14C-Diethylstilbestrol was administered orally, intraperitoneally, and intrafetally to 15-day pregnant hamsters at a dose of 20 mg/kg body weight, and the radioactivity was determined in the fetus, placenta, and maternal liver after 6 hours. Significant amounts of radioactivity were found in these tissues in every case, indicating maternal-fetal and fetal-maternal transfer of diethylstilbestrol. Part of the radioactivity found in the tissues could not be extracted even after excessive washing. This implied the presence of reactive metabolites. In the fetal and placental extracts, eight oxidative metabolites of diethylstilbestrol were identified by mass fragmentography as hydroxy- and methoxy-derivatives of diethylstilbestrol, pseudodiethylstilbestrol, and dienestrol. The presence of oxidative metabolites in the hamster fetus and the covalent binding to tissue macromolecules are possibly associated with the fetotoxic effects of diethylstilbestrol.
Oxidative metabolism of diethylstilbestrol (DES) was measured in both the male and female genital tracts of the fetal mouse in organ culture. The major oxidative metabolite formed was Z,Z-dienestrol, whose formation appeared to be time dependent in the isolated fetal genital tract of both sexes. This peroxidative metabolite, which has been previously linked to bioactivation of DES in adult target tissues, was not detected in the fetal liver cultures. In addition, fetal genital tracts were capable of O-methylation of DES. In fact, a new metabolite, 4'-O-methyl-DES, was formed in fetal genital tissues but not in liver cultures. On the other hand, conjugation of DES occurred extensively in the fetal liver and placenta but not in the fetal genital tissues; conjugated DES was found primarily in the media. Thus, the fetal genital tract, which is the primary target for the transplacental carcinogenicity of DES, has the capacity to metabolize this compound.
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