Title of article
Human Studies Do Not Support the Methylation Threshold Hypothesis for the Toxicity of Inorganic Arsenic Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Hopenhaynrich C.، نويسنده , , Smith A. H. V.، نويسنده , , Goeden H. M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1993
Pages
17
From page
161
To page
177
Abstract
Inorganic arsenic (In-As) is an established human carcinogen. Methylation to monomethylarsonate (MMA) and dimethylarsinate (DMA) is believed to be the detoxification mechanism for In-As. Urinary measurement of In-As, MMA, and DMA is considered a good biological marker of internal dose to In-As, since it excludes other ingested forms of arsenic which are much less toxic, and because urinary excretion is the main form of elimination of In-As. A methylation threshold hypothesis for In-As has been proposed, stating that after exposure to In-As reaches a certain level or threshold, methylation capacity begins to decline, thus increasing the toxic effects of In-As. We investigated the validity of this hypothesis by analyzing the data from studies which measured urinary In-As, MMA, and DMA in different populations, ranging from background to high occupational and environmental exposure groups. We also present data from our study of a highly exposed population in California. Our analysis focused on the proportion of urinary In-As remaining in the unmethylated form [In-As/(In-As + MMA + DMA)]. The results indicate that epidemiological and experimental human data do not support the methylation threshold hypothesis. On average, 20-25% In-As remains unmethylated regardless of the exposure level. The wide range of interindividual variability in methylation capacity found in some studies warrants further investigation.
Journal title
Environmental Research
Serial Year
1993
Journal title
Environmental Research
Record number
727144
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