AbstractPhysiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling and gas uptake experiments were utilized to verify the competitive inhibition mechanism of interaction between trichloroethylene (TCE) and 1,1-dichloroethylene (DCE) and to investigate the presence of an interaction threshold between the two chemicals. Initially, gas uptake experiments were conducted on Fischer 344 rats where the initial concentrations of both DCE and TCE were 2000:0, 0:2000, 2000:2000, 1000:0, 1000:1000, and 500:500ppm, respectively. When the different modes of inhibition interactions (competitive, uncompetitive and noncompetitive) were employed in the PBPK model, the model description of the competitive inhibition interaction provided the best description of the declining concentrations in the gas uptake chamber. Furthermore, to predict the range at which the interaction threshold would be found, the PBPK model included a mathematical description of the percentage of enzyme sites occupied by either chemical in the presence or the absence of the other. By comparing the percentage of occupied sites by one chemical, in the presence of the other, to those sites occupied in the absence of the latter, the PBPK model predicted a range of concentrations (100ppm or less) of either chemical where the competitive inhibition interaction would not be observed. Consequently, gas uptake experiments were designed where the initial concentration was selected at 2000ppm for one chemical while the other chemical was set at 100 in one experiment and 50ppm in another. Under these conditions, the best simulation to the concentration depletion curves in the gas uptake system of the chemical in the higher concentration was obtained when the PBPK model was run under the assumption of no-interaction. This substantiated the model predictions of the presence of observable interaction only at concentrations higher than 100ppm.