Urinary mutagenicity as a biomarker in workers exposed to benzidine: correlation with urinary metabolites and urothelial DNA adducts

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Urinary mutagenicity as a biomarker in workers exposed to benzidine: correlation with urinary metabolites and urothelial DNA adducts
المؤلفون: Melissa L. Shelton, Terry V. Zenser, B B Davis, Richard B. Hayes, V. K. Bhatnagar, L. R. Brooks, D J Parikh, Vijaya M. Lakshmi, David M. DeMarini, Mustafa Dosemeci, Marlene Jaeger, B T Eischen, F. F. Hsu, Nathanial Rothman, Glenn Talaska, Rekha Kashyap, S. K. Kashyap
المصدر: Carcinogenesis. 18(5)
سنة النشر: 1997
مصطلحات موضوعية: Male, Salmonella typhimurium, Cancer Research, Pathology, medicine.medical_specialty, Cost effectiveness, Urinary system, Metabolite, Mutagen, Urine, medicine.disease_cause, chemistry.chemical_compound, DNA Adducts, Occupational Exposure, DNA adduct, medicine, Humans, Chemistry, Mutagenicity Tests, Benzidines, General Medicine, Molecular biology, Benzidine, Biomarker (medicine), Urothelium, Biomarkers, Mutagens
الوصف: Urinary mutagenicity has been used in occupational and epidemiological studies for over two decades as a cost-effective, general biomarker of exposure to genotoxic agents. However, few studies have compared urinary mutagenicity to additional biomarkers determined among low- and high-exposed groups. To address this issue, we evaluated the relationship between urinary mutagenicity and other types of biomarkers in a cross-sectional study involving 15 workers exposed to the urinary bladder carcinogen benzidine (BZ, high exposure), 15 workers exposed to BZ-dyes (low exposure), and 13 unexposed controls in Ahmedabad, India. Urinary organics were extracted by C18/methanol and evaluated for mutagenicity in the presence of S9 in the Salmonella strain YG1024, which is a frameshift strain that overproduces acetyltransferase. The results were compared to biomarker data reported recently from the same urine samples (Rothman et al., Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 93, 5084-5089, 1996) that included a metabolite biomarker (the sum of the urinary levels of BZ + N-acetylbenzidine + N,N'-diacetylbenzidine) and a DNA adduct biomarker [a presumptive N-(3'-phosphodeoxyguanosin-8-yl)-N'-acetylbenzidine (C8dG-ABZ) DNA adduct in exfoliated urothelial cells]. The mean +/- SE urinary mutagenicity (revertants/micromol of creatinine) of the low-exposure (BZ-dye) workers was 8.2 +/- 2.4, which was significantly different from the mean of the controls (2.8 +/- 0.7, P = 0.04) as was that of the mean of the high-exposure (BZ) workers (123.2 +/- 26.1, P < 0.0001). Urinary mutagenicity showed strong, positive correlations with urinary metabolites (r = 0.88, P < 0.0001) and the level of the presumptive C8dG-ABZ urothelial DNA adduct (r = 0.59, P = 0.0006). A strong association was found between tobacco use (bidi smoking) and urinary mutagenicity among the controls (r = 0.68, P = 0.01) but not among the exposed workers (r = 0.18, P = 0.11). This study confirms the ability of a biomarker such as urinary mutagenicity to detect low-dose exposures, identify additional genotoxic exposures among the controls, and correlate strongly with urinary metabolites and DNA adducts in the target tissue (urinary bladder epithelia) in humans.
تدمد: 0143-3334
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::0b784a73ed58a42773e9b34a9dd2ea9f
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9163684
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....0b784a73ed58a42773e9b34a9dd2ea9f
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE