO-PBDEs have been proposed to behave as endocrine disruptors.

CONCLUSIONS: THERE SEEM TO BE THREE METABOLIC PATHWAYS: cleavage of the diphenyl ether bond, hydroxylation, and debromination/hydroxylation. The cleavage of the diphenyl ether bond formed bromophenols, and the other two pathways formed hydroxylated PBDEs, of which para-HO-PBDEs are most likely formed from BDE-47. These metabolites may be the most thyroxine-like and/or estrogen-like congeners among the HO-PBDEs.

DOI10.1289/ehp.10011
Alternate JournalEnviron. Health Perspect.
PubMed ID17637922
PubMed Central IDPMC1913597
Grant ListES013341 / ES / NIEHS NIH HHS / United States