32586-90-6Relevant articles and documents
Acephate insecticide toxicity: Safety conferred by inhibition of the bioactivating carboxyamidase by the metabolite methamidophos
Mahajna, Mahmoud,Quistad, Gary B.,Casida, John E.
, p. 64 - 69 (1997)
Acephate is an important systemic organophosphorus insecticide with toxicity attributed to bioactivation on metabolic conversion to methamidophos (or an oxidized metabolite thereof) which acts as an acetylcholinesterase (ACHE) inhibitor. The selective toxicity of acephate is considered to be due to facile conversion to methamidophos in insects but not mammals. We show in the present investigation that a carboxyamidase activates acephate in mice and in turn undergoes inhibition by the hydrolysis product, i.e., methamidophos; thus, the bioactivation is started but immediately turned off. These relationships are established by finding that 4 h pretreatment of mice with methamidophos ip at 5 mg/kg has the following effects on acephate action: reduces methamidophos and acephate levels in liver by 30-60% in the first 2 h after ip acephate dosage; inhibits the liver carboxyamidase cleaving [14CH3S]acephate to [14CH3S]methamidiphos with 50% block at ~1 mg/kg; strongly inhibits 14CO2 liberation from [CH314C(O)]acephate in vivo; markedly alters the pattern of urinary metabolites of acephate by increasing O- and S-demethylation products retaining the carboxyamide moiety; greatly reduces the brain AChE inhibition following acephate treatment; doubles the LD50 of ip-administered acephate from 540 to 1140 mg/kg. Methamidophos pretreatment in rats also markedly alters the metabolism of dimethoate (another systemic insecticide) from principally carboxyamide hydrolysis to mainly other pathways. In contrast, methamidophos pretreatment of houseflies does not alter the acephate-induced toxicity and brain AChE inhibition. The safety of acephate in mammals therefore appears to be due to conversion in small part to methamidophos which, acting directly or as a metabolite, is a potent carboxyamidase inhibitor, thereby blocking further activation.
S-methylation of O,O-dialkyl phosphorodithioic acids: O,O,S-trimethyl phosphorodithioate and phosphorothiolate as metabolites of dimethoate in mice
Mahajna, Mahmoud,Quistad, Gary B.,Casida, John E.
, p. 1202 - 1206 (2007/10/03)
O,O,S-Trimethyl phosphorodithioate and phosphorothiolate [(MeO)2P(S)SMe and (MeO)2P-(O)SMe, respectively] are known from earlier studies to be impurities, delayed toxicants, and detoxication inhibitors in several major O,O-dimethyl phosphorodithioate insecticides. Our recent studies show extensive S-methylation of mono- and dithiocarbamic acids in mice, suggesting the possibility that phosphorodithioic acids such as (MeO)2P(S)SH might also undergo S-methylation. This possibility was examined in ip-treated mice with emphasis on the metabolites of dimethoate [(MeO)2P(S)SCH2C(O)NHMe], one of the most important organophosphorus insecticides. The urinary metabolites of dimethoate, which contains no P-SMe substituent, were found to include four compounds with P-SMe moieties identified by 31P NMR spectroscopy as MeO(HS)P(O)SMe, MeO(HO)P(O)SMe, (MeO)2P(S)SMe, and (MeO)2P-(O)SMe; the latter two compounds are also established by GC-MS as dimethoate metabolites in mouse urine, liver, kidney, and lung. Several approaches verified unequivocally that the previously unknown P-SMe metabolites in urine and tissues are due to in vivo S-methylation rather than to impurities. Studies with other O,O-dimethyl and O,O-diethyl phosphorodithioate insecticides established the analogous S-methylation pathway for ethion, malathion, phenthoate, phosalone, and phosmet in mice. Thus, metabolism of O,O-dialkyl phosphorodithioate insecticides in mammals is shown here for the first time to yield S-methyl phosphorodithioates and phosphorothiolates from in vivo S- methylation of the intermediate O,O-dialkyl phosphorodithioic acids.