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Much of organic chemistry is based on the ability of suitably
structured chemicals to bind together through the formation of
covalent bonds. Biochemistry is replete with exam ples of
enzymatically catalyzed reactions in which normal body constituents
can be linked through covalent bonds during the process of
intermediary metabolism. The finding that xenobiotic chemicals that
enter the body from the environment, are metabolized to highly
reactive species, and then covalently react with cellular
macromolecules to induce toxic and carcinogenic effects was an
observation that spawned the research featured in the Fifth
International Symposium on Biological Reactive Intermediates (BRI
V). The group of investigators that became fascinated with this
process and its signifi cance in terms of human health began their
discussions in Turku, Finland (J 975), and continued them at
Guildford, England (1980), College Park, Maryland (1985), Tucson,
Arizona (1990), and Munich, Germany (1995). Among the results were
a series of reports listed below, as well as the book for which
this serves as the Preface. * Jollow, DJ., Kocsis, J.J., Snyder, R.
and Vainio, H. (eds), Biological Reactive Intermediates: Formation,
Toxicity and Inactivation, Plenum Press, NY, 1975. * Snyder, R.,
Park, D.V., Kocsis, J.J., Jollow, D.V., Gibson, G.G. and Witmer,
C.M. (eds), Biological Reactive Intermediates II: Chemical
Mechanisms and Biological Effects, Plenum Press, N.Y., 1982.
Much of organic chemistry is based on the ability of suitably
structured chemicals to bind together through the formation of
covalent bonds. Biochemistry is replete with exam ples of
enzymatically catalyzed reactions in which normal body constituents
can be linked through covalent bonds during the process of
intermediary metabolism. The finding that xenobiotic chemicals that
enter the body from the environment, are metabolized to highly
reactive species, and then covalently react with cellular
macromolecules to induce toxic and carcinogenic effects was an
observation that spawned the research featured in the Fifth
International Symposium on Biological Reactive Intermediates (BRI
V). The group of investigators that became fascinated with this
process and its signifi cance in terms of human health began their
discussions in Turku, Finland (J 975), and continued them at
Guildford, England (1980), College Park, Maryland (1985), Tucson,
Arizona (1990), and Munich, Germany (1995). Among the results were
a series of reports listed below, as well as the book for which
this serves as the Preface. * Jollow, DJ., Kocsis, J.J., Snyder, R.
and Vainio, H. (eds), Biological Reactive Intermediates: Formation,
Toxicity and Inactivation, Plenum Press, NY, 1975. * Snyder, R.,
Park, D.V., Kocsis, J.J., Jollow, D.V., Gibson, G.G. and Witmer,
C.M. (eds), Biological Reactive Intermediates II: Chemical
Mechanisms and Biological Effects, Plenum Press, N.Y., 1982.
The finding that chemicals can be metabolically activated to yield
reactive chemical species capable of covalently binding to cellular
macromolecules and the concept that these reactions could initiate
toxicological and carcinogenic events stimulated a meeting by a
small group of toxicologists at the University of Turku, in
Finland, in 1975 (Jollow et al. , 1977). The growing interest in
this field of research led to subsequent symposia at the University
of Surrey, in England in 1980 (Snyder et al. , 1982), and the
University of Maryland in the U. S. A. in 1985 (Kocsis et al. ,
1986). The Fourth International Symposium on Biological Reactive
Intermediates was hosted by the Center for Toxicology at the
University of Arizona and convened in Tucson, Arizona, January
14-17, 1990. Over 300 people attended. There were 60 platform
presentations by invited speakers, and 96 volunteer communications
in the form of posters were offered. These meetings have grown from
a small group of scientists working in closely related areas to a
major international series of symposia which convene every five
years to review, and place in context, the latest advances in our
understanding of the formation, fate and consequences of biological
reactive intermediates. The Organizing Committee: Allan H. Conney,
Robert Snyder (Co-chairman), and Charlotte M. Witmer (Rutgers
University, Piscataway, NJ), David J. Jollow Co chairman) (Medical
University, South Carolina, Charleston, SC), 1. Glenn Sipes (Co
chairman) (University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ), James J. Kocsis and
George F.
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