The observed toxicity of arsenic is highly dependent on animal species and differences in metabolism. Rats are one of the most tolerant species, and the metabolic pathway is quite different in some aspects from those of other mammals. The distinct metabolic pathway including the preferential accumulation in red blood cells (RBCs) has been explained, whereby allowing an effective use of rats as an animal model for the arsenic metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo unidentified arsenic metabolites were detected in the liver of rats on a gel filtration column by HPLC inductively coupled argon plasma mass spectrometry after an injection of dimethylarsinic (DMA(V)), dimethylarsinous (DMA(III)), monomethylarsonic (MMA(V)), or monomethylarsonous (MMA(III)) acid. The same arsenicals were also produced in vitro by incubation of DMA(III) in the liver supernatant but not by DMA(V). The two arsenic metabolites eluted at the same retention times as those of the two arsenicals prepared by reaction of DMA(V) with either thiosulfate plus disulfite or hydrogen sulfide or sodium sulfide plus sulfuric acid.
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