Relationships between exposure, cell loss and proliferation, and manifestation of Hprt mutant T cells following treatment of preweanling, weanling, and adult male mice with N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea

Autor: Ad D. Tates, Thomas R. Skopek, Vernon E. Walker, Michael J Bauer, Dale M. Walker, Patricia B. Upton, Andrew A. Reilly, Irene M. Jones, Quanxin Meng, Jun Nakamura, Tawni L. Crippen
Rok vydání: 1999
Předmět:
Zdroj: Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis. 431:371-388
ISSN: 0027-5107
DOI: 10.1016/s0027-5107(99)00180-3
Popis: Experiments were performed to characterize the age-related patterns of appearance and frequency of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (Hprt) mutant T lymphocytes in thymus and spleen following exposure of preweanling (12-day-old), weanling (22-day-old), and young adult (8-week-old) male B6C3F1 mice to ethylnitrosourea (ENU). Mice were given single i.p. injections of 0 or 40 mg ENU/kg and then groups of animals were necropsied from 2 h to 116 days after treatment to examine the relationships between exposure, cell loss and proliferation, and the frequency of Hprt mutant T cells in thymus and spleen. Hprt mutant frequency (Mf) data for thymus of ENU-exposed (0, 11.7, 35, 58, or 72 mg/kg, or five weekly doses of 1.7 mg/kg i.p.) male C57BL/6 mice (12- or 62-week-old), obtained during an earlier study of spleen cells [I.M. Jones, K. Burkhart-Schultz, C.L. Strout, T.L. Crippen, Factors that affect the frequency of thioguanine-resistant lymphocytes in mice following exposure to ethylnitrosourea, Environ. Mutagen, 9 (1987) 317-329.], were compared to results in B6C3F1 mice. Isolated T cells were cultured in the presence of mitogen, growth factor, and 6-thioguanine to detect Hprt mutants. The time required to achieve maximum Mfs in thymus was uniformly found at 2 weeks after ENU treatment, while the times needed to reach peak values in spleen were proportional to animal age at treatment. These data indicate that age-related differences in the appearance of Hprt mutant cells in spleen are largely defined by the physiologically based, age-dependent trafficking of mutant cells from or through the thymus. Three modes of handling the resulting Hprt Mf data were evaluated: (i) comparing the Mfs at a single time point, (ii) comparing the maximum Mfs observed, and (iii) comparing the change in Mfs over time (or the mutant T cell 'manifestation' curves in treated vs. control mice) in each age group post-exposure. Measuring the Mfs in spleen at multiple time points after cessation of exposure and integrating the frequency of mutants as a function of time appeared to be the superior method for comparing mutagenic responses in different age groups. Some of the underlying assumptions of this approach, as well as its strengths and weaknesses, are discussed.
Databáze: OpenAIRE