Evaluation of genotoxicity of N-nitrosodibenzylamine in Chinese hamster V79 cells and in Salmonella

Autor: R. Stapley, B.G. Boyes, C.G. Rogers, T.I. Matula, N.P. Sen
Rok vydání: 1990
Předmět:
Zdroj: Mutation research. 241(4)
ISSN: 0027-5107
Popis: Health concerns have arisen due to the formation of N-nitrosodibenzylamine (NDBzA; CAS No. 5336-53-8) in pork processed in a new type of rubber netting. In view of the potent carcinogenicity of related nitrosamines (e.g. N-nitroso-n-dibutylamine and N-nitrosodiethylamine), NDBzA was evaluated for genotoxicity in vitro in both Chinese hamster V79 cells and in Salmonella. In V79 cells, concentrations up to 25 micrograms/ml were tested with and without activation by rat or hamster hepatocytes. Significant elevation of SCE frequency was seen only at 25 micrograms/ml in the presence of uninduced hamster hepatocytes. Mutation to 6-thioguanine resistance was observed at 25 micrograms/ml, in the absence of hepatocytes and in the presence of induced (Aroclor 1254) or uninduced hamster hepatocytes, but not with rat hepatocytes. With uninduced rat hepatocytes, a small but significant (p less than 0.05) increase in the mutation frequency was seen with 10 micrograms/ml NDBzA. In the Salmonella assay, using a pre-incubation protocol and concentrations up to 1000 micrograms/ml, NDBzA was negative in strain TA98, and in TA100 with rat S9, but was positive at the highest dose in TA100 with hamster S9, and more strongly with Aroclor 1254-induced hamster S9. When activated by uninduced rat or hamster hepatocytes, as opposed to S9, NDBzA was negative with all tester strains. Hamster hepatocytes activated more than rat in the V79 studies, and hamster S9 was more strongly activating in the Salmonella assay. These results indicate that NDBzA is weakly mutagenic to both Salmonella and V79 cells.
Databáze: OpenAIRE