Data sets on CB concentrations in fish-eating mammals from five laboratories were combined to test and refine a pharmacokinetic
model. Clear differences in PCB patterns were observed between species. The ability to metabolize chlorobiphenyl (CB) congeners
with vicinal H-atoms only in the
ortho- and
meta-positions and with one
ortho-chlorine substituent generally increased in the order otter < cetaceans (harbor porpoise, common dolphin) < phocid seals (harbor
and grey seal), but the metabolism of congeners with vicinal H-atoms in the
meta- and
para-positions and with two
ortho-chlorines increased in the order cetaceans < seals < otter. Both categories of congeners are probably metabolized by different
families of cytochrome P450 (1A and 2B) of which levels apparently differed between the cetaceans, the pinnipeds, and the
otter. Within-species CB patterns differed in a concentration-dependent manner. The induction of cytochrome P450 enzymes offers
the most likely explanation for this phenomenon, but starvation could have a similar effect on occasion.
Received: 16 August 1996/Accepted: 17 December 1996