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Study of urinary mercapturic acids as biomarkers of human acrylonitrile exposure

Authors :
Kuen-Yuh Wu
Chia-Fang Wu
Yu-Syuan Luo
Yu-Fang Huang
Shi-Nian Uang
Yen-Yi Lee
Su-Yin Chiang
Source :
Toxicology letters. 373
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Exposure to the vinyl monomer acrylonitrile (AN) is primarily occupational. AN is also found in cigarette smoke. AN can be detoxified to form N-acetyl-S-(2-cyanoethyl)-cysteine (CEMA) or activated to 2-cyanoethylene oxide (CEO) and detoxified to form N-acetyl-S-(1-cyano-2-hydroxyethyl)-cysteine (CHEMA) and N-acetyl-S-(2-hydroxyethyl)-cysteine (HEMA). These urinary mercapturic acids (MAs) are considered to be potential biomarkers of AN exposure. This study assessed personal AN exposure, urinary MAs (CEMA, CHEMA, and HEMA), and cotinine (a biomarker of cigarette smoke) in 80 AN-exposed and 23 non-exposed factory workers from urine samples provided before and after work shifts. Unambiguous linear correlations were observed between levels of urinary CEMA and CHEMA with personal AN exposures, indicating their potential as chemically-specific biomarkers for AN exposures. AN exposure was the dominant factor in MA formation for AN-exposed workers, whereas urinary cotinine used as a biomarker showed that cigarette smoke exposure was the primary factor for non-exposed workers. The CHEMA/CEMA and (CHEMA+HEMA)/CEMA ratios in this human study differ from those in similar studies of AN-treated rats and mice in literature, suggesting a possible dose- and species-dependent effect in AN metabolic activation and detoxification.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine
Toxicology

Details

ISSN :
18793169
Volume :
373
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Toxicology letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e2313a744c6daec0dfc5be11ce9c4ff6