Mixtures of polycyclic aromatic compounds inhibit mutagenesis in the Salmonella/microsome assay by inhibition of metabolic activation.
We observed that complex mixtures of aromatic compounds isolated from a coal-derived oil suppressed the mutagenic activity of the indirect mutagens benzo[a]pyrene, 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene, 2-aminofluorene, and 2-acetylaminofluorene as measured in the Salmonella/microsome mutagenicity assay, using strain TA98 and metabolic activation with Aroclor-induced rat-liver S9 or microsomes. The mixture also inhibited S9-dependent benzo[a]pyrene metabolism and covalent binding to DNA in a cell-free system. The mixture did not suppress the activity of either the direct acting mutagens 2-nitrofluorene and benzo[a]pyrene diol-epoxide, or of the indirect mutagen N-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene which requires a microsomal deacetylase for metabolic activation. Spectrophotometric measurements showed that components of the mixture bound to microsomal cytochrome P-450. The mixture did not inhibit microsomal NADPH-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase. These observations show that the mixtures inhibited metabolic activation by the microsomal monooxygenase system, probably by binding of unidentified components to cytochrome P-450. The resulting inhibition of mutagenesis may have implications for risk estimates for the mixtures we examined as well as for other types of complex mixtures for which similar inhibitory effects have been observed.[1]References
- Mixtures of polycyclic aromatic compounds inhibit mutagenesis in the Salmonella/microsome assay by inhibition of metabolic activation. Haugen, D.A., Peak, M.J. Mutat. Res. (1983) [Pubmed]
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