DEPOSITION AND RETENTION OF RADIOLABELED SERUM CONSTITUENTS IN HAIR AFTER SYSTEMIC ADMINISTRATION

Citation
Pr. Stout et al., DEPOSITION AND RETENTION OF RADIOLABELED SERUM CONSTITUENTS IN HAIR AFTER SYSTEMIC ADMINISTRATION, Drug metabolism and disposition, 26(9), 1998, pp. 900-906
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Pharmacology & Pharmacy
ISSN journal
00909556
Volume
26
Issue
9
Year of publication
1998
Pages
900 - 906
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-9556(1998)26:9<900:DARORS>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
To investigate the chemical mechanisms involved in the accumulation of drugs or other compounds in hair, we examined the deposition of radio labeled serum constituents in the hair of BALB/c (albino) and C57 (pig mented) mice. The extents of in vivo incorporation of a normal serum c ation (Ca-45(2+)), a serum anion (Cl-36(-)), a neutral constituent ([C -14]urea), and a structural component of hair ([S-35]cysteine) were st udied to provide a reference framework for the examination of foreign substances deposited in hair from serum. The use of two mouse strains allowed evaluation of the effect of hair pigmentation on levels of acc umulation. Additionally, the endogenous contents of Mg2+, Na+, and K(measured by inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy) were determined, as was their stability to removal. Hair concentration s of isotopes were calculated from mean specific activities determined over the treatment period and corrected for quenching and decay. Ca-4 5(2+) accumulation (500 ng/mg of hair in C57 mice and 25 ng/mg of hair in BALB/c mice) was unaffected by 24-hr phosphate buffer extraction. Of the [C-14]urea accumulated (3500 ng/mg in C57 and BALB/c mice), 50% was removed by 24-hr extraction in phosphate buffer. Of the Cl-36(-) accumulated (65 ng/mg in 057 mice and 30 ng/mg in BALB/c mice), one ha lf was removed by 24-hr extraction in phosphate buffer. The accumulate d [S-35]cysteine (210 ng/mg in 057 mice and 110 ng/mg in BALB/c mice) could not be removed, Endogenous Mg2+ (350 ng/mg in 057 mice and 75 ng /mg in BALB/c mice) was stable to 24-hr extraction with phosphate buff er. K+ (2500 ng/mg) and Na+ (400 ng/mg) concentrations were approximat ely equal in the two strains and were largely extractable. Based on th e accumulation of a neutral serum constituent (urea), the data suggest that factors other than ionic binding are important in the deposition of circulating molecules into hair. The extent and reversibility of i onic binding are dependent on the chemical nature of the binding subst ance. The presence of hair pigmentation greatly increased the accumula tion of Ca-45(2+), Cl-36(-), and [S-35]cysteine. These data suggest a multi-compartmental nature of drug storage in hair.