Yoshikawa K, Isobe M, Watabe I, Takabatake E
Mutat Res. 1980 Jul;78(3):219-26. doi: 10.1016/0165-1218(80)90102-0.
A comparative study on enzymic factors influencing the metabolic inactivation of phenyloxirane (styrene oxide), a major mutagenic metabolite of styrene in the liver, was carried out with respect to soluble glutathione S-transferase and microsomal epoxide hydratase in the 9000 X g supernatant fraction (S9) from a rat-liver homogenate. The mutagenic activity of phenyloxirane to Salmonella typhimurium TA100 was markedly reduced by S9 in the presence of glutathione but to a smaller extent in its absence. The retarding effect of glutathione on the inherent mutagenic activity of phenyloxirane was exerted by the soluble supernatant of S9 but not by microsomes. A gas-liquid chromatographic study indicated that the effect of glutathione was attributable to the disappearance of the mutagen from the microbial assay system. The rate of the disappearance was 10-20 times as fast in the soluble supernatant fraction as in the microsomes when fortified with more than 4 mM glutathione. Our results strongly suggest that in hepatic cells of the rat, cytosol glutathione S-transferase plays a much more important role than microsomal epoxide hydratase in the detoxication of the metabolite, phenyloxirane.