The estrogenic activity in water at various localities on Lake Biwa-Yodo River, a representative watershed in Japan, was measured using a recombinant yeast that expresses the human estrogen receptor. The yeast bioassay revealed that the activities of 13 water samples had an average value of 14 pmol/L (3.8 ng/L) (17beta-estradiol equivalent) with a very wide range from 0 to 72 pmol/L (0-19.6 ng/ L), and two of the samples had prominent levels of activity (72 pmol/L (19.6 ng/L) and 56 pmol/L (15.2 ng/L)). We analyzed these two samples with instrumental approaches. A high-performance liquid chromatogram profile showed that the strong activity in one sample, which was collected just downstream of a sewage-treatment plant, would be due to 17beta-estradiol and estrone, whose source is considered to be human urine contained in the effluent of the plant. The activity in the other sample, which was obtained from a tributary river in a primarily residential area with some industrial development (i.e., Osaka City), however, did not correspond to 17beta-estradiol, estrone, or synthetic chemicals known as estrogenic. Analysis of a fraction with estrogenic activity by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) provided evidence that the activity in the water sample resulted from the presence of genistein, an isoflavone compound of plant origin.
3,6-Dinitrobenzo[e]pyrene (3,6-DNBeP), newly identified in airborne particles and surface soil, is a potent mutagen in Salmonella typhimurium. The present study investigated the genotoxic potency of 3,6-DNBeP in vitro and in vivo using mammalian cell strains (Chinese hamster CHL/IU and human HepG2) and ICR mice, respectively. In the hprt gene mutation assay using HepG2 cells, the spontaneous mutant frequency was 61.1 per 10(5) clonable cells, which increased to 229 per 10(5) clonable cells after treatment with 1.0 microg/ml (3 microM) 3,6-DNBeP. Notably, in HepG2 cells with increased N-acetyltransferase 2 activity, the mutant frequency increased to 648 per 10(5) clonable cells by treatment of 1.0 microg/ml (3 microM) 3,6-DNBeP. The sister chromatid exchange frequency increased approximately three times the control level in HepG2 cells treated with 3,6-DNBeP at a concentration of 1.0 microg/ml (3 microM). In HepG2 and CHL/IU cells, the frequency of the cells with micronuclei was 0.9 and 1.2%, and the frequencies increased to 2.3 and 7.6% after 1.0 microg/ml (3 microM) 3,6-DNBeP-treatment, respectively. The H2AX phosphorylation level increased 8-fold compared with the background level with 1.0 microg/ml (3 microM) 3,6-DNBeP-treatment in HepG2 cells. Moreover, the comet assay showed that 3,6-DNBeP produced DNA damage in the cells of liver, kidney, lung and bone marrow in ICR mice 3 h after intraperitoneal injection at 40 mg/kg (0.12 mmol/kg) body weight. These data indicate that 3,6-DNBeP is genotoxic to mammalian cells in vitro and in vivo.
Polymorphism of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) presumably induces genetic diŠerence in the susceptibility of animals to aryl hydrocarbons. The activation of intracellular signaling following AhR binding to aryl hydrocarbons is highly correlated with the toxicity and carcinogenicity of these chemicals. Here we developed two reporter yeasts coexpressing AhR and AhR nuclear translocator (Arnt) proteins of a guinea pig and a Syrian hamster, known as the most sensitive and most resistant laboratory rodents to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), respectively. We previously constructed reporter yeasts expressing human and mouse AhR/Arnt. We conducted reporter assays to measure ligand activities of TCDD, 3-methylcholanthrene, b-naphtho‰avone and indirubin in these yeasts. Ligand treatment induced a dose-dependent increase in b-galactosidase activity from a reporter plasmid in all 4 yeast strains. The assays showed that yeast expressing guinea pig AhR/Arnt is most sensitive and yeast expressing Syrian hamster AhR/Arnt is most insensitive to these ligands. The yeasts expressing human and mouse AhR/Arnt were in-between. These diŠerent ligand activities re‰ect the species speciˆcity of AhR/Arnt, and may be related to the susceptibility of rodents to aryl hydrocarbons.
Colibactin is a polyketide-peptide genotoxin produced by enteric bacteria such as E. coli, and is considered to contribute to the development of colorectal cancer. We previously isolated E. coli strains from Japanese colorectal cancer patients, and in the present study we investigated the genotoxic potency of the colibactin-producing (clb +) E. coli strains that carry the polyketide synthases "pks" gene cluster (pks +) and an isogenic clbmutant in which the colibactin-producing ability is impaired. Measurement of phosphorylated histone H2AX indicated that DNA double strand breaks were induced in mammalian CHO AA8 cells infected with the clb + E. coli strains. Induction of DNA damage response (SOS response) by crude extract of the clb + strains was 1.7 times higher than that of the clb-E. coli in an umu assay with a Salmonella typhimurium TA1535/pSK1002 tester strain. Micronucleus test with CHO AA8 cells revealed that infection with the clb + strains induced genotoxicity, i.e., the frequencies of micronucleated cells infected with clb + strain were 4-6 times higher than with the clbstrain. Since the intestinal flora are affected by dietary habits that are strongly associated with ethnicity, these data may contribute to both risk evaluation and prevention of colorectal cancer in the Japanese population.
Introduction: Colibactin is a small genotoxic molecule produced by enteric bacteria, including certain Escherichia coli (E. coli) strains harbored in the human large intestine. This polyketide-peptide genotoxin is considered to contribute to the development of colorectal cancer. The colibactin-producing (clb +) microorganisms possess a 54kilobase genomic island (clb gene cluster). In the present study, to assess the distribution of the clb gene cluster, genotyping analysis was carried out among E. coli strains randomly chosen from the Japan Collection of Microorganisms, RIKEN BRC, Japan. Findings: The analysis revealed that two of six strains possessed a clb gene cluster. These clb + strains JCM5263 and JCM5491 induced genotoxicity in in vitro micronucleus (MN) tests using rodent CHO AA8 cells. Since the induction level of MN by JCM5263 was high, a bacterial umu test was carried out with a cell extract of the strain, revealing that the extract had SOS-inducing potency in the umu tester bacterium. Conclusion: These results support the observations that the clb gene cluster is widely distributed in nature and clb + E. coli having genotoxic potencies is not rare among microorganisms.
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