• Title of article

    Dimethylamine Formation in the Rat from Various Related Amine Precursors

  • Author/Authors

    Zhang، نويسنده , , A.Q and Mitchell، نويسنده , , S.C. and Smith، نويسنده , , R.L، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    923
  • To page
    927
  • Abstract
    Dimethylamine is the immediate precursor of dimethylnitrosamine, a known potent carcinogen in a wide variety of animal species. Although small amounts of dimethylamine are ingested directly, the major dietary source is believed to be via choline and related materials. Owing to quantitative recoveries following oral administration, urinary dimethylamine levels provide good overall measures of body exposure. The oral administration of equimolar amounts (1 mmol/kg body weight) of potential amine precursors to male Wistar rats produced only small increases in urinary dimethylamine after choline (+11%; 0.60±0.36% dose), dimethylaminopropanol (+32%; 1.49±0.30% dose), dimethylaminoethyl chloride (+110% 5.38±1.72% dose) and trimethylamine (+51%; 1.6±0.80% dose) input, whereas significantly larger increases were found following trimethylamine N-oxide ingestion (+355%; 12.93±1.13% dose; t-test, P <0.001). These data suggest that trimethylamine N-oxide is a major dietary source of dimethylamine, by direct conversion and not by sequential reduction (to trimethylamine) and demethylation, and that in this respect it is of greater importance, on a molar basis, than choline.
  • Keywords
    Trimethylamine N-oxide , dimethylnitrosamine , Choline , Dimethylamine , Rat
  • Journal title
    Food and Chemical Toxicology
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    Food and Chemical Toxicology
  • Record number

    2116254