Carmofur is an antineoplastic agent that inhibits ceramidase, a key enzyme in the sphingolipid pathway. Previous research suggests carmofur represses reproductive maturity in Daphnia magna. The purpose of this experiment was to confirm carmofur's effects on fecundity and reproductive maturity over two generations. A chronic toxicity test found reproductive maturity was delayed from 9 to 19 days by 0.80 μM carmofur with a 99.7% drop in reproduction, probably caused by delayed ovarian development. Second generation effects were even greater with 0% reproductive success at 0.40 μM. To our surprise, carmofur was not measured in the media by HPLC 24 h after exposure. Previous research indicated that carmofur is unstable in water and hydrolyzed into 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Therefore, the chronic toxicity study was repeated with 5-FU and similar effects on reproductive maturity were observed at similar concentrations despite very different acute toxicities (48 h carmofur LC50 = 1.93 μM; 5-FU LC50 = 207 μM). 5-FU delayed reproductive maturity from 9 to 21 days with a 71.12% drop in reproduction at 0.80 μM and greater effects in the 2 generation similar to carmofur. 5-FU was found stable in aquatic media and HPLC confirmed 5-FU was hydrolyzed from carmofur within 24 h. In conclusion, carmofur and 5-FU reduce fecundity because they delay reproductive maturity and ovarian development in Daphnia magna. We conclude that the reproductive effects observed after carmofur treatment are primarily mediated by its breakdown product, 5-FU. This further underscores the importance of measuring chemical concentrations and evaluating chemical metabolism and decomposition when determining toxicity, especially of chemotherapeutic agents.Clinical trials registration Not applicable.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10646-022-02551-5DOI Listing

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