Protein Information

ID 440
Name Cl 2
Synonyms AMB11; MHC class I NK cell receptor; CD158E1; CD158E1/2; CD158E2; CL 11; CL 2; HLA BW4 specific inhibitory NK cell receptor…

Compound Information

ID 1402
Name methylene chloride
CAS dichloromethane

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
16918250 Watanabe K, Guengerich FP: Limited reactivity of formyl chloride with glutathione and relevance to metabolism and toxicity of dichloromethane. Chem Res Toxicol. 2006 Aug;19(8):1091-6.
Formyl chloride has been indirectly implicated as an intermediate in the oxidation of CH (2) Cl (2) and proposed to be a product of the oxidation of some other compounds. Formyl chloride was synthesized and added to aqueous solutions, with CO formed as a product. The presence of glutathione (GSH) did not reduce the yield of CO at any of the pH values tested. At pH > or= 9, a small amount of S-formyl GSH was detected (Cl (2) with human liver microsomes at neutral pH produced mainly CO and only trace protein adducts (detected from (14) CH (2) Cl (2)) and no S-formyl GSH at the level of detection. Neither rat liver cytosol nor purified GSH transferase (rat) 5-5 or (human) T1-1 significantly enhanced the level of S-formyl GSH recovered in incubations with either NADPH-fortified microsomes and CH (2) Cl (2) or synthetic formyl chloride. The oxidation pathway is the principal route of metabolism of CH (2) Cl (2) at low doses in vivo, and previous literature assumes that the formyl chloride product is reactive with GSH and protein. We provide evidence that formyl chloride can react with GSH but that, in contrast to suggestions in the literature, the extent is very limited because of the known high rate of rearrangement to CO in aqueous solution. The very limited reaction of formyl chloride with nucleophiles is consistent with the low toxicity of CH (2) Cl (2), and formyl chloride binding cannot be used as an explanation for discrepancies in pharmacokinetic models [Gargas, M. L., Clewell, H. J., III, and Andersen, M. E. (1986) Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 82, 211-223; Clewell, H. J., III (1995) Toxicology 102, 83-94].
3(0,0,0,3)