The glucuronic acid conjugate of methylazoxymethanol was synthesized by oxidizing the primary alcohol of the glucose moiety of cycasin (methylazoxymethanol-beta-D-glycopyranoside) to a carboxylic acid. The oxidation was carried out by bubbling oxygen gas through a cycasin solution in the presence of a platinum-on-carbon catalyst. A band at 1715 cm-1, not present in the cycasin infrared spectrum, appeared in the spectrum of the oxidized cycasin product, establishing the presence of a carboxylic acid group. The oxidation product is methylazoxymethanol-beta-D-glucosiduronic acid because, when hydrolyzed with Escherichia coli beta-glucuronidase, it produced methylazoxymethanol and glucuronic acid and also indicated retention of the beta-linkage of cycasin. Varying quantities of the synthesized methylazoxymethanol-glucosiduronic acid, injected into Wistar rats of both sexes and of varying weights, were not acutely toxic. The compound was mutagenic to Salmonella typhimurium when preincubated with E. coli beta-glucuronidase, but not when preincubated with bovine liver glucuronidase.

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