Organohalogen
Compounds in Pet Dog and Cat: Do Pets
Biotransform Natural Brominated Products in Food to Harmful Hydroxlated
Substances?
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Posted on 2016-01-05 - 00:00
There
are growing concerns about the increase in hyperthyroidism
in pet cats due to exposure to organohalogen contaminants and their
hydroxylated metabolites. This study investigated the blood contaminants
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers
(PBDEs) and their hydroxylated and methoxylated derivatives (OH-PCBs,
OH-PBDEs, and MeO-PBDEs), in pet dogs and cats. We also measured the
residue levels of these compounds in commercially available pet foods.
Chemical analyses of PCBs and OH-PCBs showed that the OH-PCB levels
were 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower in cat and dog food products
than in their blood, suggesting that the origin of OH-PCBs in pet
dogs and cats is PCBs ingested with their food. The major congeners
of OH-/MeO-PBDEs identified in both pet food products and blood were
natural products (6OH-/MeO-BDE47 and 2′OH-/MeO-BDE68) from
marine organisms. In particular, higher concentrations of 6OH-BDE47
than 2′OH-BDE68 and two MeO-PBDE congeners were observed in
the cat blood, although MeO-BDEs were dominant in cat foods, suggesting
the efficient biotransformation of 6OH-BDE47 from 6MeO-BDE47 in cats.
We performed in vitro demethylation experiments to confirm the biotransformation
of MeO-PBDEs to OH-PBDEs using liver microsomes. The results showed
that 6MeO-BDE47 and 2′MeO-BDE68 were demethylated to 6OH-BDE47
and 2′OH-BDE68 in both animals, whereas no hydroxylated metabolite
from BDE47 was detected. The present study suggests that pet cats
are exposed to MeO-PBDEs through cat food products containing fish
flavors and that the OH-PBDEs in cat blood are derived from the CYP-dependent
demethylation of naturally occurring MeO-PBDE congeners, not from
the hydroxylation of PBDEs.
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Mizukawa, Hazuki; Nomiyama, Kei; Nakatsu, Susumu; Iwata, Hisato; Yoo, Jean; Kubota, Akira; et al. (2016). Organohalogen
Compounds in Pet Dog and Cat: Do Pets
Biotransform Natural Brominated Products in Food to Harmful Hydroxlated
Substances?. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b04216