An embryotoxicity study of the fungicide tridemorph and its commercial formulation Calixin.
J Merkle, V Schulz, H P Gelbke
Index: Teratology 29(2) , 259-69, (1984)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Tridemorph (N-tridecyl-2,6-dimethylmorpholine), the active ingredient of the commercially formulated fungicide Calixin, is a teratogen in rats and mice. The no-effect level for embryotoxic effects was 27.5 mg/kg for mice and 20.6 mg/kg for rats. By contrast, when Calixin, which contains 83% tridemorph, was administered orally at dose levels of 0.156, 0.722, and 3.909 mg/kg, no embryotoxic effects were observed in two strains of rats. Our extensive investigations, carried out under exposure conditions resembling as closely as possible those reported in another study, did not reproduce the previous findings of teratogenicity of Calixin.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
1989-01-01
[Steroids 53(3-5) , 393-412, (1989)]
[Teratogenic effect of the fungicide calixin].
1981-01-01
[Vopr. Pitan. (6) , 55-61, (1981)]
Human lamin B receptor exhibits sterol C14-reductase activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
1998-06-15
[Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1392(2-3) , 233-44, (1998)]
1983-10-01
[Biochem. Soc. Trans. 11(5) , 537-43, (1983)]
Synthesis and structure revision of calyxin natural products.
2006-04-14
[J. Org. Chem. 71(8) , 3176-83, (2006)]