pubmed:abstractText |
Female Japanese quail received either hexachlorobenzene (HCB, 100 mg/kg . d) or tetrachlorohydroquinone (TCHQ, 175 mg/kg . d) for 10 d as a primary treatment. Following this, a secondary treatment of HCB (100 mg/kg . d) or TCHQ (175 mg/kg . d), alone or in combination, was administered for 1, 5, 10 or 15 d. The primary HCB treatment caused elevated delta-aminolevulinic acid synthetase (ALA-S) activities and small increases in porphyrin concentrations. Subsequent treatment of these birds with lactose resulted in no further increases in porphyrins or ALA-S. TCHQ treatment caused increases in porphyrins similar to those seen with continued HCB treatment. Apparently, despite the fact that TCHQ alone had no affect on ALA-S or porphyrin levels, this compound is able, in the presence of elevated ALA levels to cause porphyria. A combination of HCB and TCHQ administered to HCB-pretreated animals caused a more severe porphyria than did follow-up treatment with either HCB or TCHQ alone.
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