Abstract
Products that appeared to be mainly benzo[a]pyrene 7,8-oxide and benzo[a]pyrene 9,10-oxide were synthesized and their chemical and biochemical properties were investigated. The oxides were unstable and readily rearranged to phenols. They were converted by rat liver homogenates and microsomal preparations into phenols and dihydrodiols, but glutathione conjugates were not formed in appreciable amounts. The dihydrodiols formed from benzo[a]pyrene 7,8- and 9,10-oxide by rat liver microsomal preparations were identical in their chromatographic and spectrographic properties with dihydrodiols formed when benzo[a]pyrene was metabolized by rat liver homogenates. 9,10-Dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene 7,8-oxide and 7,8-dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene 9,10-oxide were also synthesized. They were converted by rat liver homogenates and microsomal preparations into the related cis- and trans-dihydroxy compounds. Glutathione conjugates were formed from the oxides by rat liver homogenates. Both 7,8- and 9,10-dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene were metabolized by rat liver homogenates to mainly the trans-isomers of the related dihydroxy compounds. In experiments with boiled homogenates, the benzo[a]pyrene oxides were converted into phenols, whereas the dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene oxides yielded small amounts of the related dihydroxy compounds.